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Research Frontiers Inc.TTEC ANNUAL REPORT 2017 TTEC ANNUAL REPORT 2017 TTEC ANNUAL REPORT 2017 TTEC (NASDAQ: TTEC) is a leading global technology and services provider TTEC (NASDAQ: TTEC) is a leading global technology and services provider TTEC (NASDAQ: TTEC) is a leading global technology and services provider focused exclusively on the design, implementation and delivery of transformative focused exclusively on the design, implementation and delivery of transformative focused exclusively on the design, implementation and delivery of transformative customer experience for many of the world’s most iconic and disruptive brands. customer experience for many of the world’s most iconic and disruptive brands. customer experience for many of the world’s most iconic and disruptive brands. The Company delivers outcome-based customer engagement solutions through The Company delivers outcome-based customer engagement solutions through The Company delivers outcome-based customer engagement solutions through TTEC Digital, its digital consultancy that designs and builds human centric, TTEC Digital, its digital consultancy that designs and builds human centric, TTEC Digital, its digital consultancy that designs and builds human centric, tech-enabled, insight-driven customer experience solutions for clients and TTEC tech-enabled, insight-driven customer experience solutions for clients and TTEC tech-enabled, insight-driven customer experience solutions for clients and TTEC Engage, its delivery center of excellence, that operates customer acquisition, care, Engage, its delivery center of excellence, that operates customer acquisition, care, Engage, its delivery center of excellence, that operates customer acquisition, care, growth and digital trust and safety services. growth and digital trust and safety services. growth and digital trust and safety services. Founded in 1982, the Company’s 56,000 employees operate on six continents Founded in 1982, the Company’s 56,000 employees operate on six continents Founded in 1982, the Company’s 56,000 employees operate on six continents across the globe and live by a set of customer-focused values that guide across the globe and live by a set of customer-focused values that guide across the globe and live by a set of customer-focused values that guide relationships with clients, their customers, and each other. relationships with clients, their customers, and each other. relationships with clients, their customers, and each other. To learn more about how TTEC is bringing humanity to the customer experience, To learn more about how TTEC is bringing humanity to the customer experience, To learn more about how TTEC is bringing humanity to the customer experience, visit www.ttec.com. visit www.ttec.com. visit www.ttec.com. 9197 South Peoria Street 9197 South Peoria Street 9197 South Peoria Street Englewood, CO 80112-5833 Englewood, CO 80112-5833 Englewood, CO 80112-5833 +1 303 397-8100 or 1-800 835-3832 +1 303 397-8100 or 1-800 835-3832 +1 303 397-8100 or 1-800 835-3832 ttec.com ttec.com ttec.com 310375_Cover.indd 1 4/6/18 12:48 PM Corporate Information Corporate Information Directors Directors Kenneth D. Tuchman Kenneth D. Tuchman Founder, Chairman of the Board Founder, Chairman of the Board Steven J. Anenen Steven J. Anenen Gregory A. Conley Gregory A. Conley Officer, Odyssey Group, SA Officer, Odyssey Group, SA Robert N. Frerichs Robert N. Frerichs Former Chief Executive Officer, CDK Global, Inc.; former President of ADP Dealer Services; former Former Chief Executive Officer, CDK Global, Inc.; former President of ADP Dealer Services; former Senior Vice President of North America Systems Senior Vice President of North America Systems Tracy L. Bahl Tracy L. Bahl Executive Vice President, Health Plans, CVS Health; former Director, MedExpress; former Executive Vice President, Health Plans, CVS Health; former Director, MedExpress; former Executive Chairman, Emdeon; former Chief Executive Officer, Uniprise Executive Chairman, Emdeon; former Chief Executive Officer, Uniprise former Vice Chairman, Barclays Capital former Vice Chairman, Barclays Capital Ekta Singh-Bushell Ekta Singh-Bushell Former Global Client Services Partner, Ernst & Young; former Deputy to the First Vice President, Former Global Client Services Partner, Ernst & Young; former Deputy to the First Vice President, Chief Operating Officer, Executive Office at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York; former Partner, Chief Operating Officer, Executive Office at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York; former Partner, DecisionGPS LLC; Director, LifeStream (Taxonometrics, Inc) DecisionGPS LLC; Director, LifeStream (Taxonometrics, Inc) Executive Officers Executive Officers Kenneth D. Tuchman Kenneth D. Tuchman Chief Executive Officer Chief Executive Officer Regina M. Paolillo Regina M. Paolillo Executive Vice President, Chief Administrative and Financial Officer Executive Vice President, Chief Administrative and Financial Officer Executive Vice President, Chief Operating Officer, Customer Management and Executive Vice President, Chief Operating Officer, Customer Management and Customer Growth Services, TTEC Engage Customer Growth Services, TTEC Engage Judi A. Hand Judi A. Hand Executive Vice President, Chief Revenue Officer Executive Vice President, Chief Revenue Officer Anthony “Tony” Y. Tsai Anthony “Tony” Y. Tsai Executive Vice President, Chief Information & Innovation Officer Executive Vice President, Chief Information & Innovation Officer Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Chief Risk Officer Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Chief Risk Officer Stock Listing Stock Listing NASDAQ Global Select Market NASDAQ Global Select Market Symbol: TTEC Symbol: TTEC Website Website ttec.com ttec.com 2018 Annual Meeting of Stockholders 2018 Annual Meeting of Stockholders The Annual Meeting of Stockholders will be The Annual Meeting of Stockholders will be held Wednesday, May 23, 2018, beginning at held Wednesday, May 23, 2018, beginning at 10:00 a.m MDT at: 10:00 a.m MDT at: TTEC Holdings, Inc. TTEC Holdings, Inc. Global Headquarters Global Headquarters 9197 South Peoria Street 9197 South Peoria Street Englewood, CO 80112-5833 Englewood, CO 80112-5833 Transfer Agent and Registrar Transfer Agent and Registrar Broadridge Corporate Issuer Solutions, Inc. Broadridge Corporate Issuer Solutions, Inc. 1717 Arch Street, Suite 1300 1717 Arch Street, Suite 1300 Philadelphia, PA 19103 Philadelphia, PA 19103 Telephone: 855.206.5002 Telephone: 855.206.5002 Facsimile: 215.553.5402 Facsimile: 215.553.5402 Email: shareholder@broadridge.com Email: shareholder@broadridge.com Investor Information Investor Information Investor information, including TTEC’s Investor information, including TTEC’s Annual Report, press releases and filings Annual Report, press releases and filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, may be obtained from Commission, may be obtained from TTEC’s website, ttec.com or by contacting TTEC’s website, ttec.com or by contacting TTEC Investor Relations at: TTEC Investor Relations at: 1.800.835.3832 1.800.835.3832 investor.relations@ttec.com investor.relations@ttec.com Independent Accountants Independent Accountants PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, Denver, Colorado Denver, Colorado Financial Highlights Financial Highlights ($ in millions, except per share data) ($ in millions, except per share data) Revenue Revenue Operating Income Operating Income Net Income Per Diluted Share Net Income Per Diluted Share $1,286.8 $1,286.8 $1,275.3 $1,275.3 $1,477.4 $1,477.4 $100.5 $100.5 $1.26 $1.26 $90.2 $90.2 $52.8 $52.8 $0.71 $0.71 Director, HaulHound.com; former Chief Executive Officer, Aha! Software; former Chief Executive Director, HaulHound.com; former Chief Executive Officer, Aha! Software; former Chief Executive 2015 2015 2016 2016 2017 2017 2015 2015 2016 2016 2017 2017 2015 2015 2016 2016 2017 2017 Chairman, Bank of Kigali; Director, FAT Brands Inc.; former Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Chairman, Bank of Kigali; Director, FAT Brands Inc.; former Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Kazkommertsbank; former Director, FTI Consulting; former Chairman, Meridian Capital HK; of Kazkommertsbank; former Director, FTI Consulting; former Chairman, Meridian Capital HK; Former Director, Merkle, Inc.; former International Chairman, Accenture, Inc.; former Chairman, Former Director, Merkle, Inc.; former International Chairman, Accenture, Inc.; former Chairman, Aricent Group; former Chairman, Avanade Aricent Group; former Chairman, Avanade $0.16** $0.16** Marc L. Holtzman Marc L. Holtzman *Non-GAAP **Includes one-time impact from enactment of the U.S. Tax Cuts and Jobs Act *Non-GAAP **Includes one-time impact from enactment of the U.S. Tax Cuts and Jobs Act $100.1* $100.1* Revenue Revenue EBITDA EBITDA Operating income Operating income Operating margin Operating margin EBIT EBIT Net income Net income $89.2* $89.2* $120.5* $120.5* $1.48* $1.48* $1.32* $1.32* $1.80* $1.80* 2015 2015 2016 2016 2017 2017 $ 1,286.8 $ 1,286.8 $ 1,275.3 $ 1,275.3 $ 1,477.4 $ 1,477.4 $ 151.9 $ 151.9 $ 121.9 $ 121.9 $ 160.7 $ 160.7 $ 90.2 $ 90.2 $ 52.8 $ 52.8 $ 100.5 $ 100.5 7.0% 7.0% 4.1% 4.1% 6.8% 6.8% $ 88.1 $ 88.1 $ 53.3 $ 53.3 $ 96.2 $ 96.2 Martin F. DeGhetto Martin F. DeGhetto $ 61.7 $ 61.7 $ 33.7 $ 33.7 $ 7.3* $ 7.3* Average diluted shares outstanding Average diluted shares outstanding 49.0 49.0 47.7 47.7 46.4 46.4 Net income per diluted share Net income per diluted share $ 1.26 $ 1.26 $ 0.71 $ 0.71 $ 0.16* $ 0.16* Cash and cash equivalents Cash and cash equivalents $ 60.3 $ 60.3 $ 55.3 $ 55.3 $ 74.4 $ 74.4 Total debt Total debt Capital expenditures Capital expenditures $ 107.3 $ 107.3 $ 229.6 $ 229.6 $ 361.3 $ 361.3 Margaret B. McLean Margaret B. McLean $ 66.6 $ 66.6 $ 50.8 $ 50.8 $ 52.0 $ 52.0 *Includes the one-time impact from enactment of the U.S. Tax Cuts and Jobs Act *Includes the one-time impact from enactment of the U.S. Tax Cuts and Jobs Act 2017 Revenue by Geography 2017 Revenue by Geography 2017 Revenue by Segment 2017 Revenue by Segment 4% 4% 9% 9% 5% 5% 9% 9% North America North America Asia Pacific Asia Pacific Customer Management Services Customer Management Services Customer Growth Services Customer Growth Services 9% 9% Latin America Latin America 26% 26% 61% 61% Customer Technology Services Customer Technology Services 77% 77% EMEA EMEA Customer Strategy Services Customer Strategy Services Audit Committee Audit Committee Gregory A. Conley, Chairman Gregory A. Conley, Chairman Robert N. Frerichs Robert N. Frerichs Ekta Singh-Bushell Ekta Singh-Bushell Compensation Committee Compensation Committee Tracy L. Bahl, Chairman Tracy L. Bahl, Chairman Gregory A. Conley Gregory A. Conley Robert N. Frerichs Robert N. Frerichs Nominating and Governance Committee Nominating and Governance Committee Robert N. Frerichs, Chairman Robert N. Frerichs, Chairman Steven J. Anenen Steven J. Anenen Tracy L. Bahl Tracy L. Bahl Executive Committee Executive Committee Kenneth D. Tuchman, Chairman Kenneth D. Tuchman, Chairman Tracy L. Bahl Tracy L. Bahl Steven J. Anenen Steven J. Anenen 2017 AR_cover-Final.indd 3-4 2017 AR_cover-Final.indd 3-4 310375_Cover.indd 2 3/23/18 3:21 PM 3/23/18 3:21 PM 4/6/18 12:48 PM Dear Shareholders: 2017 was a very strong year for us. We gained momentum on numerous fronts and reached many significant and meaningful milestones. In addition to exceeding our financial goals with record revenue and adjusted operating income, we accelerated our strategy to be the leading global technology and services partner focused exclusively on the design, implementation and delivery of transformative customer experience. In 2017, this singular focus enabled us to: Kenneth D. Tuchman Founder, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer • Add many significant new marquee clients to our portfolio and increase the number of clients taking services across multiple segments by 25 percent. Our focus: to continue to grow as a leading global technology and services partner focused exclusively on the design, implementation, and delivery of transformative customer experience. • Strengthen our core offering with innovative new digital solutions and a streamlined organizational structure that weaves these advanced capabilities across our HumanifyTM Customer Engagement as a Service platform. • Grow our customer experience cloud business as more businesses embrace the flexibility of the cloud. Our growth is coming from a combination of direct sales and channel partner agreements with Cisco, Verizon, Allstream and Telstra. • Complete and integrate two strategic acquisitions that broaden our capabilities, expand our geographic footprint, increase our global client base, and add further scale to our end-to-end platform. Our acquisition of healthcare services provider, Connextions, allowed us to bring significant scale to our healthcare vertical. Through the acquisition, we added several new payer and provider clients to our portfolio as well as new industry specific capabilities. The Motif acquisition broadened our services to include trust and safety and content moderation while expanding our footprint into India and our presence in the Philippines. As digital interactions become core to our everyday lives, fraud prevention has become essential to creating and maintaining trusted customer relationships. TTEC now delivers expertise that combines sophisticated algorithms with trained knowledge workers to help our clients detect, identify and minimize the impact of fraud online. The acquisition also provides us with extensive content moderation capabilities that are vital to global brands as they strive to create and maintain a safe and trusted presence online. 2017 AR_inside_pages-Final.indd 1 310375_4pg.indd 1 3/23/18 3:20 PM 4/2/18 12:43 PM TeleTech becomes TTEC – Digital + Engage In early January, we made the move to change our name to TTEC. The decision to rebrand represented a turning point for our business. Our new name is the manifestation of our transformation from a vendor of cost-driven services to a strategic client partner in the design, implementation and delivery of digital customer experience. Our new name represents the culmination of hundreds of millions of dollars in acquisitions, over one hundred patents, the diversification of capabilities, and the coming together of a talented and experienced leadership team. While it was our ambition to change our name sooner, we held off until we could demonstrate at scale, the full scope of our end-to-end platform with multiple client proof points across industries and geographies. Core to our rebranding strategy was the creation of a highly collaborative organizational structure to face the market. We have built two distinct centers of excellence, TTEC Digital and TTEC Engage, that map to our clients’ specific business challenges and their customers’ needs. TTEC Digital unites our consulting and technology services into a true digital platform, while TTEC Engage operates and delivers front line customer interactions globally, working side-by-side with TTEC Digital. • TTEC Digital combines customer experience consulting, analytics, systems integration and ongoing technology operations. Through TTEC Digital we are designing context aware, insight-driven, omnichannel customer journeys and then bringing them to life with the enabling systems on our own cloud-based technology platforms, leveraging knowledge management with machine learning and artificial intelligence. • TTEC Engage houses TTEC’s global delivery center of excellence that operates managed services to help clients acquire, retain, grow, serve and protect their customers across every touchpoint, across the globe, at scale. Through TTEC Engage, we are enabling clients to increase revenue, reduce costs and build customer lifetime value and affinity by combining the compassion and creativity of human talent with the convenience and efficiency of technology. More strategically relevant than ever In a world where every touchpoint is an opportunity to build engagement and brand advocacy or a potential point of failure, our customer-focused approach is more relevant than ever. Today, customers expect simple, convenient and trustworthy interactions. They expect to be valued and treated like individuals who can effortlessly interact over their touchpoint of choice and seamlessly move between channels without loss of information. They want their issues resolved, on their terms and in context to their particular situation. They want their service providers to have an understanding of their interaction and transaction history, and treat them with empathy, compassion and respect. As the lines blur between digital and physical interactions, modern omnichannel interaction hubs have become THE focal point for customer acquisition, retention and customer loyalty, and the central source for customer insights. They have become the nerve center for customer-centricity and have continued to rise in strategic importance. Companies are realizing that the old way of managing customer interactions no longer works. They are seeking guidance from experts, like us, who understand how to link the needs of increasingly demanding, fickle, hyper-connected customers with the technology and data rich capabilities of a high performing modern interaction hub. Synchronizing the complex mesh of crisscrossing channels and real-time information takes a combination of strategy, technology, process excellence and well-trained, compassionate people. Most From the day our company was founded, we have focused on only one thing: helping the world’s most respected and iconic brands build unbreakable bonds with their customers by experiences. delivering amazing customer help them navigate their digital transformation journey. companies have some of the pieces, but very few have them all. Many companies are operating pilot projects, but very few are managing operationalized programs that cut across an enterprise at scale. The good news is that there are some strong examples of amazing customer experiences in the market and we are proud to be supporting several of them. These CX leaders are the companies that we all love and look forward to doing business with. They are digital, seamless and fun to engage with. And they are growing faster and retaining customers at a much higher rate than the laggards. These leaders have set a high bar and are forcing brands across the globe to do far more than rethink their operations. Companies are beginning to reimagine their business to take advantage of new technologies and capabilities that enable them to put their customers up front and center. And that is where we come in. Companies can’t fix the experience in isolation. They need well- orchestrated, end-to-end solutions that deliver comprehensive journey maps, advanced analytics, omnichannel platforms, dynamic learning engines and a culture that is ready to embrace change. With TTEC Digital and TTEC Engage, we are providing clients with a modern, modular platform designed to Exclusive focus on customer experience From the day our company was founded, we have focused on only one thing - helping the world’s most respected and iconic brands build unbreakable bonds with their customers by delivering amazing customer experiences. While the touchpoints, technologies and methods may have evolved, the customer experience has always been our true north. Because of this singular focus on the customer experience and our continual investments in innovation, today we are uniquely positioned to be the partner of choice in customer experience transformation. And the market is ripe with opportunity. We have the momentum, global scale and unified offering to continue leading the market as a true end-to-end customer engagement service provider. With fortitude and conviction, we have been deliberate in our strategy to invest in innovation and have refused to cut corners that would impact our quality. We have sculpted our business carefully and are truly proud of where we are positioned today. Our prestigious client base is expanding, our balance sheet remains strong, our platform is proven and continues to evolve and our talented team of over 50,000 employees is excited and energized about our new brand and integrated capabilities. Further, we continue to utilize our capital to balance organic investment in the business as well as acquisitions, dividends, and share repurchases to maximize shareholder value. your continued support. As we move into 2018, our momentum is accelerating. We are growing and are excited as ever about our future. On behalf of our executive team, board and our employees across the globe, thank you for Kenneth D. Tuchman Founder, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer 2017 AR_inside_pages-Final.indd 2-3 310375_4pg.indd 2 4/2/18 12:43 PM 3/23/18 3:20 PM TeleTech becomes TTEC – Digital + Engage In early January, we made the move to change our name to TTEC. The decision to rebrand represented a turning point for our business. Our new name is the manifestation of our transformation from a vendor of cost-driven services to a strategic client partner in the design, implementation and delivery of digital customer experience. Our new name represents the culmination of hundreds of millions of dollars in acquisitions, over one hundred patents, the diversification of capabilities, and the coming together of a talented and experienced leadership team. While it was our ambition to change our name sooner, we held off until we could demonstrate at scale, the full scope of our end-to-end platform with multiple client proof points across industries and geographies. Core to our rebranding strategy was the creation of a highly collaborative organizational structure to face the market. We have built two distinct centers of excellence, TTEC Digital and TTEC Engage, that map to our clients’ specific business challenges and their customers’ needs. TTEC Digital unites our consulting and technology services into a true digital platform, while TTEC Engage operates and delivers front line customer interactions globally, working side-by-side with TTEC Digital. • TTEC Digital combines customer experience consulting, analytics, systems integration and ongoing technology operations. Through TTEC Digital we are designing context aware, insight-driven, omnichannel customer journeys and then bringing them to life with the enabling systems on our own cloud-based technology platforms, leveraging knowledge management with machine learning and artificial intelligence. • TTEC Engage houses TTEC’s global delivery center of excellence that operates managed services to help clients acquire, retain, grow, serve and protect their customers across every touchpoint, across the globe, at scale. Through TTEC Engage, we are enabling clients to increase revenue, reduce costs and build customer lifetime value and affinity by combining the compassion and creativity of human talent with the convenience and efficiency of technology. More strategically relevant than ever In a world where every touchpoint is an opportunity to build engagement and brand advocacy or a potential point of failure, our customer-focused approach is more relevant than ever. Today, customers expect simple, convenient and trustworthy interactions. They expect to be valued and treated like individuals who can effortlessly interact over their touchpoint of choice and seamlessly move between channels without loss of information. They want their issues resolved, on their terms and in context to their particular situation. They want their service providers to have an understanding of their interaction and transaction history, and treat them with empathy, compassion and respect. As the lines blur between digital and physical interactions, modern omnichannel interaction hubs have become THE focal point for customer acquisition, retention and customer loyalty, and the central source for customer insights. They have become the nerve center for customer-centricity and have continued to rise in strategic importance. Companies are realizing that the old way of managing customer interactions no longer works. They are seeking guidance from experts, like us, who understand how to link the needs of increasingly demanding, fickle, hyper-connected customers with the technology and data rich capabilities of a high performing modern interaction hub. Synchronizing the complex mesh of crisscrossing channels and real-time information takes a combination of strategy, technology, process excellence and well-trained, compassionate people. Most From the day our company was founded, we have focused on only one thing: helping the world’s most respected and iconic brands build unbreakable bonds with their customers by delivering amazing customer experiences. companies have some of the pieces, but very few have them all. Many companies are operating pilot projects, but very few are managing operationalized programs that cut across an enterprise at scale. The good news is that there are some strong examples of amazing customer experiences in the market and we are proud to be supporting several of them. These CX leaders are the companies that we all love and look forward to doing business with. They are digital, seamless and fun to engage with. And they are growing faster and retaining customers at a much higher rate than the laggards. These leaders have set a high bar and are forcing brands across the globe to do far more than rethink their operations. Companies are beginning to reimagine their business to take advantage of new technologies and capabilities that enable them to put their customers up front and center. And that is where we come in. Companies can’t fix the experience in isolation. They need well- orchestrated, end-to-end solutions that deliver comprehensive journey maps, advanced analytics, omnichannel platforms, dynamic learning engines and a culture that is ready to embrace change. With TTEC Digital and TTEC Engage, we are providing clients with a modern, modular platform designed to help them navigate their digital transformation journey. Exclusive focus on customer experience From the day our company was founded, we have focused on only one thing - helping the world’s most respected and iconic brands build unbreakable bonds with their customers by delivering amazing customer experiences. While the touchpoints, technologies and methods may have evolved, the customer experience has always been our true north. Because of this singular focus on the customer experience and our continual investments in innovation, today we are uniquely positioned to be the partner of choice in customer experience transformation. And the market is ripe with opportunity. We have the momentum, global scale and unified offering to continue leading the market as a true end-to-end customer engagement service provider. With fortitude and conviction, we have been deliberate in our strategy to invest in innovation and have refused to cut corners that would impact our quality. We have sculpted our business carefully and are truly proud of where we are positioned today. Our prestigious client base is expanding, our balance sheet remains strong, our platform is proven and continues to evolve and our talented team of over 50,000 employees is excited and energized about our new brand and integrated capabilities. Further, we continue to utilize our capital to balance organic investment in the business as well as acquisitions, dividends, and share repurchases to maximize shareholder value. As we move into 2018, our momentum is accelerating. We are growing and are excited as ever about our future. On behalf of our executive team, board and our employees across the globe, thank you for your continued support. Kenneth D. Tuchman Founder, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer 2017 AR_inside_pages-Final.indd 2-3 310375_4pg.indd 3 3/23/18 3:20 PM 4/2/18 12:43 PM Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Revenue (in millions) Revenue 2015 2016 2017 $ 1,286.8 $ 1,275.3 $ 1,477.4 Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Income from Operations and Operating Margin (in millions) GAAP Income from Operations Restructuring charges, net Impairment losses Non-GAAP Income from Operations Non-GAAP Operating Margin 2015 2016 2017 $ 90.2 $ 1.8 $ 8.1 $ 100.1 7.8% $ 52.8 $ 4.4 $ 32.0 $ 89.2 7.0% $ 100.5 $ 14.7 $ 5.3 $ 120.5 8.2% Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Net Income and Net Income per Diluted Share (in millions except per share data) GAAP Net Income Asset impairment and restructuring charges, net of related taxes Changes in acquisition contingent consideration and transition services agreement, net of related taxes Estimated loss on assets held for sale, net of related taxes Interest charge related to future purchase of remaining 30% for Motif acquisition Gain on dissolution of foreign subsidiary, net of related taxes Gain on sale of business unit U.S. 2017 Tax Act Changes in valuation allowance and returns on provision adjustments Non-GAAP Net Income Average diluted shares outstanding Non-GAAP Net Income per Diluted Share Reconciliation of Free Cash Flow (in millions) Net cash provided by operating activities Purchases of property, plant and equipment Free Cash Flow 2015 2016 2017 $ 61.7 $ 6.6 $ 33.7 $ 26.2 $ 7.3 $ 12.3 $ 0.3 $ (4.6) $ 3.2 $ - $ - $ - $ - $ - $ 3.9 $ 72.5 49.0 $ 1.48 $ 4.2 $ - $ - $ - $ - $ 3.6 $ 63.1 47.7 $ 1.32 $ 1.5 $ 1.2 $ (1.9) $ (0.3) $ 62.4 $ (2.2) $ 83.5 46.4 $ 1.80 2015 2016 2017 $ 138.0 $ 66.6 $ 71.4 $ 111.8 $ 50.8 $ 61.0 $ 113.2 $ 52.0 $ 61.2 Cautionary Note About Forward-Looking Statements This Report contains “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, relating to our operations, expected financial position, results of operation, and other business matters that are based on our current expectations, assumptions, and projections with respect to the future, and are not a guarantee of performance. In this report, when we use words such as “may,” “believe,” “plan,” “will,” “anticipate,” “estimate,” “expect,” “intend,” “project,” “would,” “could,” “target,” or similar expressions, or when we discuss our strategy, plans, goals initiatives, or objectives, we are making forward-looking statements. We caution you not to rely unduly on any forward-looking statements. Actual results may differ materially from what is expressed in the forward-looking statements, and you should review and consider carefully the risks, uncertainties and other factors that affect our business and may cause such differences as outlined but are not limited to factors discussed in the section entitled “Risk Factors” of TTEC Annual Report on Form 10-K. Our forward looking statements speak only as of the date that this report is filed with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission and we undertake no obligation to update them, except as may be required by applicable laws. 2017 AR_inside_pages-Final.indd 4 310375_4pg.indd 4 3/23/18 3:20 PM 4/2/18 12:43 PM Table of Contents UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION Washington, D.C. 20549 Form 10-K (Mark One) ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2017 or TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 For the transition period from to Commission File Number: 001-11919 TTEC Holdings, Inc. (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter) Delaware 84-1291044 (State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization) (I.R.S. Employer Identification No.) 9197 South Peoria Street Englewood, Colorado 80112 (Address of principal executive offices) Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (303) 397-8100 Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act: Title of each class Name of each exchange on which registered Common Stock, $0.01 par value NASDAQ Global Select Market Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: None. Indicate by checkmark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act. Yes No Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Yes No Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports) and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes No Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically and posted on its corporate Web site, if any, every Interactive Data File required to be submitted and posted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit and post such files). Yes No Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405 of Regulation S-K (§ 229.405) is not contained herein, and will not be contained, to the best of registrant’s knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to this Form 10-K. Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or a smaller reporting company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer” and “smaller reporting company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act. (Check one): Large accelerated filer Accelerated filer Non-accelerated filer Smaller reporting company (Do not check if a smaller reporting company) Emerging growth company If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act. Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes No As of June 30, 2017, the last business day of the registrant’s most recently completed second fiscal quarter, there were 45,694,081 shares of the registrant’s common stock outstanding. The aggregate market value of the registrant’s voting and non-voting common stock that was held by non-affiliates on such date was $562,964,438 based on the closing sale price of the registrant’s common stock on such date as reported on the NASDAQ Global Select Market. As of February 28, 2018, there were 45,876,511 shares of the registrant’s common stock outstanding. DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE Certain information required for Part III of this report is incorporated by reference to the proxy statement for the registrant’s 2018 annual meeting of stockholders. Table of Contents i TTEC HOLDINGS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES DECEMBER 31, 2017 FORM 10-K TABLE OF CONTENTS Page No. CAUTIONARY NOTE ABOUT FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS ii AVAILABILITY OF INFORMATION ii PART I Item 1. Business 1 Item 1A. Risk Factors 7 Item 1B. Unresolved Staff Comments 18 Item 2. Properties 18 Item 3. Legal Proceedings 19 Item 4. Mine Safety Disclosures 19 PART II. Item 5. Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities 20 Item 6. Selected Financial Data 23 Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations 25 Item 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk 42 Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data 45 Item 9. Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure 45 Item 9A. Controls and Procedures 45 Item 9B. Other Information 47 PART III Item 10. Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance 47 Item 11. Executive Compensation 47 Item 12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters 48 Item 13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence 48 Item 14. Principal Accountants Fees and Services 48 PART IV Item 15. Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules 48 Item 16. Form 10-K Summary 51 SIGNATURES 52 INDEX TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF TTEC HOLDINGS, INC. F-1 ii CAUTIONARY NOTE ABOUT FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS This Annual Report on Form 10-K contains “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, relating to our operations, expected financial position, results of operation, and other business matters that are based on our current expectations, assumptions, and projections with respect to the future, and are not a guarantee of performance. In this report, when we use words such as “may,” “believe,” “plan,” “will,” “anticipate,” “estimate,” “expect,” “intend,” “project,” “would,” “could,” “target,” or similar expressions, or when we discuss our strategy, plans, goals, initiatives, or objectives, we are making forward-looking statements. We caution you not to rely unduly on any forward-looking statements. Actual results may differ materially from what is expressed in the forward-looking statements, and you should review and consider carefully the risks, uncertainties and other factors that affect our business and may cause such differences as outlined but are not limited to factors discussed in the section of this report entitled “Risk Factors”. Our forward-looking statements speak only as of the date that this report is filed with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) and we undertake no obligation to update them, except as may be required by applicable laws. AVAILABILITY OF INFORMATION TTEC Holdings, Inc.’s principal executive offices are located at 9197 South Peoria Street, Englewood, Colorado 80112. Electronic copies of our Annual Reports on Form 10-K, Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q, Current Reports on Form 8-K, Proxy Statements and any amendments to these reports are available free of charge by (i) visiting our website at http://www.ttec.com/investors/sec-filings/ or (ii) sending a written request to Investor Relations at our corporate headquarters or to investor.relations@ttec.com. TTEC’s SEC filings are posted on our corporate website as soon as reasonably practical after we electronically file such materials with, or furnish them to, the SEC. Information on our website is not incorporated by reference into this report. You may also access any materials that we file with the SEC at the SEC’s Public Reference Room at 100 F. Street, N.E., Room 1580, Washington, D.C. 20549 (telephone number 1-800-SEC-0330); or via the SEC’s public website at www.sec.gov. 1 PART I ITEM 1. BUSINESS Our Business TTEC Holdings, Inc. (“TTEC”, “the Company”, “we”, “our” or “us”) is a global customer experience company that designs, builds and operates omnichannel customer experiences on behalf of some of the world's most innovative brands. We help these large global companies increase revenue and reduce costs by delivering personalized customer experiences across every interaction channel and phase of the customer lifecycle as an end-to-end provider of customer engagement services, technologies, insights and innovations. Since our establishment in 1982, we have helped clients strengthen their customer relationships, brand recognition and loyalty by simplifying and personalizing interactions with their customers. We deliver thought leadership, through innovation in programs that differentiate our clients from their competition. We are organized into two centers of excellence: TTEC Digital and TTEC Engage. • TTEC Digital provides digital consultancy for designing and building human centric, tech-enabled, insight-driven customer experience solutions. • TTEC Engage is the Company’s global hub of operational excellence providing clients with turnkey customer acquisition, care, revenue growth, and digital trust and safety services. TTEC Digital and TTEC Engage come together under our unified offering, HumanifyTM Customer Engagement as a Service, which drives measurable results for clients through delivery of personalized omnichannel interactions that are seamless and relevant. Our offering is supported by 56,000 employees delivering services in 24 countries from 97 customer engagement centers on six continents. Our end-to-end approach differentiates the Company by combining service design, strategic consulting, data analytics, process optimization, system integration, operational excellence, and technology solutions and services. This unified offering is value-oriented, outcome-based, and delivered on a global scale across four business segments, two of which comprise TTEC Engage - Customer Management Services (“CMS”) and Customer Growth Services (“CGS”); and two of which comprise TTEC Digital - Customer Technology Services (“CTS”) and Customer Strategy Services (“CSS”). Our revenue for fiscal 2017 was $1,477 million, approximately 23% or $336 million of which came from the CGS, CTS and CSS segments, focused on customer-centric strategy, growth or technology-based services with the remainder of our revenue coming from the core customer care services of our CMS segment. To improve our competitive position in a rapidly changing market and stay strategically relevant to our clients, we continue to invest in innovation and growth businesses, diversifying and strengthening our core customer care services with consulting, data analytics and insights technologies, and technology-enabled, outcomes-focused services. We also invest in businesses that enable us to expand our geographic footprint, broaden our product and service capabilities, increase our global client base and industry expertise, and further scale our end-to-end integrated solutions platform. In 2017, we acquired Motif, Inc., a digital trust and safety services company based in India and the Philippines, and Connextions, Inc., a U.S.-based health services company focused on improving the customer relationships for healthcare plan providers and pharmacy benefits managers. While we have customer relationship experience in almost every industry, we have developed tailored expertise in the automotive, communications, healthcare, financial services, government, logistics, media and entertainment, retail, technology, travel and transportation industries. We target customer-focused industry leaders in the Global 1000 and serve approximately 300 clients globally. Our strong balance sheet, cash flows from operations and access to debt and capital markets have historically provided us the financial flexibility to effectively fund our organic growth, capital expenditures, strategic acquisitions, incremental investments, and capital distributions. 2 We continue to return capital to our shareholders via an ongoing stock repurchase program and semi-annual dividends. As of December 31, 2017, our cumulative authorized share repurchase allowance was $762.3 million, of which we have repurchased 46.1 million shares for $735.8 million. Our remaining repurchase allowance is $26.6 million which may be increased at the discretion of our Board of Directors. For the period from January 1, 2018 through February 28, 2018, we did not purchase any additional shares. Our stock repurchase program does not have an expiration date. Given our cash flow generation and balance sheet strength, we believe cash dividends and early returns to shareholders through share repurchases, in balance with our investments in innovation and strategic acquisitions, align shareholder interests with the needs of the Company. On February 24, 2015, our Board of Directors adopted a dividend policy, with the intent to distribute a periodic cash dividend to stockholders of our common stock, after consideration of, among other things, TTEC’s performance, cash flows from operations, capital needs and liquidity factors. The initial dividend of $0.18 per common share was paid on March 16, 2015 to shareholders of record as of March 6, 2015. Thereafter, the Company has been paying a semi-annual dividend in October and April of each year in amounts ranging between $0.18 and $0.25 per common share. Effective February 28, 2018, the Company’s Board of Directors authorized an additional semi-annual dividend of $0.27 per common share, payable on April 12, 2018 to shareholders of record as of March 30, 2018. Our Market Opportunity Our end-to-end customer experience approach is designed to drive retention, affinity, growth, and customer protection, all with savings for our clients. Our transition from multichannel to true omnichannel service requires agility and speed and TTEC’s integrated approach is growing in strategic relevance because of the following trends: • Increasing focus on customer engagement to sustain competitive advantage. — The ability to sustain a competitive advantage based on price or product differentiation has significantly narrowed given the speed of technological innovation. As our clients’ customers become more connected and widely broadcast their experiences across a variety of social networking channels, the quality of the experience has a profound impact on brand loyalty and business performance. We believe customers are increasingly shaping their attitudes, behaviors and willingness to recommend or stay with a brand on the totality of their experience, including not only the superiority of the product or service but more importantly on the quality of their ongoing service interactions. Given the strong correlation between high customer satisfaction and improved profitability, we believe more companies are increasingly focused on selecting third-party partners, such as TTEC, that can deliver integrated insights-driven strategy, service and technology solutions that increase the lifetime value of each customer relationship versus merely reducing costs. • Increasing percentage of companies consolidating their customer engagement requirements with a few select partners who can deliver measurable business outcomes by offering an integrated, technology-rich solution. — The proliferation of mobile communication technologies and devices along with customers’ increased access to information and heightened expectations are driving the need for companies to implement enabling technologies that ensure customers have the best experience across all devices and channels. These two-way interactions need to be received or delivered seamlessly via the customer channel of choice and include voice, email, chat, SMS text, intelligent self serve, virtual agents and the social network. We believe companies will continue to consolidate to third-party partners, like TTEC, who have demonstrated expertise in increasing brand value by delivering a holistic, integrated customer-centric solution that spans the customer experience from strategy through execution versus the time, expense and often failed returns resulting from linking together a series of point solutions from different providers. 3 • Focus on speed-to-market by companies launching new products or entering new geographic locations. — As companies broaden their product offerings and enter new markets, they are looking for partners that can provide speed-to-market while reducing their capital and operating risk. To achieve these benefits, companies select us because of our extensive operating track record, established global footprint, financial strength, commitment to innovation, and our ability to quickly scale infrastructure and complex business processes around the globe in a short period of time while assuring a high-quality experience for their customers. Our Strategy We aim to grow our revenue and profitability by focusing on our core customer engagement operational capabilities linking them to higher margin, insights and technology-enabled platforms and managed services to drive a superior customer experience for our clients’ customers. To that end we plan to continue: • Building deeper, more strategic relationships with existing global clients to drive enduring, transformational change within their organizations; • Pursuing new clients who lead their respective industries and who are committed to customer engagement as a differentiator; • Investing in our sales leadership team at both the segment level to improve collaboration and speed-to-market and consultative sales level to deliver more integrated, strategic, and transformational solutions; • Executing strategic acquisitions that further complement and expand our integrated solutions; • Investing in technology-enabled platforms and innovating through technology advancements, broader and globally protected intellectual property, and process optimization, and • Working within our technology partner ecosystem to deliver best in class solutions with expanding intellectual property through value-add applications, integrations, services and solutions. Our Integrated Service Offerings, Centers of Excellence and Business Segments We have two centers of excellence that encompass our four operating and reportable segments. TTEC Digital houses our professional services and technology platforms. These solutions are critical to enabling and accelerating digital transformation for our clients. Customer Strategy Services Segment Through our strategy and operations, analytics, and learning and performance consulting expertise, we help our clients design, build and execute their customer engagement strategies. We help our clients to better understand and predict their customers’ behaviors and preferences along with their current and future economic value. Using proprietary analytic models, we provide the insight clients need to build the business case for customer centricity and to better optimize their investments in customer experience. This insight-based strategy creates a roadmap for transformation. We build customer journey maps to inform service design across automated, human and hybrid interaction and increasingly are developing and implementing strategies around Interactive Virtual Assistants (chat bots). A key component of this segment involves instilling a high-performance culture through management and leadership alignment and process optimization. 4 Customer Technology Services Segment In connection with the design of the customer engagement strategy, our ability to architect, deploy and host or manage the client’s customer experience environments becomes a key enabler to achieving and sustaining the client’s customer engagement vision. Given the proliferation of mobile communication technologies and devices, we enable our clients’ operations to interact with their customers across the growing array of channels including email, social networks, mobile, web, SMS text, voice and chat. We design, implement and manage cloud, on-premise or hybrid customer experience environments to deliver a consistent and superior experience across all touch points on a global scale that we believe result in higher quality, lower costs and reduced risk for our clients. Through our Humanify™ Technology platforms, we also provide data-driven context aware software-as-a-service (“SaaS”) based solutions that link customers seamlessly and directly to appropriate resources, any time and across any channel. TTEC Engage houses our end-to-end managed services operations for customer care, growth and trust and safety services. Customer Management Services Segment We design and manage clients’ front-to-back office processes to deliver just-in-time, personalized, protected, multi-channel interactions. Our front-office solutions seamlessly integrate voice, chat, email, e-commerce and social media to optimize the customer experience for our clients. In addition, we manage certain client back-office processes to enhance their customer-centric view of relationships and maximize operating efficiencies. We also perform fraud prevention and content moderation services to protect our clients and their customers from malevolent digital activities. Our delivery of integrated business processes via our onshore, offshore or work-from-home associates reduces operating costs and allows customer needs to be met more quickly and efficiently, resulting in higher satisfaction, brand loyalty and a stronger competitive position for our clients. Customer Growth Services Segment We offer integrated sales and marketing solutions to help our clients boost revenue in new, fragmented or underpenetrated business-to-consumer or business-to-business markets. We deliver or manage approximately $4 billion in client revenue annually via the discovery, acquisition, growth and retention of customers through a combination of our highly trained, client-dedicated sales professionals and proprietary analytics platform. This platform continuously aggregates individual customer information across all channels into one holistic view so as to ensure more relevant and personalized communications. Based on our clients’ requirements, we provide our services on an integrated cross-business segment and on a discrete basis. Additional information with respect to our segments and geographic footprint is included in Part II, Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 3 to the Consolidated Financial Statements. Our Competitive Strengths We believe that our differentiation lies in our integrated unified offering and our holistic approach to customer experience and engagement as an end-to-end provider of customer engagement services, technologies, insights and innovations. Humanify Customer Engagement as a Service includes customer strategy, technology services, customer management, growth and protections services. We also believe that our insight-driven technological solutions, innovative human capital strategies and globally scaled and deployed best practices in operational excellence are key elements to our continued industry leadership. As the complexity and pace of technological change required to deliver our omnichannel customer engagement increases, the successful execution of our principal corporate strategies depends on our competitive strengths, which are briefly described below: • Our industry reputation and leadership position reflecting more than three decades of delivering integrated customer engagement solutions to our clients; • Omnichannel, multi-modal solutions that meet the rapidly changing profile of the customer and their heightened expectations; 5 • Scalable technology and human capital infrastructure using globally deployed best practices to ensure a consistent, high-quality service; • Tailored and optimized customer care delivery through the use of proprietary workforce hiring, award-winning training and development programs, and performance optimization methodology and tools; and • Commitment to continued investment and innovation that enhances the strategic capabilities of our clients. Technological Excellence Our Humanify Technology Platforms are based on secure, private, 100% internet protocol based infrastructure. This architecture enables us to centralize and standardize our worldwide delivery capabilities resulting in improved scalability and quality of delivery for our clients, as well as lower capital, and lower information technology (“IT”) operating costs. The foundation of this platform is our nine data centers located on five continents. Our data centers provide a fully integrated suite of voice and data routing, workforce management, quality monitoring, business analytic and storage capabilities, enabling seamless operations from any location around the globe. This hub and spoke model enables us to provide our services at competitive cost while increasing scalability, reliability, asset utilization and the diversity of our service offerings. It also provides an effective redundancy for timely responses to system interruptions and outages due to natural disasters and other conditions outside our control. We monitor and manage our data centers 24 x 7, 365 days per year from several strategically located global command centers to ensure the availability of our redundant, fail-over capabilities for each data center. Importantly, this platform has become the foundation for new, innovative offerings including TTEC’s cloud-based offerings, Humanify @Home for remote omnichannel agents, and our suite of human capital solutions. Further, our Humanify Technology Platforms leverage reference architectures for multiple scenarios whether we are operating the platforms and the services, implementing customized platforms for clients, or providing advanced managed services, continuous and automated development environments. Innovative Human Capital Strategies Our globally located, highly trained employees are a crucial component of the success of our business. We have made significant investments in proprietary technologies, management tools, methodologies and training processes in the areas of talent acquisition, learning services, knowledge management, workforce collaboration and performance optimization. These capabilities are the culmination of more than three decades of experience in managing large, global workforces combined with the latest technology, innovation and strategy in the field of human capital management. This capability has enabled us to deliver a consistent, scalable and flexible workforce that is highly engaged in achieving or exceeding our clients’ business objectives. Globally Deployed Best Operating Practices Globally deployed best operating practices assure that we deliver a consistent, scalable, high-quality experience to our clients’ customers from any of our 97 customer engagement centers and work from home associates around the world. Standardized processes include our approach to attracting, screening, hiring, training, scheduling, evaluating, coaching and maximizing associate performance to meet our clients’ needs. We provide real-time reporting and analytics on performance across the globe to ensure consistency of delivery. This information provides valuable insight into what is driving customer inquiries, enabling us to proactively recommend process changes to our clients to optimize their customers’ experience. Our global operating model includes customer engagement centers in 17 countries on six continents that operate 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. New customer engagement centers are established and existing centers are expanded or scaled down to accommodate anticipated business demands or specific client needs. We have significant capacity in the Philippines, India, Mexico and Brazil to support customer demand and deliver superior cost efficiencies. We continue to explore opportunities in North America, Central Europe and Africa to diversify our client footprint enabling near-shore and off-shore locations that enable our multi-lingual service offerings and provide superior client economics. 6 Of the 17 countries from which we provide customer management solutions, 10 provide some services for onshore clients including the U.S., Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Germany, Ireland, South Africa, Thailand, and the United Kingdom. The total number of workstations in these countries is 19,900, or 45% of our total delivery capacity. The other seven countries provide services, partially or entirely, for offshore clients including Bulgaria, Costa Rica, India, Macedonia, Mexico, Poland, and the Philippines. The total number of workstations in these countries is 24,500 or 55% of our total delivery capacity. See Item 1A. Risk Factors for a description of the risks associated with our foreign operations. Clients We develop long-term relationships with Global 1000 companies in customer intensive industries, whose business complexities and customer focus requires a partner that can quickly and globally scale integrated technology and data-enabled services. In 2017, our top five and ten clients represented 35% and 49% of total revenue, respectively; and one of our clients, Telstra Corporation Limited, represented 9.0% of our total annual revenue. In several of our operating segments, we enter into long-term relationships which provide us with a more predictable revenue stream. Although most of our contracts can be terminated for convenience by either party, our relationships with our top five clients have ranged from 10 to 21 years including multiple contract renewals for several of these clients. In 2017, we had a 95% client retention rate for the combined Customer Management Services and Customer Growth Services segments. Certain of our communications clients provide us with telecommunication services through arm’s length negotiated transactions. These clients currently represent approximately 13% of our total annual revenue. Expenditures under these supplier contracts represent less than one percent of our total operating costs. Competition We are a global customer experience company that designs, builds and operates omnichannel customer experiences on our clients’ behalf. Our competitors vary by geography and business segment, and range from large multinational corporations to smaller, narrowly-focused enterprises. Across our lines of business, the principal competitive factors include: client relationships, technology and process innovation, integrated solutions, operational performance and efficiencies, pricing, brand recognition and financial strength. Our strategy in maintaining market leadership is to prudently invest, innovate and provide integrated value-driven services, all centered around customer engagement management. Today, we are executing on a more expansive, holistic strategy by transforming our business into higher-value offerings through organic investments and strategic acquisitions. As we execute, we are differentiating ourselves in the marketplace and entering new markets that introduce us to an expanded competitive landscape. In our Customer Management Services business, we primarily compete with in-house customer management operations as well as other companies that provide customer care including: Alorica, Convergys, Sykes, and Teleperformance, among others. As we expand our offerings into customer engagement consulting, technology, and growth, we are competing with smaller specialized companies and divisions of multinational companies, including Bain & Company, McKinsey & Company, Accenture, IBM, AT&T, Interactive Intelligence, LiveOps, inContact, Five9, WPP, Publicis Groupe, Dentsu, Sitel, and others. Employees Our people are our most valuable asset. As of December 31, 2017, we had 56,000 employees in 24 countries on six continents. Although a percentage of our Customer Management Services segment employees are hired seasonally to address the fourth quarter and first quarter higher business volumes in retail, healthcare and other seasonal industries, most remain employed throughout the year and work at 97 locations and through our @home environment. Approximately 65% of our employees are located outside of the U.S. Approximately 10% of our employees are covered by collective bargaining agreements, most of which are mandated under national labor laws outside of the United States. These agreements are subject to periodic renegotiations and we anticipate that they will be renewed in the ordinary course of business without material impact to our business or in a manner materially different from other companies covered by such industry-wide agreements. 7 Research, Innovation, Intellectual Property and Proprietary Technology We recognize the value of innovation in our business and are committed to developing leading-edge technologies and proprietary solutions. Research and innovation have been a major factor in our success and we believe that they will continue to contribute to our growth in the future. We use our investment in research and development to create, commercialize and deploy innovative business strategies and high-value technology solutions. We deliver value to our clients through, and our success in part depends on, certain proprietary technologies and methodologies. We leverage U.S. and foreign patent, trade secret, copyright and trademark laws as well as confidentiality, proprietary information non-disclosure agreements, and key staff non-competition agreements to protect our proprietary technology. As of December 31, 2017 we had 41 patent applications pending in 8 jurisdictions; and own 116 U.S. and non-U.S. patents that we leverage in our operations and as market place differentiation for our service offerings. Our trade name, logos and names of our proprietary solution offerings are protected by their historic use and by trademarks and service marks registered in 27 countries. ITEM 1A. RISK FACTORS In addition to the other information presented in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, you should carefully consider the risks and uncertainties discussed in this section when evaluating our business. If any of these risks or uncertainties actually occur, our business, financial condition, and results of operations (including revenue, profitability and cash flows) could be materially adversely affected and the market price of our stock may decline. Our markets are highly competitive and we might not be able to compete effectively The markets where we offer our services are highly competitive. Our future performance is largely dependent on our ability to compete successfully in markets we currently serve, while expanding into new, profitable markets. We compete with large multinational service providers; offshore service providers from lower-cost jurisdictions that offer similar services, often at highly competitive prices and more aggressive contract terms; niche solution providers that compete with us in specific geographic markets, industry segments or service areas; companies that rely on new disruptive technologies or delivery models, including artificial intelligence powered solutions; and in-house functions of large companies that use their own resources, rather than outsourcing customer care and customer experience services we provide. Some of our competitors have greater financial or marketing resources than we do and, therefore, may be better able to compete. Further, the continuing trend of consolidation in the technology sector and among business process outsourcing competitors in various geographies where we have operations may result in new competitors with greater scale, a broader footprint, better technologies, and price efficiencies attractive to our clients. If we are unable to compete successfully and provide our clients with superior service and solutions at competitive prices, we could lose market share and clients to competitors, which would materially adversely affect our business, financial condition, and results of operations. If we are unsuccessful in implementing our business strategy, our long-term financial prospects could be adversely affected Our growth strategy is based on continuous diversification of our business beyond contact center customer care outsourcing to an integrated customer experience platform that unites innovative and disruptive technologies, strategic consulting, data analytics, client growth solutions, and customer experience focused system design and integration. These investments in technologies and integrated solution development, however, may not lead to increased revenue and profitability as we may not be successful in deploying our new products and services. If we are not successful in creating value from these investments, the investments could have a negative impact on our operating results and financial condition. 8 Cyber-attacks, cyber-fraud, and unauthorized information disclosure could harm our reputation, cause liability, result in service outages and losses, any of which could adversely affect our business and results of operations Our business involves the use, storage, and transmission of information about our clients, customers of our clients, and our employees. While we take reasonable measures to protect the security of and unauthorized access to our systems and the privacy of personal and proprietary information that we access and store, our security controls over our systems may not prevent the improper access to or disclosure of this information. Such unauthorized access or disclosure could subject us to liability under relevant law and our contracts and could harm our reputation resulting in loss of revenue and loss of business opportunities. In recent years, there have been an increasing number of high profile security breaches at companies and government agencies, and security experts have warned about the growing risks of hackers and cyber criminals launching a broad range of attacks targeting information technology systems. Our business is dependent on information technology systems. Information security breaches, computer viruses, interruption or loss of business data, DDoS (distributed denial of service) attacks, and other cyber-attacks on any of these systems could disrupt the normal operations of our contact centers, our cloud platform offerings, and our enterprise services, impeding our ability to provide critical services to our clients. We are experiencing an increase in frequency of cyber-fraud attempts, such as so-called “social engineering” attacks and phishing scams, which typically seek unauthorized money transfers or information disclosure. We actively train our employees to recognize these attacks and have implemented proactive risk mitigation measures to curb them. There are no assurances, however, that these attacks, which are also growing in sophistication, may deceive our employees, resulting in a material loss. While we have taken reasonable measures to protect our systems and processes from intrusion and cyber-fraud, we cannot be certain that advances in cyber-criminal capabilities, discovery of new system vulnerabilities, and attempts to exploit such vulnerabilities will not compromise or breach the technology protecting our systems and the information that we manage and control, which could result in damage to our systems, our reputation and our profitability. Our need for consistent improvements in cybersecurity may force us to expend significant additional resources to respond to system disruptions and security breaches, including additional investments in repairing systems damaged by such attacks, reconfiguring and rerouting systems to reduce vulnerabilities, and resolution of legal claims that may arise from data breaches. A significant cyber security breach could materially harm our business, financial condition, and operating results. The recently enacted General Data Protection Regulation (“GDPR”) in Europe goes into effect in the second quarter of 2018. We are currently working to develop our compliance solutions for GDPR and, once fully implemented these solutions may impose significant incremental costs on our operations in Europe, thus impacting our results of operations. Our results of operations and ability to grow could be materially adversely affected if we cannot adapt our service offerings to changes in technology Our success depends on our ability to develop and implement technology, consulting and outsourcing services and solutions that anticipate and respond to rapid and continuous changes in technology. Areas of significant change include artificial intelligence, digital offerings, voice recognition and self-help software solutions, automation, chatbots, and ‘as-a-service’ cloud solutions. Our growth and profitability will depend on our ability to develop and adopt new disruptive technologies that expand our existing offerings to leverage new technological trends and cost efficiencies in our operations. 9 We may not be successful in anticipating or responding to new technology developments and our integration of these technologies may not achieve their intended service enhancements or cost reductions. Services and technologies offered by our competitors may make our service offerings obsolete and may reduce or replace some of our offerings. As technology continues to evolve, more tasks currently performed by our agents may be replaced by automation, robotics, artificial intelligence, chatbots and other technological advances, which pose risks our lower-skill, tier one, customer care offerings. These technology innovations could potentially reduce our business volumes and related revenues, unless we are successful in adoption and deployment of technological alternatives that replace our tier one service offerings. Our failure to innovate, maintain technological advantage, or respond effectively and timely to transformational changes in technology could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, and results of operations. If we are unable to attract and retain talented and experienced executives for key positions in our business, our business and our strategy execution can be adversely impacted Our business success depends on contributions of senior management and key personnel. Our ability to attract, motivate and retain key senior management staff is conditioned on our ability to pay adequate compensation and incentives. We compete for top senior management candidates with other, often larger, companies that at times have access to greater resources. Our ability to attract qualified individuals for our senior management team is also impacted by our requirement that members of senior management sign non-compete agreements as a condition to joining TTEC. If we are not able to attract and retain talented and experienced executives, we would be unable to compete effectively and our growth may be limited, which could have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations, and prospects. A large portion of our revenue is generated from a limited number of clients and the loss of one or more of our clients could adversely affect our business We rely on strategic, long-term relationships with large, global companies in targeted industries. As a result, we derive a substantial portion of our revenue from relatively few clients. Our five and ten largest clients collectively represented 35% and 49% of our revenue in 2017 while the largest client represented 9.0% of our revenue in 2017. Although we have multiple engagements with all of our largest clients and all contracts are unlikely to terminate at the same time, the contracts with our five largest clients expire between 2018 and 2023 and there can be no assurance that these contracts will continue to be renewed at all or be renewed on favorable terms. The loss of all or part of a major client’s business could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, and results of operations, if the loss of revenue was not replaced with profitable business from other clients. We serve clients in industries that have historically experienced a significant level of consolidation. If one of our clients is acquired (including by another of our clients) our business volume and revenue may materially decrease due to the termination or phase out of an existing client contract, volume discounts or other contract concessions which could have an adverse effect on our business, financial condition, and results of operations. Our delivery model involves geographic concentration exposing us to significant operational risks Our business model is dependent on our service customer engagement centers and enterprise support functions being located in low cost jurisdictions around the globe. We have on the ground presence in 24 countries, but our customer care and experience management delivery capacity and our back office functions are concentrated in the Philippines, Mexico, India, and Bulgaria and our technology solutions customer engagement centers are concentrated in a few locations in the United States. Natural disasters (floods, winds, and earthquakes), terrorist attacks, pandemics, large-scale utilities outages, telecommunication and transportation disruptions, labor or political unrest, and restriction on repatriation of funds at some of these locations may interrupt or limit our ability to operate or may increase our costs. Our business continuity and disaster recovery plans, while extensive, may not be effective, particularly if catastrophic events occur. 10 Our dependence on our customer engagement centers and enterprise services support functions in the Philippines, which is subject to frequent severe weather, natural disasters, and occasional security threats, represents a particular risk. For these and other reasons, our geographic concentration could result in a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations. Although we procure business interruption insurance to cover some of these exposures, adequate insurance may not be available on an ongoing basis for a reasonable price. Our growth of operations could strain our resources and cause our business to suffer We plan to continue growing our business organically through expansion, sales efforts, and strategic acquisitions, while maintaining tight controls on our expenses and overhead. Lean overhead functions combined with focused growth may place a strain on our management systems, infrastructure and resources, resulting in internal control failures, missed opportunities, and staff attrition which could impact our business and results of operations. Our profitability could suffer if our cost-management strategies are unsuccessful Our ability to improve or maintain our profitability is dependent on our ability to engage in continuous management of our costs. Our cost management strategies include optimizing the alignment between the demand for our services and our resource capacity, including contact center utilization; the costs of service delivery; the cost of sales and general and administrative costs as a percentage of revenues, and the use of process automation for standard operating tasks. If we are not effective in managing our operating and administrative costs in response to changes in demand and pricing for our services, or if we are unable to absorb or pass on to our clients the increases in our costs of operations, our results of operations could be materially adversely affected. Our financial results depend on our capacity utilization and our ability to forecast demand and make timely decisions about staffing levels, investments, and operating expenses Our ability to meet our strategic growth and profitability objectives depends on how effectively we manage our contact center capacity against the fluctuating and seasonal client demands. Predicting customer demand and making timely staffing level decisions, investments, and other operating expenditure commitments in each of our delivery center locations is key to our successful execution and profitability maximization. We can provide no assurance that we will continue to be able to achieve or maintain desired delivery center capacity utilization, because quarterly variations in client volumes, many of which are outside our control, can have a material adverse effect on our utilization rates. If our utilization rates are below expectations, because of our high fixed costs of operation, our financial conditions and results of operations could be adversely affected. If we cannot recruit, hire, train, and retain qualified employees to respond to client demands, our business will be adversely affected Our business is labor intensive and our ability to recruit and train employees with the right skills, at the right price point, and in the time frame required by our client commitments is critical to achieving our growth objective. Demand for qualified personnel with multiple language capabilities and fluency in English may exceed supply. Employees with specific backgrounds and skills may also be required to keep pace with evolving technologies and client demands. While we invest in employee retention, we continue to experience high employee turnover and are continuously recruiting and training replacement staff. Some of our facilities are located in geographies with low unemployment, which makes it costly to hire personnel, and in several jurisdictions, jurisdiction-specific wage regulations are changing rapidly making it difficult to recruit new employees at price points acceptable for our business model. Our inability to attract and retain qualified personnel at costs acceptable under our contracts, our costs associated with attracting, training, and retaining employees, and the challenge of managing the continuously changing and seasonal client demands could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, and results of operations. 11 Uncertainty related to cost of labor across various jurisdictions in the United States could adversely affect our results of operating As a labor intensive business, we sign multi-year client contracts that are priced based on prevailing labor costs in jurisdictions where we deliver services. Yet, our business is confronted with a patchwork of ever changing minimum wage, mandatory time off, and rest and meal break laws at the state and local levels. As these jurisdiction-specific laws change with little notice or grace period for transition, we often have no opportunity to adjust and change how we do business and pass cost increases to our clients. The frequent changes in the law and inconsistencies in laws across different jurisdictions in the United States, may result in higher costs, lower contract profitability, higher turnover, and reduced operational efficiencies, which could in the aggregate have material adverse impact on our results of operations. Turnover in senior sales staff and the length of time required for newly-hired sales staff to become productive could adversely impact our growth and our results of operations It can take several months before newly-hired sales staff are productive in selling our service offerings, technology and consulting solutions to prospective clients. The long ramp period impacts the speed at which they can be effective in contributing to our growth. The cost of sales staff recruiting and their base compensation, therefore, cannot be immediately offset by the revenue such staff produce. Further, given the length of the ramp period, sometimes we cannot determine if new sales representatives would succeed until they have been employed for a period of time. If we cannot reliably limit turnover in our sales staff and speed up development of newly-hired sales staff to a productive level, or if we lose productive sales representatives in whom we have heavily invested, our future growth rates and revenue will suffer. Our sales cycles for new client relationships and new lines of business with existing clients can be long, which results in a long lead time before we receive certain revenues We often face a long selling cycle to secure contracts with new clients or contracts for new lines of business with existing clients. When we are successful in securing a new engagement, it is generally followed by a long implementation period when clients must give notice to incumbent service providers or transfer in-house operations to us. There may also be a long ramp up period before we commence our services, and for certain contracts we receive no revenue until we start performing the work. If we are not successful in obtaining contractual commitments after the initial prolonged sales cycle or in maintaining the contractual relationship for a period of time necessary to offset new project investment costs and appropriate return on that investment, the investments may have a material adverse effect on our results of operations. Contract terms typical in our industry can lead to volatility in our revenue and our margins Many of our contracts have termination for convenience clauses, which could have a material adverse effect on our results of operation. Although many of our contracts can be terminated for convenience, our relationships with our top five clients have ranged from 10 to 21 years with the majority of these clients having completed multiple contract renewals with us. Yet, our contracts do not guarantee a minimum revenue level or profitability, and clients may terminate them or materially reduce customer interaction volumes, which would reduce our earning potential. This could have a material adverse effect on our results of operations and makes it harder to make projections. Many of our contracts utilize performance pricing that link some of our fees to the attainment of performance criteria, which could increase the variability of our revenue and operating margin. These performance criteria can be complex, and at times they are not entirely within our control. If we fail to satisfy our contract performance metrics, our revenue under the contracts and our operating margin are reduced. 12 We may not always offset increased costs with increased fees under long-term contracts. The pricing and other terms of our client contracts, particularly our long-term contact center agreements, are based on estimates and assumptions we make at the time we enter into these contracts. These estimates reflect our best judgments regarding the nature of the engagement and our expected costs to provide the contracted services and could differ from actual results. Not all our larger long-term contracts allow for escalation of fees as our cost of operations increase and those that allow for such escalations do not always allow increases at rates comparable to increases that we experience due to rising minimum wage costs and related payroll cost increases. If we cannot negotiate long-term contract terms that provide for fee adjustments to reflect increases in our cost of service delivery, our business, financial conditions, and results of operation would be materially impacted. Our contracts seldom address the impacts of currency fluctuation on our costs of delivery. As we continue to leverage our global delivery model, more of our expenses may be incurred in currencies other than those in which we bill for services. An increase in the value of certain currencies, such as U.S. or Australian dollar against the Philippine peso and India rupee, could increase costs for our delivery at offshore sites by increasing our labor and other costs that are denominated in local currencies. Our contractual provisions, cost management efforts, and currency hedging activities may not be able to offset the currency fluctuation impact, resulting in the decrease of the profitability of our contracts. Our pricing depends on effectiveness of our forecasting of the level of effort. Pricing for our services in our technology and strategic consulting businesses is highly contingent on our ability to accurately forecast the level of effort and cost necessary to deliver our services, which is data dependent and could turn out to be materially inaccurate. The inaccurate level of effort in project estimates could yield lower profit margins or cause projects to become unprofitable, resulting in adverse impacts on our results of operations. The new U.S. tax reform legislation and uncertainties of related interpretations may adversely affect our results of operations The United States recently enacted comprehensive tax reform legislation known as the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (the "2017 Tax Act") that, among other things, reduces the U.S. federal corporate income tax rate from 35% to 21% and implements a territorial tax system, but imposes an alternative “base erosion and anti-abuse tax” (“BEAT”), an incremental tax on global intangible low taxed foreign income (“GILTI”) as well as a one-time mandatory repatriation tax on accumulated foreign earnings on domestic corporations. The comprehensive impact of the BEAT and GILTI on TTEC is not yet clear and will depend on future tax regulatory guidance and actions the Company may take, as a result of the 2017 Tax Act. There are a number of uncertainties and ambiguities as to the interpretation and application of many of the provisions in the 2017 Tax Act, such as for example, the impact of the BEAT on the deductibility of payments we routinely make to our foreign affiliates for cost of services delivered outside of the United States and sold to clients based in the United States. In the absence of guidance on these issues, we will use what we believe to be reasonable interpretations and assumptions in applying the provisions of the 2017 Tax Act for purposes of determining our income tax liability and results of operations. Future guidance on the interpretations of the 2017 Tax Act that will be provided by the U.S. Department of Treasury or audit positions that may be taken by the Internal Revenue Service that differ from the interpretations and assumptions that we will reasonably make could have a material adverse effect on our overall effective tax rate, results of operations and financial condition. Uncertainty of tax regulations in countries where we do business may affect our costs of operation We operate in multiple countries through legal entity structures that optimize our operations and tax positions globally. We make our business decisions regarding entity capitalization and repatriation of capital based on the needs of the business and costs and tax impacts of such decisions. Corporate tax reform, base-erosion efforts and tax transparency continue to be high priorities in many tax jurisdictions where we have business operations. As a result, policies regarding corporate income and other taxes in numerous jurisdictions are under heightened scrutiny. Changes in the tax regulations in the countries where we currently operate could lead to higher taxation levels, higher costs of doing business, and labor uncertainties when employees’ take-home pay is impacted by unexpected tax changes. 13 We face special risks associated with our business outside of the United States An important component of our business strategy is service delivery outside of the United States and our continuing international expansion. In 2017 we derived approximately 44% of our revenue from operations outside of the United States. Conducting business abroad is subject to a variety of risks, including: • currency exchange rate fluctuations, restrictions on currency movement, and impact of international tax laws could adversely affect our results of operations, if we are forced to maintain assets in currencies other than the U.S. dollars, while our financial results are reported in U.S. dollars; • longer payment cycles and/or difficulties in accounts receivable collections particular to operations outside of the United States could impact our cash flows and results of operations; • political and economic instability and unexpected changes in regulatory regimes could adversely affect our ability to deliver services overseas and our ability to repatriate cash; • inconsistent regulations, licensing and legal requirements may increase our cost of operations as we endeavor to comply with multiple, complex laws that differ from one country to another; • terrorist attacks and civil unrests in some of the regions where we do business (e.g. tension in the Middle East, Latin America, and the Philippines, and terror attacks in Europe), and the resulting need for enhanced security measures may impact our ability to deliver services, threaten the safety of our employees, and increase our costs of operations; and • special challenges in managing risks inherent in international operations, such as unique and prescriptive labor rules, corrupt business environments, restrictive immigration and export control laws may cause an inadvertent violation of laws that we may not be able to immediately detect or correct. While we monitor and endeavor to mitigate timely the relevant regulatory, geopolitical, and other risks related to our operations outside of the United States, we cannot assess with certainty what impact such risks are likely to have over time on our business, and we can provide no assurance that we will always be able to mitigate these risks successfully and avoid material impact to our business and results of operations. Our profitability may be adversely affected if we are unable to expand and maintain our contact centers in countries with stable wage rates and find new “near shore” locations required by our clients. Our business is labor-intensive and therefore cost of wages, benefits and related taxes constitute a large component of our operating expenses. As a result, expansion of our business is dependent upon our ability to maintain and expand our operations in cost-effective locations, in and outside of the United States. Most of our contact centers are located in jurisdictions subject to minimum wage regulations, which may result in increased wages in the future, thus impacting our profitability. Our clients often dictate where they wish for us to locate the contact centers that serve their customers and ‘near shore’ jurisdictions located in close proximity to the United States have grown in popularity recently. There is no assurance that we will be able to find and secure locations suitable for contact center operations in ‘near shore’ jurisdictions which meet our cost-effectiveness and security standards. Our inability to expand our operations to such ‘near shore’ locations, however, may impact our ability to secure new and additional business from clients, and may impact our growth and results of operations. 14 Restrictions on mobility of people across borders may affect our ability to compete for and provide services to clients Our business depends on the ability of some of our employees to obtain the necessary visas and entry permits to do business in the countries where our clients and contact centers are located. In recent years, in response to terrorist attacks and global unrest, immigration authorities generally, and those in the United States in particular, have increased the level of scrutiny in granting such visas, and even imposed bans on immigration and commercial travel for citizens of certain countries. If further terrorist attacks occur or global unrest intensifies, we anticipate that these restrictions will further increase. Immigration and business entry rules outside of the United States may also require us to meet certain additional legal requirements as a condition to obtaining or maintaining visas. Furthermore, immigration laws in most countries where we do business are subject to legislative change and varying standards of application and enforcement due to political forces, economic conditions or other events unrelated to our operations. If we are unable to obtain the necessary visas for our personnel with need to travel to the United States or for our United States based employees who may need to travel to countries with newly restricted access; if the issuance of such visas is delayed or if the length of such visas is shortened, we may not be able to continue to provide services on a timely and cost-effective basis, receive revenues as early as expected or manage our customer engagement centers efficiently. Any of these developments could have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations and financial condition. If the transfer pricing arrangements we have among our subsidiaries are determined to be inappropriate, our tax liability may increase We have transfer pricing arrangements among our subsidiaries in relation to various aspects of our business, including operations, marketing, sales, and delivery functions. U.S., Australian, Philippines and other transfer pricing regulations in other countries where we operate, require that cross-border transactions between affiliates be on arm’s-length terms. We carefully consider the pricing among our subsidiaries to assure that they are at arm’s-length. If tax authorities were to determine that the transfer prices and terms we have applied are not appropriate, we may incur increased tax liability, including accrued interest and penalties, which would cause material increase in our tax liability, thereby impacting our profitability and cash flows, and potentially resulting in a material adverse effect on our operations, effective tax rate and financial condition. The recently enacted 2017 Tax Act in the U.S. may impact the transfer pricing arrangements we have with our cross-border affiliates, because of potential impact BEAT (base erosion and anti-abuse tax) may have on such payments. The comprehensive impact of the BEAT on TTEC is not yet clear and will depend on future tax regulatory guidance and actions the Company may take, as a result of the 2017 Tax Act. If the requirements of 2017 Tax Act and requirements of tax regulations in countries where we have subsidiaries do not reconcile, our overall tax liability and penalties resulting from transfer pricing arrangements may impact our profitability, effective tax rate and financial condition. Our strategy of growing through acquisitions may impact our business in unexpected ways Our growth strategy involves acquisitions that help us expand our service offerings and diversify our geographic footprint. We continuously evaluate acquisition opportunities, but there are no assurances that we will be able to identify acquisition targets that complement our strategy and are available at valuation levels accretive to our business. Even if we are successful in acquiring, our acquisitions may subject our business to risks that may impact our results of operation: • inability to integrate acquired companies effectively and realize anticipated synergies and benefits from the acquisitions; • diversion of management’s attention to the integration of the acquired businesses at the expense of delivering results for the legacy business; • inability to appropriately scale critical resources to support the business of the expanded enterprise and other unforeseen challenges of operating the acquired business as part of TTEC’s operations; 15 • inability to retain key employees of the acquired businesses and/or inability of such key employees to be effective as part of TTEC operations; • impact of liabilities of the acquired businesses undiscovered or underestimated as part of the acquisition due diligence; • failure to realize anticipated growth opportunities from a combined business, because existing and potential clients may be unwilling to consolidate business with a single supplier or to stay with the acquirer post acquisition; • impacts of cash on hand and debt incurred to finance acquisitions, thus reducing liquidity for other significant strategic objectives; and • internal controls, disclosure controls, corruption prevention policies, human resources and other key policies and practices of the acquired companies may be inadequate or ineffective. We have incurred and may in the future incur impairments to goodwill, long-lived assets or strategic investments As a result of past acquisitions, as of December 31, 2017, we have approximately $206.7 million of goodwill and $92.1 million of intangible assets included on our Consolidated Balance Sheet. We review our goodwill and intangible assets for impairment at least once annually, and more often when events or changes in circumstances indicate the carrying value may not be recoverable. We perform an assessment of qualitative and quantitative factors to determine whether the existence of events or circumstances leads to a determination that it is more likely than not that the fair value of the goodwill or intangible asset is less than its carrying amount. In the event that the book value of goodwill or intangible asset is impaired, such impairment would be charged to earnings in the period when such impairment is determined. We have recorded goodwill and intangible impairments in the past, and there can be no assurance that we will not incur impairment charges in the future that could have material adverse effects on our financial condition or results of operations. Our share price could be adversely affected if we are unable to maintain effective internal controls over financial reporting and we are not able to prevent or timely detect errors or fraud Our management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting. As previously disclosed, in prior periods, our management had identified material weaknesses in our internal control over financial reporting and has taken remedial actions that we believe remediate such material weaknesses. Although we improved our control environment in response to the previously identified material weaknesses, there can be no assurances that we will be able to prevent future control deficiencies, including material weaknesses, from occurring. Any internal and disclosure controls and procedures, no matter how well conceived and operated, can provide only reasonable, not absolute, assurance that the objectives of the control system are met. Inherent limitations within a control system include the realities that judgments in decision-making can be faulty, and that breakdowns can occur because of simple error or mistake. Additionally, any controls can be circumvented by individuals acting alone or in collusion with others to override controls. If additional material weaknesses or significant deficiencies in our internal control over financial reporting are discovered or occur in the future, our consolidated financial statements may contain material misstatements. These misstatements could result in restatements of our consolidated financial statements and cause investors to lose confidence in our reported financial information, which could lead to a decline in our stock price. Intellectual property infringement by us and by others may adversely impact our ability to innovate and compete Our solutions could infringe intellectual property of others impacting our ability to deploy them with clients. From time to time, we and members of our supply chain receive assertions that our service offerings or technologies infringe on the patents or other intellectual property rights of third parties. While to date we have been successful in defending such claims and many of these claims are without basis, the claims could require us to cease activities, incur expensive licensing costs, or engage in costly litigation, which could adversely affect our business and results of operation. 16 Our intellectual property may not always receive favorable treatment from the United States Patent and Trademark Office, the European Patent Office or similar foreign intellectual property adjudication and registration agencies; and our “patent pending” intellectual property may not receive a patent or may be subject to prior art limitations. The lack of legal system sophistication in certain countries where we do business or lack of commitment to protection of intellectual property rights, may prevent us from being able to defend our intellectual property and related technology against infringement by others, leading to a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations and financial condition. Increases in the cost of communication and data services or significant interruptions in such services could adversely affect our business Our business is significantly dependent on telephone, internet and data service provided by various domestic and foreign communication companies. Any disruption of these services could adversely affect our business. We have taken steps to mitigate our exposure to service disruptions by investing in complex and multi-layered redundancies, and we can transition services among our different contact centers around the world. Despite these efforts, there can be no assurance, however, that the redundancies we have in place would be sufficient to maintain operations without disruption. Our inability to obtain communication and data services at favorable rates could negatively affect our results of operations. Where possible, we have entered into long-term contracts with various providers to mitigate short term rate increases and fluctuations. There is no obligation, however, for the vendors to renew their contracts with us, or to offer the same or lower rates in the future, and such contracts are subject to termination or modification for various reasons outside of our control. A significant increase in the cost of communication services that is not recoverable through an increase in the price of our services could adversely affect our business. Defects or errors within software could adversely affect our business. The third-party software and systems that we use to conduct our business and serve our clients is highly complex and may, from time to time, contain design defects, coding errors or other software errors that may be difficult to detect or correct, and which are outside of our control. Although our commercial agreements may contain provisions designed to limit our exposure to potential claims and liabilities, these provisions may not effectively protect us against claims in all cases and in all jurisdictions. As a result, problems with the software and systems that we use may result in damages to our clients for which we are held responsible, or cause damage to our reputation, adversely affecting our business, results of operations, and financial condition. Our financial results may be adversely impacted by foreign currency exchange rate risk Many contracts that we service from customer care contact centers based outside of the United States are typically priced, invoiced, and paid in U.S. and Australian dollars or Euros, while the costs incurred to deliver the services and operate contact centers are incurred in the functional currencies of the applicable operating subsidiary. The fluctuations between the currencies of the contract and operating currencies present foreign currency exchange risks. Furthermore, because our financial statements are denominated in U.S. dollars, but approximately 24% of our revenue is derived from contracts denominated in other currencies, our results of operations could be adversely affected if the U.S. dollar strengthens significantly against foreign currencies. While we hedge against the effect of exchange rate fluctuations, we can provide no assurance that we will be able to continue to successfully manage this foreign currency exchange risk and avoid adverse impacts on our business, financial condition, and results of operations. 17 Compliance with laws, including unexpected changes to such laws, could adversely affect our results of operations Our business is subject to extensive regulation by U.S. and foreign national, state and provincial authorities relating to confidential client and customer data, customer communications, telemarketing practices, and licensed healthcare and financial services activities, among other areas. Costs and complexity of compliance with existing and future regulations could adversely affect our profitability. If we fail to comply with regulations relevant to our business, we could be subject to civil or criminal liability, monetary damages and fines. Private lawsuits and enforcement actions by regulatory agencies may materially increase our costs of operations and impact our ability to serve our clients. As we provide services to clients’ customers residing in countries across the world, we are subject to numerous, and sometimes conflicting, legal regimes on matters as diverse as import/export controls, communication content requirements, trade restrictions and sanctions, tariffs, taxation, data privacy, labor relations, wages and severance, health care requirements, internal and disclosure control obligations, and immigration. Violations of these regulations could impact our reputation and result in financial liability, criminal prosecution, unfavorable publicity, restrictions on our ability to process information and breach of our contractual commitments. Adverse changes in laws or regulations that impact our business may negatively affect the sale of our services, slow the growth of our operations, or mandate changes to how we deliver our services, including our ability to use offshore resources. These changes could threaten our ability to continue to serve certain markets. The current trend to outsource customer care may not continue and the prices that clients are willing to pay for the services may diminish, adversely affecting our business Our growth depends, in large part, on the willingness of our clients and potential clients to outsource customer care and management services to companies like TTEC. There can be no assurance that the customer care outsourcing trend will continue; and our clients and potential clients may elect to perform in-house customer care and management services that they currently outsource. Reduction in demand for our services and increased competition from other providers and in-house service alternatives would create pricing pressures and excess capacity that could have an adverse effect on our business, financial condition, and results of operations. Legislation discouraging offshoring of service by U.S. companies or making such offshoring difficult could significantly affect our business A perceived association between offshore service providers and the loss of jobs in the United States has been a focus of political debate in recent years. As a result, current and prospective clients may be reluctant to hire offshore service providers like TTEC to avoid negative perceptions and regulatory scrutiny. If they seek customer care and management capacity onshore that was previously available to them through outsourcers outside of the United States, they may elect to perform these services in-house as a less expensive alternative to outsourcing the services onshore. Possible tax incentives for U.S. businesses to return offshored, including outsourced and offshored, services to the U.S. could also impact our clients’ continuing interest in using our services. Legislation aimed to expand protections for U.S. based customers from having their personal data accessible outside of the United States could also impact offshore outsourcing opportunities by requiring notice and consent as a condition for sharing personal identifiable information with service providers based outside of the United States. Any material changes in current trends among U.S. based clients to use services outsourced and delivered offshore would materially impact our business and results of operations. Health epidemics could disrupt our business and adversely affect our financial results Our contact centers typically seat hundreds of employees in one location. Accordingly, an outbreak of a contagious infection in one or more of the markets in which we do business may result in significant worker absenteeism, lower capacity utilization rates, voluntary or mandatory closure of our customer engagement centers, travel restrictions on our employees, and other disruptions to our business. Any prolonged or widespread health epidemic could severely disrupt our business operations and have a material adverse effect on our business, its financial condition and results of operations. 18 The volatility of our stock price may result in loss of investment Our share price has been and may continue to be subject to substantial fluctuation. We believe that market prices of outsourced customer care management services stock in general have experienced volatility and such volatility will affect our stock price. As we continue to diversify our service offerings to include growth, technology and strategic consulting, our stock price volatility may stabilize or it may be further impacted by stock price fluctuations in these new industries. In addition to fluctuations specific to our industry and service offerings, we believe that various other factors such as general economic conditions, changes or volatility in the financial markets, and changing market condition for our clients could impact the valuation of our stock. The quarterly variations in our financial results, acquisition and divestiture announcements by us or our competitors, strategic partnerships and new service offering, our failure to meet our growth objectives or exceed our targets, and securities analysts’ perception about our performance could cause the market price of our shares to fluctuate substantially in the future. Our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer controls a majority of our stock and has control over all matters requiring action by our stockholders Kenneth D. Tuchman, our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, directly and beneficially owns approximately 69% of TTEC’s common stock. As a result, Mr. Tuchman could and does exercise significant influence and control over our business practices and strategy, including the direction of our business and our dividend policy, and all matters requiring action by our stockholders, including the election of our entire Board of Directors and our capital structure. Further, a change in control of our company or significant capital transactions could not be effected without Mr. Tuchman’s approval, even if such a change in control or other capital transactions could benefit our other stockholders. ITEM 1B. UNRESOLVED STAFF COMMENTS We have not received written comments regarding our periodic or current reports from the staff of the SEC that were issued 180 days or more preceding the end of our 2017 fiscal year that remain unresolved. ITEM 2. PROPERTIES Our corporate headquarters are located in Englewood, Colorado, which consists of approximately 264,000 square feet of owned office space. In addition to our headquarters and the customer engagement centers used by our Customer Management Services and Customer Growth Services segments discussed below, we also maintain sales and consulting offices in several countries around the world which serve our Customer Technology Services and Customer Strategy Services segments. As of December 31, 2017 we operated 97 customer engagement centers that are classified as follows: • Multi-Client Center — We lease space for these centers and serve multiple clients in each facility; • Dedicated Center — We lease space for these centers and dedicate the entire facility to one client; and • Managed Center — These facilities are leased or owned by our clients and we staff and manage these sites on behalf of our clients in accordance with facility management contracts. 19 As of December 31, 2017, our customer engagement centers were located in the following countries: Total Number of Multi-Client Dedicated Managed Delivery Centers Centers Centers Centers Australia — 4 — 4 Brazil 2 — — 2 Bulgaria 2 — — 2 Canada 8 — 1 9 China — — 1 1 Costa Rica — 1 — 1 Germany — — 1 1 India 4 — — 4 Ireland 1 — — 1 Macedonia 1 — — 1 Mexico 3 — — 3 Philippines 18 3 — 21 Poland — — 1 1 South Africa — — 2 2 Thailand — — 1 1 United Kingdom — — 2 2 United States of America 25 7 9 41 Total 64 15 18 97 The leases for our customer engagement centers have remaining terms ranging from one to nine years and generally contain renewal options. We believe that our existing customer engagement centers are suitable and adequate for our current operations, and we have plans to build additional centers to accommodate future business. ITEM 3. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS From time to time, the Company has been involved in legal actions, both as plaintiff and defendant, which arise in the ordinary course of business. The Company accrues for exposures associated with such legal actions to the extent that losses are deemed both probable and reasonably estimable. To the extent specific reserves have not been made for certain legal proceedings, their ultimate outcome, and consequently, an estimate of possible loss, if any, cannot reasonably be determined at this time. Based on currently available information and advice received from counsel, the Company believes that the disposition or ultimate resolution of any current legal proceedings, except as otherwise specifically reserved for in its financial statements, will not have a material adverse effect on the Company’s financial position, cash flows or results of operations. ITEM 4. MINE SAFETY DISCLOSURES Not applicable. 20 PART II ITEM 5. MARKET FOR REGISTRANT’S COMMON EQUITY, RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS AND ISSUER PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES Our common stock is traded on the NASDAQ Global Select Market under the symbol “TTEC.” The following table sets forth the range of the high and low sales prices per share of the common stock for the quarters indicated as reported on the NASDAQ Global Select Market: High Low Fourth Quarter 2017 $ 43.35 $ 37.85 Third Quarter 2017 $ 42.15 $ 38.60 Second Quarter 2017 $ 42.60 $ 28.85 First Quarter 2017 $ 31.30 $ 29.10 Fourth Quarter 2016 $ 31.75 $ 25.40 Third Quarter 2016 $ 30.24 $ 26.87 Second Quarter 2016 $ 28.29 $ 25.80 First Quarter 2016 $ 28.71 $ 24.49 As of December 31, 2017, we had approximately 282 holders of record of our common stock and during 2017 we declared and paid a $0.22 per share dividend and a $0.25 per share dividend on our common stock. During 2016 we declared and paid an $0.185 per share dividend and a $0.20 per share dividend on our common stock as discussed below. On February 24, 2015, our Board of Directors adopted a dividend policy, with the intent to distribute a periodic cash dividend to stockholders of our common stock, after consideration of, among other things, TTEC’s performance, cash flows, capital needs and liquidity factors. The initial dividend of $0.18 per common share was paid on March 16, 2015 to shareholders of record as of March 6, 2015. Thereafter, the Company has been paying a semi-annual dividend in October and April of each year in amounts ranging between $0.18 and $0.25 per common share. On February 28, 2018, the Board of Directors authorized a $0.27 dividend per common share, payable on April 12, 2018, to shareholders of record as of March 30, 2018. While it is our intention to continue to pay semi-annual dividends in 2018 and beyond, any decision to pay future cash dividends will be made by our Board of Directors. In addition, our credit facility restricts our ability to pay dividends in the event we are in default or do not satisfy certain covenants. Stock Repurchase Program We continue to return capital to our shareholders via an ongoing stock repurchase program (originally authorized by the Board of Directors in 2001). As of December 31, 2017, the cumulative authorized repurchase allowance was $762.3 million, of which we have purchased 46.1 million shares for $735.8 million. 21 Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities During the Fourth Quarter of 2017 The following table provides information about our repurchases of equity securities during the quarter ended December 31, 2017: Total Number of Approximate Dollar Shares Value of Shares that Purchased as May Yet Be Part of Publicly Purchased Under Total Number Announced the Plans or of Shares Average Price Plans or Programs (In Period Purchased Paid per Share Programs thousands) September 30, 2017 $ 26,580 October 1, 2017 - October 31, 2017 — $ — — $ 26,580 November 1, 2017 - November 30, 2017 — $ — — $ 26,580 December 1, 2017 - December 31, 2017 — $ — — $ 26,580 Total — — In 2018, through February 28, 2018, we purchased no additional shares. The stock repurchase program does not have an expiration date and the Board authorizes additional stock repurchases under the program from time to time. Stock Performance Graph The graph depicted below compares the performance of TTEC common stock with the performance of the NASDAQ Composite Index; the Russell 2000 Index; and customized peer group over the period beginning on December 31, 2012 and ending on December 31, 2017. We have chosen a “Peer Group” composed of Convergys Corporation (NYSE: CVG), Sykes Enterprises, Incorporated (NASDAQ: SYKE) and Teleperformance (NYSE Euronext: RCF). We believe that the companies in the Peer Group are relevant to our current business model, market capitalization and position in the overall BPO industry. The graph assumes that $100 was invested on December 31, 2012 in our common stock and in each comparison index, and that all dividends were reinvested. We declared per share dividends on our common stock of $0.385 during 2016 and $0.47 during 2017. Stock price performance shown on the graph below is not necessarily indicative of future price performance. COMPARISON OF 5 YEAR CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN Among TTEC Holdings, Inc., The NASDAQ Composite Index, The Russell 2000 Index, And A Peer Group December 31, 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 TTEC Holdings, Inc. 100 134 133 159 176 236 NASDAQ Composite 100 142 162 173 187 242 Russell 2000 100 139 146 139 169 194 Peer Group 100 151 163 204 227 290 22 23 ITEM 6. SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA The following selected financial data should be read in conjunction with Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations, the Consolidated Financial Statements and the related notes appearing elsewhere in this Form 10-K (amounts in thousands except per share amounts). Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 Statement of Operations Data Revenue $ 1,477,365 $ 1,275,258 $ 1,286,755 $ 1,241,781 (11) $ 1,193,157 (16) Cost of services (1,110,068) (941,592) (928,247) (886,492) (846,631) Selling, general and administrative (182,314) (175,797) (194,606) (198,553) (193,423) Depreciation and amortization (64,507) (68,675) (63,808) (56,538) (46,064) Other operating expenses (19,987) (1) (36,442) (5) (9,914) (9) (3,723) (12) (5,640) (17) Income from operations 100,489 52,752 90,180 96,475 101,399 Other income (expense) (11,602) (2) (2,454) (6) (4,291) 3,984 (13) (9,330) (18) Provision for income taxes (78,075) (3) (12,863) (7) (20,004) (10) (23,042) (14) (20,598) (19) Noncontrolling interest (3,556) (3,757) (4,219) (5,124) (4,083) Net income attributable to TTEC stockholders $ 7,256 $ 33,678 $ 61,666 $ 72,293 $ 67,388 Weighted average shares outstanding Basic 45,826 47,423 48,370 49,297 51,338 Diluted 46,382 47,736 49,011 50,102 52,244 Net income per share attributable to TTEC stockholders Basic $ 0.16 $ 0.71 $ 1.27 $ 1.47 $ 1.31 Diluted $ 0.16 $ 0.71 $ 1.26 $ 1.44 $ 1.29 Dividends issued per common share $ 0.47 $ 0.385 $ 0.36 $ — $ — Balance Sheet Data Total assets $ 1,078,736 (4) $ 846,304 (8) $ 843,327 $ 852,475 (15) $ 842,342 (20) Total long-term liabilities $ 514,113 (4) $ 304,380 (8) $ 191,473 $ 187,780 (15) $ 175,564 (20) (1) Includes $1.2 million expense related to reductions in force, a $2.2 million expense due to facility exit charges, a $3.5 million expense due to write-off of leasehold improvements and other fixed assets in connection with the facilities we exited, $7.8 million expense related to integration charges for the Connextions acquisition, and a $5.3 million impairment charge related to two trade name intangible assets. (2) Includes a $5.3 million expense related to the finalization of the transition services agreement for Connextions, a net $2.6 million loss related to a held for sale business unit that was sold in December 2017 and a $1.2 million charge to interest expense related to the future purchase of the remaining 30% of the Motif acquisition offset by a $3.2 million benefit related to the release of the currency translation adjustment in equity in connection with the dissolution of a foreign entity. (3) Includes $62.4 million of expense related to the US 2017 Tax Act, $0.4 million of expense related to the disposition of assets, $1.9 million of benefit related to impairments, $2.2 million of benefit related to stock options, $0.6 million of expense related to changes in valuation allowances, $5.8 million of benefit related to restructuring, $0.6 million of benefit related to return to provision adjustments and $2.1 million of benefit related to changes to a transition service agreement. (4) The Company spent $116.7 million, net of cash acquired of $6.0 million, in 2017 for the acquisitions of Connextions and Motif. Upon acquisitions of Connextions and Motif, the Company acquired $40.8 million in assets and assumed, $21.1 million in liabilities ($12.1 million in long-term liabilities). (5) Includes $3.4 million expense related to reductions in force, a $1.0 million expense due to facility exit and other charges, a $1.3 million impairment of fixed assets, a $1.4 million impairment of goodwill, a 24 $11.1 million impairment of internally developed software, and a $18.2 million of impairment charges related to several trade name, customer relationship and non-compete intangible assets. (6) Includes a $5.3 million estimated loss related to two business units which have been classified as assets held for sale offset by a $4.8 million benefit related to fair value adjustments to the contingent consideration based on revised estimates of performance against targets for two of our acquisitions. (7) Includes $1.7 million of expense related to return to provision adjustments, $1.1 million of expense related to a transfer pricing adjustment for a prior period, $0.5 million of expense related to tax rate changes, $0.5 million of expense related to changes in valuation allowances, $1.5 million of benefit related to restructuring charges, and $9.8 million of benefit related to impairments and assets held for sales. (8) The Company spent $46.1 million, net of cash acquired of $2.7 million, in 2016 for the acquisition of Atelka. Upon acquisition of Atelka, the Company acquired $25.1 million in assets and assumed $7.7 million in liabilities ($1.4 million in long-term liabilities). (9) Includes $1.8 million expense related to reductions in force, a $0.4 million expense related to the impairment of property and equipment, and a $7.7 million expense related to the impairment of goodwill. (10) Includes a $0.7 million benefit related to restructuring charges, $1.2 million net of expense related to changes in valuation allowance and a related release of a deferred tax liability, $1.5 million of expense related to provisions for uncertain tax positions, $2.6 million of benefit related to impairments, $1.3 million of expense related to state net operating losses and credits, and $0.4 million of benefit related to other discrete items. (11) Includes $30.0 million in revenue generated by Sofica and rogenSi, which were acquired in 2014. (12) Includes $3.3 million expense related to reductions in force and $0.4 million expense related to the impairment of property and equipment. (13) Includes a net $6.7 million benefit related to fair value adjustments to the contingent consideration based on revised estimates of performance against targets for four of our acquisitions. (14) Includes a $1.3 million benefit related to restructuring charges, a $0.4 million benefit related to a valuation allowance for equity compensation, a $1.2 million benefit related to the closing of statute of limitations in Canada, $3.8 million of expense related to future contingent payments, $1.3 million of expense related to the resolution of an audit in the Netherlands, and $0.2 million of expense related to other discrete items. (15) The Company spent $23.8 million net of cash acquired of $3.5 million in 2014 for the acquisitions of Sofica and rogenSi. Upon the acquisitions of Sofica and rogenSi, the Company acquired $59.5 million in assets and assumed $11.1 million in liabilities ($5.4 million in long-term liabilities). The Company also assumed a purchase price payable of $22.4 million related to these acquisitions. Of the $22.4 million purchase price payable, $13.2 million was included in long-term liabilities. (16) Includes $51.4 million in revenue generated by WebMetro, which was acquired in 2013, and TSG, which was acquired on December 31, 2012. (17) Includes $4.1 million expense related to reductions in force, $0.3 million related to facilities exit charges, $0.1 million expense related to the impairment of property and equipment and $1.1 million expense related to the impact of intangible assets. (18) Includes a $3.7 million charge related to the deconsolidation of a subsidiary and a $1.9 million charge related to a fair value adjustment to the contingent consideration based on revised estimates of performance against targets for three of our acquisitions. (19) Includes a $1.8 million benefit related to restructuring charges, a $1.5 million benefit related to return to provision adjustments, and $1.8 million of expense related to valuation allowance increases. (20) The Company spent $8.9 million net of cash acquired of $6.4 million in 2013 for the acquisition of WebMetro. Upon the acquisition of WebMetro, the Company acquired $27.5 million in assets and assumed $9.7 million in liabilities ($0.8 million in long-term liabilities). The Company also assumed a purchase price payable of $2.5 million related to this acquisition. Of the $2.5 million purchase price payable, $1.8 million was included in long-term liabilities. 25 ITEM 7. MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS Executive Summary TTEC Holdings, Inc. (“TTEC”, “the Company”, “we”, “our” or “us”) is a global customer experience company that designs, builds and operates omnichannel customer experiences on behalf of the world's most innovative brands. We help large global companies increase revenue and reduce costs by delivering personalized customer experiences across every interactional channel and phase of the customer lifecycle as an end-to-end provider of customer engagement services, technologies, insights and innovations. We are organized into two centers of excellence: TTEC Digital and TTEC Engage. • TTEC Digital is the Company’s digital consultancy that designs and builds human centric, tech-enabled, insight-driven customer experience solutions. • TTEC Engage is the Company’s global hub of operational excellence providing clients with turnkey customer acquisition, care, revenue growth, and digital trust and safety services. TTEC Digital and TTEC Engage come together under our unified offering, HumanifyTM Customer Engagement as a Service, which drives measurable results for clients through delivery of personalized omnichannel interactions that are seamless and relevant. Our offering is supported by 56,000 employees delivering services in 24 countries from 97 customer engagement centers on six continents. Our end-to-end approach differentiates the Company by combining service design, strategic consulting, data analytics, process optimization, system integration, operational excellence, and technology solutions and services. This unified offering is value-oriented, outcome-based, and delivered on a global scale across four business segments: two of which comprise TTEC Engage - Customer Management Services (“CMS”) and Customer Growth Services (“CGS”); and two of which comprise TTEC Digital - Customer Technology Services (“CTS”) and Customer Strategy Services (“CSS”). Our revenue for fiscal 2017 was $1,477 million, approximately 23% or $336 million of which came from the CGS, CTS and CSS segments, focused on customer-centric strategy, growth and technology-based services with the remainder of our revenue coming from the core customer care services of our CMS segment. Since our establishment in 1982, we have helped clients strengthen their customer relationships, brand recognition and loyalty by simplifying and personalizing interactions with their customers. We deliver thought leadership, through innovation in programs that differentiate our clients from their competition. To improve our competitive position in a rapidly changing market and stay strategically relevant to our clients, we continue to invest in innovation and growth businesses, diversifying and strengthening our core customer care services with consulting, data analytics and insights technologies, and technology-enabled, outcomes-focused services. We also invest in businesses that enable us to expand our geographic footprint, broaden our product and service capabilities, increase our global client base and industry expertise, and further scale our end-to-end integrated solutions platform. In 2017, we acquired Motif, Inc., a digital trust and safety services company based in India and the Philippines, and Connextions, Inc., a U.S.-based health services company focused on improving the customer relationships for healthcare plan providers and pharmacy benefits managers. We have developed tailored expertise in the automotive, communications, healthcare, financial services, government, logistics, media and entertainment, retail, technology, travel and transportation industries. We target customer-focused industry leaders in the Global 1000 and serve approximately 300 clients globally. Our Integrated Service Offerings, Centers of Excellence and Business Segments We have two centers of excellence that encompass our four operating and reportable segments. TTEC Digital houses our professional services and technology platforms. These solutions are critical to enabling and accelerating digital transformation for our clients. 26 Customer Strategy Services Segment Through our strategy and operations, analytics, and learning and performance consulting expertise, we help our clients design, build and execute their customer engagement strategies. We help our clients to better understand and predict their customers’ behaviors and preferences along with their current and future economic value. Using proprietary analytic models, we provide the insight clients need to build the business case for customer centricity and to better optimize their investments in customer experience. This insight-based strategy creates a roadmap for transformation. We build customer journey maps to inform service design across automated, human and hybrid interactions and increasingly are developing and implementing strategies around Interactive Virtual Assistants (chat bots). A key component of this segment involves instilling a high-performance culture through management and leadership alignment and process optimization. Customer Technology Services Segment In connection with the design of the customer engagement strategy, our ability to architect, deploy and host or manage the client’s customer experience environments becomes a key enabler to achieving and sustaining the client’s customer engagement vision. Given the proliferation of mobile communication technologies and devices, we enable our clients’ operations to interact with their customers across the growing array of channels including email, social networks, mobile, web, SMS text, voice and chat. We design, implement and manage cloud, on-premise or hybrid customer experience environments to deliver a consistent and superior experience across all touch points on a global scale that we believe result in higher quality, lower costs and reduced risk for our clients. Through our Humanify™ Technology platforms, we also provide data-driven context aware software-as-a-service (“SaaS”) based solutions that link customers seamlessly and directly to appropriate resources, any time and across any channel. TTEC Engage houses our end-to-end managed services operations for customer care, growth and trust and safety services. Customer Management Services Segment We design and manage clients’ front-to-back office processes to deliver just-in-time, personalized, protected, multi-channel interactions. Our front-office solutions seamlessly integrate voice, chat, email, e-commerce and social media to optimize the customer experience for our clients. In addition, we manage certain client back-office processes to enhance their customer-centric view of relationships and maximize operating efficiencies. We also perform fraud prevention and content moderation services to protect our clients and their customers from malevolent digital activities. Our delivery of integrated business processes via our onshore, offshore or work-from-home associates reduces operating costs and allows customer needs to be met more quickly and efficiently, resulting in higher satisfaction, brand loyalty and a stronger competitive position for our clients. Customer Growth Services Segment We offer integrated sales and marketing solutions to help our clients boost revenue in new, fragmented or underpenetrated business-to-consumer or business-to-business markets. We deliver or manage approximately $4 billion in client revenue annually via the discovery, acquisition, growth and retention of customers through a combination of our highly trained, client-dedicated sales professionals and proprietary analytics platform. This platform continuously aggregates individual customer information across all channels into one holistic view so as to ensure more relevant and personalized communications. Based on our clients’ requirements, we provide our services on an integrated cross-business segment and on a discrete basis. Additional information with respect to our segments and geographic footprint is included in Part II, Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 3 to the Consolidated Financial Statements. 27 Our 2017 Financial Results In 2017, our revenue increased 15.8% to $1,477 million over the same period in 2016, including an increase of 0.2% or $3.1 million due to foreign currency fluctuations. The increase in revenue is comprised of an increase from the Atelka, Connextions, and Motif acquisitions and organic growth in the CMS and CTS segments offset by lower revenue due to the sale of the Avaya business unit in the second quarter of 2017. Revenue adjusted for the $3.1 million increase related to foreign exchange increased 15.6% over the prior year. Our 2017 income from operations increased $47.7 million to $100.5 million or 6.8% of revenue, from $52.8 million or 4.1% of revenue for 2016. The increase is primarily due to the CMS acquisitions, the CMS and CTS revenue growth noted above, and a $12.5 million benefit related to improved foreign exchange trends. These increases were partially offset by a $5.3 million impairment charge related to two trade names, and $14.7 million related to the restructuring and integration of the Connextions acquisition and other overhead restructurings (see Part II. Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Notes 7 and 11 to the Consolidated Financial Statements). Included in 2016 was $18.2 million of impairment charges related to trade name, customer relationship and non-compete intangible assets, $11.1 million of impairment charges related to internally developed software and technology, a $1.4 million impairment of goodwill (see Part II. Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Notes 6 and 7 to the Consolidated Financial Statements), a $1.3 million impairment of fixed assets, and a $3.7 million restructuring charge related to a reorganization of the global sales force and restructuring of a portion of the IT functions. Income from operations in 2017 and 2016 included a total of $20.0 million and $36.4 million of restructuring and integration charges and asset impairments, respectively. Our offshore customer engagement centers serve clients based in the U.S. and in other countries and span seven countries with 24,500 workstations representing 55% of our global delivery capabilities. Revenue for our CMS and CGS segments that is provided in these offshore locations was $453 million and represented 36% of our revenue for 2017, as compared to $437 million and 41% of our revenue for 2016. We internally target capacity utilization in our customer engagement centers at 80% to 90% of our available workstations. As of December 31, 2017, the overall capacity utilization in our multi-client centers was 83%. The table below presents workstation data for all of our centers as of December 31, 2017 and 2016. Our utilization percentage is defined as the total number of utilized production workstations compared to the total number of available production workstations. December 31, 2017 December 31, 2016 Total Total Production % In Production % In Workstations In Use Use Workstations In Use Use Total centers Sites open >1 year 42,033 34,409 82 % 38,506 30,674 80 % Sites open <1 year 2,404 2,392 100 % 270 270 100 % Total workstations 44,437 36,801 83 % 38,776 30,944 80 % While we continue to see demand from all geographic regions to utilize our offshore delivery capabilities and expect this trend to continue with our clients, some of our clients have regulatory pressures to bring the services onshore to the United States. In light of these trends, we plan to continue to selectively retain and grow capacity and expand into new offshore markets, while maintaining appropriate capacity in the United States. As we grow our offshore delivery capabilities and our exposure to foreign currency fluctuations increases, we continue to actively manage this risk via a multi-currency hedging program designed to minimize operating margin volatility. 28 Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates Management’s Discussion and Analysis of our financial condition and results of operations are based upon our Consolidated Financial Statements, which have been prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the U.S. (“GAAP”). The preparation of these financial statements requires us to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets, liabilities, revenue and expenses as well as the disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities. We regularly review our estimates and assumptions. These estimates and assumptions, which are based upon historical experience and on various other factors believed to be reasonable under the circumstances, form the basis for making judgments about the carrying values of assets and liabilities that are not readily apparent from other sources. Reported amounts and disclosures may have been different had management used different estimates and assumptions or if different conditions had occurred in the periods presented. Below is a discussion of the policies that we believe may involve a high degree of judgment and complexity. Revenue Recognition We recognize revenue when evidence of an arrangement exists, the delivery of service has occurred, the fee is fixed or determinable and collection is reasonably assured. The BPO inbound and outbound service fees are based on either a per minute, per hour, per full-time employee, per transaction or per call basis. Certain client programs provide for adjustments to monthly billings based upon whether we achieve, exceed or fail certain performance criteria. Adjustments to monthly billings consist of contractual bonuses/penalties, holdbacks and other performance based contingencies. Revenue recognition is limited to the amount that is not contingent upon delivery of future services or meeting other specified performance conditions. Revenue also consists of services for agent training, program launch, professional consulting, fully-hosted or managed technology and learning innovation. These service offerings may contain multiple element arrangements whereby we determine if those service offerings represent separate units of accounting. A deliverable constitutes a separate unit of accounting when it has standalone value and delivery or performance of the undelivered items is considered probable and substantially within our control. If those deliverables are determined to be separate units of accounting, revenue is recognized as services are provided. If those deliverables are not determined to be separate units of accounting, revenue for the delivered services are bundled into one unit of accounting and recognized over the life of the arrangement or at the time all services and deliverables have been delivered and satisfied. We allocate revenue to each of the deliverables based on a selling price hierarchy of vendor specific objective evidence (“VSOE”), third-party evidence, and then estimated selling price. VSOE is based on the price charged when the deliverable is sold separately. Third-party evidence is based on largely interchangeable competitor services in standalone sales to similarly situated customers. Estimated selling price is based on our best estimate of what the selling prices of deliverables would be if they were sold regularly on a standalone basis. Estimated selling price is established considering multiple factors including, but not limited to, pricing practices in different geographies, service offerings, and customer classifications. Once we allocate revenue to each deliverable, we recognize revenue when all revenue recognition criteria are met. Periodically, we will make certain expenditures related to acquiring contracts or provide up-front discounts for future services. These expenditures are capitalized as contract acquisition costs and amortized in proportion to the expected future revenue from the contract, which in most cases results in straight-line amortization over the life of the contract. Amortization of these contract acquisition costs is recorded as a reduction to revenue. 29 During 2014, new guidance was issued related to how an entity should recognize revenue to depict the transfer of promised goods or services to customers in an amount that reflects the consideration to which the entity expects to be entitled in exchange for those goods or services. The updated guidance includes cost guidance, whereby all direct and incremental costs to obtain or fulfill a contract will be capitalized and amortized over the corresponding period of benefit, determined on a contract by contract basis. The updated guidance also requires additional qualitative and quantitative disclosures relating to the nature, amount, timing and uncertainty of revenue and cash flows arising from contracts with customers largely on a disaggregated basis. We have evaluated the adoption impact of the updated accounting guidance on our consolidated financial statements and continue to evaluate the impact on disclosures and internal controls. The new guidance will impact: (i) revenue associated with certain taxes, which will be recognized on a net basis versus the current gross treatment; (ii) the timing of revenue recognition associated with upfront fees on certain contracts; and (iii) the timing of recognition related to certain elements of variable consideration. We adopted this updated accounting guidance beginning January 1, 2018 using the modified retrospective method under which we will recognize a cumulative-effect adjustment in the range of $9 million to $12 million. Income Taxes Accounting for income taxes requires recognition of deferred tax assets and liabilities for the expected future income tax consequences of transactions that have been included in the Consolidated Financial Statements or tax returns. Under this method, deferred tax assets and liabilities are determined based on the difference between the financial statement and tax basis of assets and liabilities using tax rates in effect for the year in which the differences are expected to reverse. When circumstances warrant, we assess the likelihood that our net deferred tax assets will more likely than not be recovered from future projected taxable income. We continually review the likelihood that deferred tax assets will be realized in future tax periods under the “more-likely-than-not” criteria. In making this judgment, we consider all available evidence, both positive and negative, in determining whether, based on the weight of that evidence, a valuation allowance is required. We follow a two-step approach to recognizing and measuring uncertain tax positions. The first step is to determine if the weight of available evidence indicates that it is more likely than not that the tax position will be sustained on audit. The second step is to estimate and measure the tax benefit as the amount that has a greater than 50% likelihood of being realized upon ultimate settlement with the tax authority. We evaluate these uncertain tax positions on a quarterly basis. This evaluation is based on the consideration of several factors including changes in facts or circumstances, changes in applicable tax law, and settlement of issues under audit. Interest and penalties relating to income taxes and uncertain tax positions are accrued net of tax in the Provision for income taxes in the accompanying Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). In the future, our effective tax rate could be adversely affected by several factors, many of which are outside our control. Our effective tax rate is affected by the proportion of revenue and income before taxes in the various domestic and international jurisdictions in which we operate. Further, we are subject to changing tax laws, regulations and interpretations in multiple jurisdictions in which we operate, as well as the requirements, pronouncements and rulings of certain tax, regulatory and accounting organizations. We estimate our annual effective tax rate each quarter based on a combination of actual and forecasted results of subsequent quarters. Consequently, significant changes in our actual quarterly or forecasted results may impact the effective tax rate for the current or future periods. Tax Reform The United States recently enacted comprehensive tax reform legislation known as the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (the "2017 Tax Act") that, among other things, reduces the U.S. federal corporate income tax rate from 35% to 21% and implements a territorial tax system, but imposes an alternative “base erosion and anti-abuse tax” (“BEAT”), and an incremental tax on global intangible low taxed foreign income (“GILTI”) effective January 1, 2018. In addition, the law imposes a one-time mandatory repatriation tax on accumulated foreign earnings on domestic corporations effective for the 2017 tax year. In response, the SEC staff issued Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 118 (“SAB 118”) to address the application of U.S. GAAP in situations when a registrant does not have the necessary information available, 30 prepared, or analyzed (including computations) in reasonable detail to complete the accounting for certain income tax effects of the 2017 Tax Act and allows the registrant to record provisional amounts during a measurement period not to extend beyond one year of the enactment date. We have recognized the provisional impacts related to the one-time transition tax and revaluation of deferred tax balances and included these estimates in our consolidated financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2017. The ultimate impact may materially differ from these provisional amounts, due to, among other things, additional analysis, changes in interpretations and assumptions we have made, additional regulatory guidance that may be issued, and actions we may take as a result of the Tax Act. Our selection of an accounting policy with respect to the new GILTI rules will depend in part on analyzing our global income to determine whether we expect to have future U.S. inclusions in taxable income related to GILTI, and if so, what the impact is expected to be. We have not yet computed a reasonable estimate of the effect of this provision, and therefore, we have not made a policy decision regarding whether to record deferred taxes related to GILTI nor have we made any adjustments related to GILTI tax in our year-end financial statements. Impairment of Long-Lived Assets We evaluate the carrying value of property, plant and equipment and definite-lived intangible assets for impairment whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount may not be recoverable. An asset is considered to be impaired when the forecasted undiscounted cash flows of an asset group are estimated to be less than its carrying value. The amount of impairment recognized is the difference between the carrying value of the asset group and its fair value. Fair value estimates are based on assumptions concerning the amount and timing of estimated future cash flows and assumed discount rates. Goodwill and Indefinite-Lived Intangible Assets We evaluate goodwill and indefinite-lived intangible assets for possible impairment at least annually or whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount of such assets may not be recoverable. We use a two step process to assess the realizability of goodwill. The first step, Step 0, is a qualitative assessment that analyzes current economic indicators associated with a particular reporting unit. For example, we analyze changes in economic, market and industry conditions, business strategy, cost factors, and financial performance, among others, to determine if there would be a significant decline to the fair value of a particular reporting unit. A qualitative assessment also includes analyzing the excess fair value of a reporting unit over its carrying value from impairment assessments performed in previous years. If the qualitative assessment indicates a stable or improved fair value, no further testing is required. If a qualitative assessment indicates that a significant decline to fair value of a reporting unit is more likely than not, or if a reporting unit’s fair value has historically been closer to its carrying value, we will proceed to Step 1 testing where we calculate the fair value of a reporting unit based on discounted future probability-weighted cash flows. If Step 1 indicates that the carrying value of a reporting unit is in excess of its fair value, we will record an impairment equal to the amount by which a reporting unit’s carrying value exceeds its fair value. We estimate fair value using discounted cash flows of the reporting units. The most significant assumptions used in these analyses are those made in estimating future cash flows. In estimating future cash flows, we use financial assumptions in our internal forecasting model such as projected capacity utilization, projected changes in the prices we charge for our services, projected labor costs, as well as contract negotiation status. The financial and credit market volatility directly impacts our fair value measurement through our weighted average cost of capital that we use to determine our discount rate. We use a discount rate we consider appropriate for the country where the business unit is providing services. 31 Similar to goodwill, the Company may first use a qualitative analysis to assess the realizability of its indefinite-lived intangible assets. The qualitative analysis will include a review of changes in economic, market and industry conditions, business strategy, cost factors, and financial performance, among others, to determine if there would be a significant decline to the fair value of an indefinite-lived intangible asset. If a quantitative analysis is completed, an indefinite-lived intangible asset (such as a trade name) is evaluated for possible impairment by comparing the fair value of the asset with its carrying value. Fair value is estimated as the discounted value of future revenues arising from a trade name using a royalty rate that a market participant would pay for use of that trade name. An impairment charge is recorded if the trade name’s carrying value exceeds its estimated fair value. Restructuring and Liability We routinely assess the profitability and utilization of our customer engagement centers and existing markets. In some cases, we have chosen to close under-performing customer engagement centers and complete reductions in workforce to enhance future profitability. Severance payments that occur from reductions in workforce are in accordance with postemployment plans and/or statutory requirements that are communicated to all employees upon hire date; therefore, we recognize severance liabilities when they are determined to be probable and reasonably estimable. Other liabilities for costs associated with an exit or disposal activity are recognized when the liability is incurred, rather than upon commitment to a plan. Derivatives We enter into foreign exchange forward and option contracts to reduce our exposure to foreign currency exchange rate fluctuations that are associated with forecasted revenue earned in foreign locations. We enter into interest rate swaps to reduce our exposure to interest rate fluctuations associated with our variable rate debt. Upon proper qualification, these contracts are accounted for as cash flow hedges under current accounting standards. From time-to-time, we also enter into foreign exchange forward contracts to hedge our net investment in a foreign operation. All derivative financial instruments are reported in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets at fair value. Changes in fair value of derivative instruments designated as cash flow hedges are recorded in Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss), a component of Stockholders’ Equity, to the extent they are deemed effective. Based on the criteria established by current accounting standards, all of our cash flow hedge contracts are deemed to be highly effective. Changes in fair value of any net investment hedge are recorded in cumulative translation adjustment in Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets offsetting the change in cumulative translation adjustment attributable to the hedged portion of our net investment in the foreign operation. Any realized gains or losses resulting from the foreign currency cash flow hedges are recognized together with the hedged transactions within Revenue. Any realized gains or losses resulting from the interest rate swaps are recognized in Interest expense. Gains and losses from the settlements of our net investment hedges remain in Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) until partial or complete liquidation of the applicable net investment. We also enter into fair value derivative contracts to reduce our exposure to foreign currency exchange rate fluctuations associated with changes in asset and liability balances. Changes in the fair value of derivative instruments designated as fair value hedges affect the carrying value of the asset or liability hedged, with changes in both the derivative instrument and the hedged asset or liability being recognized in Other income (expense), net in the accompanying Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). While we expect that our derivative instruments will continue to be highly effective and in compliance with applicable accounting standards, if our hedges did not qualify as highly effective or if we determine that forecasted transactions will not occur, the changes in the fair value of the derivatives used as hedges would be reflected currently in earnings. Contingencies We record a liability for pending litigation and claims where losses are both probable and reasonably estimable. Each quarter, management reviews all litigation and claims on a case-by-case basis and assigns probability of loss and range of loss. 32 Explanation of Key Metrics and Other Items Cost of Services Cost of services principally include costs incurred in connection with our customer management services, including direct labor and related taxes and benefits, telecommunications, technology costs, sales and use tax and certain fixed costs associated with the customer engagement centers. In addition, cost of services includes income related to grants we may receive from local or state governments as an incentive to locate customer engagement centers in their jurisdictions which reduce the cost of services for those facilities. Selling, General and Administrative Selling, general and administrative expenses primarily include costs associated with administrative services such as sales, marketing, product development, legal, information systems (including core technology and telephony infrastructure) accounting and finance and legal settlements. It also includes outside professional fees (i.e., legal and accounting services), building expense for non-engagement center facilities and other items associated with general business administration. Restructuring and Integration Charges, Net Restructuring charges, net primarily include costs incurred in conjunction with reductions in force or decisions to exit facilities, including termination benefits and lease liabilities, net of expected sublease rentals. Integration charges represent the activities related to the re-hiring and retraining of the agents, the consolidation of facilities, the transfer of IT systems and other duplicative expenses incurred as the acquisitions are fully integrated. Interest Expense Interest expense includes interest expense, amortization of debt issuance costs associated with our Credit Facility, and the accretion of deferred payments associated with our acquisitions. Other Income The main components of other income are miscellaneous income not directly related to our operating activities, such as foreign exchange gains and reductions in our contingent consideration. Other Expenses The main components of other expenses are expenditures not directly related to our operating activities, such as foreign exchange losses and increases in our contingent consideration. RESULTS OF OPERATIONS Year Ended December 31, 2017 Compared to December 31, 2016 The tables included in the following sections are presented to facilitate an understanding of Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations and present certain information by segment for the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016 (amounts in thousands). All inter-company transactions between the reported segments for the periods presented have been eliminated. Customer Management Services Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 $ Change % Change Revenue $ 1,141,760 $ 924,325 $ 217,435 23.5 % Operating Income 78,206 50,541 27,665 54.7 % Operating Margin 6.8 % 5.5 % The increase in revenue for the Customer Management Services segment was attributable to a $246.0 million net increase in organic and inorganic client programs including the Atelka, Connextions and Motif acquisitions and a $2.3 million increase due to foreign currency fluctuations, offset by program completions of $30.9 million. 33 The operating income as a percentage of revenue increased to 6.8% in 2017 as compared to 5.5% in 2016. The operating margin increased due to higher revenue, a $12.1 million benefit due to improved foreign exchange trends, increased capacity utilization, and efficiencies realized from the expense rationalization activities completed during the second half of 2016. This increase was offset by $13.6 million of 2017 planned restructuring and integration charges for the Connextions acquisition related to severance, center closure costs, the hiring, training and licensing of employees in new delivery centers and the integration of the IT systems (see Part II. Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 2 to the Consolidated Financial Statements) and an increase of $9.3 million for variable incentive compensation. The increase was also due to the 2016 $11.1 million impairment for internally developed software and technology assets and a $1.4 million impairment of goodwill (see Part II. Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 6 to the Consolidated Financial Statements). Included in the operating income was amortization related to acquired intangibles of $4.6 million and $0.9 million for the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively. Customer Growth Services Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 $ Change % Change Revenue $ 128,698 $ 141,005 $ (12,307) (8.7) % Operating Income 7,803 6,969 834 12.0 % Operating Margin 6.1 % 4.9 % The decrease in revenue for the Customer Growth Services segment was due to a $9.0 million increase in client programs and a decrease for program completions of $21.3 million. The operating income as a percentage of revenue increased to 6.1% in 2017 as compared to 4.9% in 2016. This was attributable to pricing improvements and other profit optimization actions, along with reductions in amortization expense and a reduction in the operating loss for the Digital Marketing unit, which was sold effective December 22, 2017 (see Part II. Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 2 to the Consolidated Financial Statements). Included in the operating income was amortization related to acquired intangibles of zero and $1.8 million for the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively. Customer Technology Services Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 $ Change % Change Revenue $ 138,581 $ 141,254 $ (2,673) (1.9) % Operating Income 12,047 933 11,114 1,191.2 % Operating Margin 8.7 % 0.7 % The decrease in revenue for the Customer Technology Services segment was driven by an increase in the CISCO offerings offset by a decrease in the Avaya offerings as we wound down and then sold the business unit in the second quarter of 2017. The operating income as a percentage of revenue increased to 8.7% in 2017 as compared to 0.7% in 2016. This increase is primarily due to a $12.1 million charge recorded in 2016 related to the impairment of customer relationships, trade name, non-compete intangible assets and technology fixed assets due to the lower financial performance of the Avaya business unit offset by the 2017 $3.3 million impairment of a trade name intangible asset (see Part II. Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 7 to the Consolidated Financial Statements). Included in the operating income was amortization related to acquired intangibles of $1.1 million and $4.6 million for the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively. 34 Customer Strategy Services Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 $ Change % Change Revenue $ 68,326 $ 68,674 $ (348) (0.5) % Operating Income 2,433 (5,691) 8,124 142.8 % Operating Margin 3.6 % (8.3) % The decrease in revenue for the Customer Strategy Services segment was related to growth in the Content and Collaboration and Service Optimization practices offset by decreases in the Mindset and Sales Transformation and Customer Insights practices across multiple delivery regions. The operating income as a percentage of revenue was 3.6% in 2017 as compared to an operating loss of (8.3)% in 2016. The increase is primarily related to the 2016 $7.5 million charge for the impairment of two trade name intangibles offset by the 2017 $2.0 million impairment of one trade name intangible asset (see Part II. Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 7 to the Consolidated Financial Statements). Included in the operating income was amortization expense related to acquired intangibles of $1.8 million and $2.9 million for the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively. Interest Income (Expense) Interest income increased to $2.8 million in 2017 from $1.2 million in 2016. Interest expense increased to $13.7 million during 2017 from $7.9 million for the comparable period in 2016, primarily due to larger utilization of the line of credit primarily related to the acquisitions, higher average interest rates, the upsizing of the credit facility completed in October 2017, and a $1.2 million charge related to the future purchase of the remaining 30% of the Motif acquisition. Other Income (Expense), Net Included in the year ended December 31, 2017 was a net $2.6 million loss related to a business unit which has been sold effective December 22, 2017 and a $3.2 million gain related to dissolution of a foreign entity and a release of its cumulative translation adjustment (see Part II. Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 2 to the Consolidated Financial Statements). Included in the year ended December 31, 2017 was a $5.3 million expense related to the Connextions acquisition and the finalization of the transition services agreement. Included in the year ended December 31, 2016 was a total of $5.3 million of estimated losses related to two business units which had been classified as assets held for sale (see Part II. Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 2 to the Consolidated Financial Statements). Included in the year ended December 31, 2016, was a $4.8 million benefit related to fair value adjustments of the contingent consideration based on revised estimates of performance against targets for two of our acquisitions (see Part II, Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 9 to the Consolidated Financial Statements). Income Taxes The reported effective tax rate for 2017 was 87.8% as compared to 25.6% for 2016. The effective tax rate for 2017 was impacted by earnings in international jurisdictions currently under an income tax holiday, $62.4 million of expense related to the US 2017 Tax Act, $0.6 million of benefit related to provision to return adjustments, a $1.9 million benefit related to impairments, $0.4 million of expense related to the disposition of assets, $0.6 million of expense related to changes in valuation allowances, a $2.2 million benefit related to excess taxes on equity compensation, $5.8 million of benefit related to restructuring charges, and a $2.1 million benefit related to the finalization of a transition service agreement. Without these items our effective tax rate for the year ended December 31, 2017 would have been 24.4%. 35 For the year ended December 31, 2016, our effective tax rate was 25.6%. The effective tax rate for 2016 was impacted by earnings in international jurisdictions currently under an income tax holiday, $1.7 million of expense related to return to provision adjustments, $1.1 million of expense related to a transfer pricing adjustment for a prior period, $0.5 million of expense related to tax rate changes, $0.5 million of expense related to changes in valuation allowances, $1.5 million of benefit related to restructuring expenses, and $9.8 million of benefit related to impairments and assets held for sale. Without these items our effective tax rate for the year ended December 31, 2016 would have been 23.3%. Year Ended December 31, 2016 Compared to 2015 The tables included in the following sections are presented to facilitate an understanding of Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations and present certain information by segment for the years ended December 31, 2016 and 2015 (amounts in thousands). All inter-company transactions between the reported segments for the periods presented have been eliminated. Customer Management Services Year Ended December 31, 2016 2015 $ Change % Change Revenue $ 924,325 $ 913,272 $ 11,053 1.2 % Operating Income 50,541 58,018 (7,477) (12.9) % Operating Margin 5.5 % 6.4 % The increase in revenue for the Customer Management Services segment was attributable to a $47.0 million net increase in client programs and acquisitions offset by program completions of $18.2 million. Revenue was further impacted by a $17.7 million reduction due to foreign currency fluctuations, primarily the Australian dollar and the Brazilian Real. The operating income as a percentage of revenue decreased to 5.5% in 2016 as compared to 6.4% in 2015. The decrease was primarily driven by a $11.1 million impairment for internally developed software and technology assets and a $1.4 million impairment of goodwill (see Part II. Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 6 to the Consolidated Financial Statements) and a shift in business mix to onshore vs. offshore. This was offset by an increase of $4.3 million due to foreign currency fluctuations. Included in the operating income was amortization related to acquired intangibles of $0.9 million and $0.8 million for the years ended December 31, 2016 and 2015, respectively. Customer Growth Services Year Ended December 31, 2016 2015 $ Change % Change Revenue $ 141,005 $ 129,021 $ 11,984 9.3 % Operating Income 6,969 3,077 3,892 126.5 % Operating Margin 4.9 % 2.4 % The increase in revenue for the Customer Growth Services segment was due to a $21.9 million increase in client programs offset by program completions of $8.6 million and a $1.3 million reduction due to foreign currency fluctuations. The operating income as a percentage of revenue increased to 4.9% in 2016 as compared to 2.4% in 2015. This increase was attributable to increased revenue and improvements in the efficiency of the selling, general and administrative expenses and a decrease in amortization. Also included in the 2015 income was a $5.9 million goodwill impairment for the WebMetro reporting unit (see Part II. Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 6 to the Consolidated Financial Statements). Included in the operating income was amortization related to acquired intangibles of $1.8 million and $2.7 million for the years ended December 31, 2016 and 2015, respectively. 36 Customer Technology Services Year Ended December 31, 2016 2015 $ Change % Change Revenue $ 141,254 $ 157,606 $ (16,352) (10.4) % Operating Income 933 13,339 (12,406) (93.0) % Operating Margin 0.7 % 8.5 % The decrease in revenue for the Customer Technology Services segment was driven most significantly by lower volumes in the Avaya platform due to Avaya’s product transition and financial challenges. Additionally, CISCO product sales have declined as clients increasingly move to adopt cloud based solutions. The operating income as a percentage of revenue decreased to 0.7% in 2016 as compared to 8.5% in 2015. Included in the 2016 income was a $12.1 million charge related to the impairment of customer relationships, trade name, non-compete intangible assets and technology fixed assets due to continued lower financial performance of the Avaya business unit (see Part II. Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 7 to the Consolidated Financial Statements). This was offset by increases in the profitability of the CISCO platform including Cloud, Managed Service and Consulting services. Included in the operating income was amortization related to acquired intangibles of $4.6 million and $4.2 million for the years ended December 31, 2016 and 2015, respectively. Customer Strategy Services Year Ended December 31, 2016 2015 $ Change % Change Revenue $ 68,674 $ 86,856 $ (18,182) (20.9) % Operating Income (5,691) 15,746 (21,437) (136.1) % Operating Margin (8.3) % 18.1 % The decrease in revenue for the Customer Strategy Services segment was primarily related to the decrease in the Middle East consulting business as well as revenue volatility in several other regions and a $1.2 million decrease due to foreign currency fluctuations. The operating loss as a percentage of revenue was (8.3)% in 2016 as compared to income of 18.1% in 2015. The loss included $7.5 million of charges for the impairment of two trade name intangible assets due to continued lower performance for two business units (see Part II. Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 7 to the Consolidated Financial Statements). The operating margin decrease also related to lower revenue which caused an underutilization of the consultants as well as the planned investments in practice areas and geographic expansion. Included in the operating income was amortization expense related to acquired intangibles of $2.9 million and $2.9 million for the years ended December 31, 2016 and 2015, respectively. Interest Income (Expense) Interest income increased slightly to $1.2 million in 2016 from $1.1 million in 2015. Interest expense increased to $7.9 million during 2016 from $7.5 million for the comparable period in 2015, primarily due to higher outstanding balances on the line of credit. Other Income (Expense), Net Included in the year ended December 31, 2016 was a total of $5.3 million of estimated losses related to two business units which have been classified as assets held for sale (see Part II. Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 2 to the Consolidated Financial Statements). Included in the year ended December 31, 2016, was a $4.8 million benefit related to fair value adjustments of the contingent consideration based on revised estimates of performance against targets for two of our acquisitions (see Part II, Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 9 to the Consolidated Financial Statements). 37 Included in the year ended December 31, 2015, was a net $26 thousand expense related to fair value adjustments of the contingent consideration based on revised estimates of performance against targets for two of our acquisitions (see Part II, Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 9 to the Consolidated Financial Statements). Income Taxes The reported effective tax rate for 2016 was 25.6% as compared to 23.3% for 2015. The effective tax rate for 2016 was impacted by earnings in international jurisdictions currently under an income tax holiday, $1.7 million of expense related to return to provision adjustments, $1.1 million of expense related to a transfer pricing adjustment for a prior period, $0.5 million of expense related to tax rate changes, $0.5 million of expense related to changes in valuation allowances, $1.5 million of benefit related to restructuring expenses, and $9.8 million of benefit related to impairments and assets held for sale. Without these items our effective tax rate for the year ended December 31, 2016 would have been 23.3%. For the year ended December 31, 2015, our effective tax rate was 23.3%. The effective tax rate for 2015 was impacted by earnings in international jurisdictions currently under an income tax holiday, $2.6 million of benefit related to impairments, $0.7 million benefit related to restructuring charges, $1.2 million net of expense related to changes in valuation allowance and a related release of a deferred tax liability, $1.3 million of expense related to state net operating losses and credits, $1.5 million of expense related to provisions for uncertain tax positions, and $0.4 million benefit related to other discrete items. Without these items our effective tax rate for the year ended December 31, 2015 would have been 20.4%. Liquidity and Capital Resources Our principal sources of liquidity are our cash generated from operations, our cash and cash equivalents, and borrowings under our Credit Facility, dated June 3, 2013 which was amended and restated effective October 30, 2017 (the “Credit Facility”). During the year ended December 31, 2017, we generated positive operating cash flows of $113.2 million. We believe that our cash generated from operations, existing cash and cash equivalents, and available credit will be sufficient to meet expected operating and capital expenditure requirements for the next 12 months. We manage a centralized global treasury function in the United States with a focus on concentrating and safeguarding our global cash and cash equivalents. While the majority of our cash is held outside the U.S., we prefer to hold U.S. Dollars in addition to the local currencies of our foreign subsidiaries. We expect to use our offshore cash to support working capital and growth of our foreign operations. While there are no assurances, we believe our global cash is protected given our cash management practices, banking partners and utilization of diversified, high quality investments. We have global operations that expose us to foreign currency exchange rate fluctuations that may positively or negatively impact our liquidity. We are also exposed to higher interest rates associated with our variable rate debt. To mitigate these risks, we enter into foreign exchange forward and option contracts and interest rate swaps through our cash flow hedging program. Please refer to Item 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk, Foreign Currency Risk, for further discussion. We primarily utilize our Credit Facility to fund working capital, general operations, stock repurchases, dividends, and other strategic activities, such as the acquisitions described in Part II. Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 2 to the Consolidated Financial Statements. As of December 31, 2017 and 2016, we had borrowings of $344.0 million and $217.3 million, respectively, under our Credit Facility, and our average daily utilization was $494.7 million and $375.3 million for the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively. After consideration for the current level of availability based on the covenant calculations, our remaining borrowing capacity was approximately $350 million as of December 31, 2017. As of December 31, 2017, we were in compliance with all covenants and conditions under our Credit Facility. 38 The amount of capital required over the next 12 months will depend on our levels of investment in infrastructure necessary to maintain, upgrade or replace existing assets. Our working capital and capital expenditure requirements could also increase materially in the event of acquisitions or joint ventures, among other factors. These factors could require that we raise additional capital through future debt or equity financing. We can provide no assurance that we will be able to raise additional capital with commercially reasonable terms acceptable to us. The following discussion highlights our cash flow activities during the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016, and 2015. Cash and Cash Equivalents We consider all liquid investments purchased within 90 days of their original maturity to be cash equivalents. Our cash and cash equivalents totaled $74.4 million and $55.3 million as of December 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively. We diversify the holdings of such cash and cash equivalents considering the financial condition and stability of the counterparty institutions. We reinvest our cash flows to grow our client base, expand our infrastructure, for investment in research and development, for strategic acquisitions, for the purchase of our outstanding stock and to pay dividends. Cash Flows from Operating Activities For the years 2017, 2016 and 2015 we reported net cash flows provided by operating activities of $113.2 million, $111.8 million and $138.0 million, respectively. The increase of $1.3 million from 2016 to 2017 was primarily due to a $110.6 million decrease in payments made for operating expenses offset by a $51.4 million decrease in cash collected from accounts receivable and an $19.2 million decrease in prepaid assets. The decrease of $26.2 million from 2015 to 2016 was primarily due to a $12.0 million increase in cash collected from accounts receivable, a $5.3 million increase in prepaid assets, offset by $34.3 million increase in payments made for operating expenses. Cash Flows from Investing Activities For the years 2017, 2016 and 2015, we reported net cash flows used in investing activities of $169.0 million, $100.4 million and $77.2 million, respectively. The net increase in cash used in investing activities from 2016 to 2017 was primarily due to increased spending on acquisitions of $69.9 million. The net increase in cash used in investing activities from 2015 to 2016 was primarily due to increased spending on acquisitions of $44.7 million offset by a decrease in spending on investments of $5.8 million and a decrease of $15.8 million due to lower capital expenditures. Cash Flows from Financing Activities For the years 2017, 2016 and 2015, we reported net cash flows provided by (used in) financing activities of $71.6 million, $(1.6) million and $(57.1) million, respectively. The change in net cash flows from 2016 to 2017 was primarily due to a $9.4 million increase in borrowing on the Credit Facility, a decrease in the contingent consideration and hold-back payments of $8.1 million, offset by a $56.4 million decrease in purchases of our outstanding common stock and a $4.1 million payment to purchase a non-controlling interest. The change in net cash flows from 2015 to 2016 was primarily due to a $117.3 million increase in borrowing on the Credit Facility, a decrease in the contingent consideration and hold-back payments of $2.4 million, offset by a $57.5 million increase in purchases of our outstanding common stock, a $4.1 million payment to purchase a non-controlling interest, and $1.9 million paid for debt issuance costs. Free Cash Flow Free cash flow (see “Presentation of Non-GAAP Measurements” below for the definition of free cash flow) was $61.2 million, $61.0 million and $71.4 million for the years 2017, 2016 and 2015, respectively. The increase from 2016 to 2017 was primarily due to the increase in cash flows provided by operating activities. The decrease from 2015 to 2016 was primarily due to the decrease in cash flows provided by operating activities offset by a decrease in spend for capital expenditures. 39 Presentation of Non-GAAP Measurements Free Cash Flow Free cash flow is a non-GAAP liquidity measurement. We believe that free cash flow is useful to our investors because it measures, during a given period, the amount of cash generated that is available for debt obligations and investments other than purchases of property, plant and equipment. Free cash flow is not a measure determined by GAAP and should not be considered a substitute for “income from operations,” “net income,” “net cash provided by operating activities,” or any other measure determined in accordance with GAAP. We believe this non-GAAP liquidity measure is useful, in addition to the most directly comparable GAAP measure of “net cash provided by operating activities,” because free cash flow includes investments in operational assets. Free cash flow does not represent residual cash available for discretionary expenditures, since it includes cash required for debt service. Free cash flow also includes cash that may be necessary for acquisitions, investments and other needs that may arise. The following table reconciles net cash provided by operating activities to free cash flow for our consolidated results (in thousands): Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 2015 Net cash provided by operating activities $ 113,152 $ 111,830 $ 137,998 Less: Purchases of property, plant and equipment 51,958 50,832 66,595 Free cash flow $ 61,194 $ 60,998 $ 71,403 Obligations and Future Capital Requirements Future maturities of our outstanding debt and contractual obligations as of December 31, 2017 are summarized as follows (in thousands): Less than 1 to 3 3 to 5 Over 5 1 Year Years Years Years Total Credit Facility(1) $ 10,154 $ 20,308 $ 345,692 $ — $ 376,154 Equipment financing arrangements 3,588 5,376 1,570 — 10,534 Contingent consideration 399 — — — 399 Purchase obligations 10,333 6,977 681 — 17,991 Operating lease commitments 44,299 61,314 38,139 30,984 174,736 Transition tax related to US 2017 Tax Act — 2,900 9,400 35,600 47,900 Other debt 2,988 31,232 425 — 34,645 Total $ 71,761 $ 128,107 $ 395,907 $ 66,584 $ 662,359 (1) Includes estimated interest payments based on the weighted-average interest rate, unused commitment fees, current interest rate swap arrangements, and outstanding debt as of December 31, 2017. • Contractual obligations to be paid in a foreign currency are translated at the period end exchange rate. • Purchase obligations primarily consist of outstanding purchase orders for goods or services not yet received, which are not recognized as liabilities in our Consolidated Balance Sheets until such goods and/or services are received. • The contractual obligation table excludes our liabilities of $5.1 million related to uncertain tax positions because we cannot reliably estimate the timing of future cash payments. See Part II, Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 10 to the Consolidated Financial Statements for further discussion. 40 Our outstanding debt is primarily associated with the use of funds under our Credit Agreement to fund working capital, repurchase our common stock, pay dividends and for other cash flow needs across our global operations. Purchase Obligations Occasionally we contract with certain of our communications clients to provide us with telecommunication services. These clients currently represent approximately 13% of our total annual revenue. We believe these contracts are negotiated on an arm’s-length basis and may be negotiated at different times and with different legal entities. Future Capital Requirements We expect total capital expenditures in 2018 to be approximately 3.8% of 2018 revenue. Approximately 70% of these expected capital expenditures are to support growth in our business and 30% relate to the maintenance of existing assets. The anticipated level of 2018 capital expenditures is primarily driven by new client contracts and the corresponding requirements for additional customer engagement center capacity as well as enhancements to our technological infrastructure. We may consider restructurings, dispositions, mergers, acquisitions and other similar transactions. Such transactions could include the transfer, sale or acquisition of significant assets, businesses or interests, including joint ventures or the incurrence, assumption, or refinancing of indebtedness and could be material to the consolidated financial condition and consolidated results of our operations. Our capital expenditures requirements could also increase materially in the event of an acquisition or joint ventures. In addition, as of December 31, 2017, we were authorized to purchase an additional $26.6 million of common stock under our stock repurchase program (see Item 5. Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities). Our stock repurchase program does not have an expiration date. The launch of large client contracts may result in short-term negative working capital because of the time period between incurring the costs for training and launching the program and the beginning of the accounts receivable collection process. As a result, periodically we may generate negative cash flows from operating activities. Debt Instruments and Related Covenants On February 11, 2016, we entered into a First Amendment to our June 3, 2013 Amended and Restated Credit Agreement and Amended and Restated Security Agreement (collectively the “Credit Agreement”) for a senior secured revolving credit facility (the “Credit Facility”) with a syndicate of lenders led by Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as agent, swing line and fronting lender. On October 30, 2017, the Company entered into a Third Amendment to the Credit Agreement and exercised the Credit Facility’s accordion feature to increase the total commitment under the Credit Facility to $1.2 billion. All other material terms of the Credit Agreement remained unchanged. The Credit Agreement provides for a secured revolving credit facility that matures on February 11, 2021 with a maximum aggregate commitment of $1.2 billion. At our discretion, direct borrowing options under the Credit Agreement include (i) Eurodollar loans with one, two, three, and six month terms, (ii) overnight base rate loans, and (iii) alternate currency loans. The Credit Agreement also provides for a foreign subsidiary borrowing capacity sub-limit for loans or letters of credit of up to 50% of the total commitment amount, in both U.S. dollars and certain foreign currencies. We primarily utilize our Credit Facility to fund working capital, general operations, stock repurchases, dividends, acquisitions, and other strategic activities. Base rate loans bear interest at a rate equal to the greatest of (i) Wells Fargo’s prime rate, (ii) one half of 1% in excess of the federal funds effective rate, or (iii) 1.25% in excess of the one month London Interbank Offered Rate (“LIBOR”), plus in each case a margin of 0% to 0.75% based on our net leverage ratio. Eurodollar loans bear interest at LIBOR plus a margin of 1.0% to 1.75% based on our net leverage ratio. Alternate currency loans bear interest at rates applicable to their respective currencies. Letter of credit fees are one eighth of 1% of the stated amount of the letter of credit on the date of issuance, renewal or amendment, plus an annual fee equal to the borrowing margin for Eurodollar loans. 41 The Credit Facility commitment fees are payable to the lenders in an amount equal to the unused portion of the Credit Facility at a rate of 0.125% to 0.250% per annum based on our net leverage ratio. Indebtedness under the Credit Agreement is guaranteed by certain of our domestic subsidiaries and is secured by security interests (subject to permitted liens) in the U.S. accounts receivable and cash of our Company and certain of its domestic subsidiaries. The indebtedness may also be secured by tangible assets of our Company and its domestic subsidiaries, if borrowings by foreign subsidiaries exceed $100.0 million and the total net leverage ratio is greater than 3.00 to 1.00. We also pledged 65% of the voting stock and all of the non-voting stock, if any, of certain of our material foreign subsidiaries. The Credit Agreement contains customary affirmative, negative, and financial covenants. These covenants include, but are not limited to, the following, in each case subject to exceptions set forth in the Credit Agreement: incurring additional indebtedness or, guaranteeing of indebtedness; creating, incurring, assuming or permitting to exist liens on property and assets; making loans and investments and entering into certain types of mergers, consolidations and acquisitions; making capital distributions or paying, redeeming or repurchasing subordinated debt; entering into certain affiliate transactions; and entering into agreements that would restrict the ability of the Company’s subsidiaries to pay dividends and make distributions. In addition, the Company is obligated to maintain a maximum net leverage ratio of 3.25 to 1.00, and a minimum interest coverage ratio of 2.50 to 1.00. The Credit Facility also contains certain customary information and reporting requirements, and events of default, including without limitation events of default based on payment obligations, material inaccuracies of representations and warranties, covenant defaults, cross defaults to certain other debt, certain ERISA events, changes in control, monetary judgments, and insolvency proceedings. Upon the occurrence of an event of default, the lenders may accelerate the maturity of all amounts outstanding under the Credit Facility. As of December 31, 2017 and 2016, we had borrowings of $344.0 million and $217.3 million, respectively, under the Credit Facility. During 2017, 2016 and 2015, borrowings accrued interest at an average rate of approximately 2.2%, 1.5%, and 1.2% per annum, respectively, excluding unused commitment fees. Our daily average borrowings during 2017, 2016 and 2015 were $494.7 million, $375.3 million and $319.6 million, respectively. As of December 31, 2017, and 2016, based on the current level of availability based on the covenant calculations, the remaining borrowing capacity was approximately $350 million and $370 million, respectively. Client Concentration During 2017, one of our clients represented 9.0% of our total annual revenue. Our five largest clients accounted for 35%, 35% and 35% of our annual revenue for the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015, respectively. We have long-term relationships with our top five clients, ranging from 10 to 21 years, with the majority of these clients having completed multiple contract renewals with us. The relative contribution of any single client to consolidated earnings is not always proportional to the relative revenue contribution on a consolidated basis and varies greatly based upon specific contract terms. In addition, clients may adjust business volumes served by us based on their business requirements. We believe the risk of this concentration is mitigated, in part, by the long-term contracts we have with our largest clients. Although certain client contracts may be terminated for convenience by either party, we believe this risk is mitigated, in part, by the service level disruptions and transition/migration costs that would arise for our clients. The contracts with our five largest clients expire between 2018 and 2023. Additionally, a particular client may have multiple contracts with different expiration dates. We have historically renewed most of our contracts with our largest clients, but there can be no assurance that future contracts will be renewed or, if renewed, will be on terms as favorable as the existing contracts. 42 Cybersecurity We have made and continue to make significant financial investments in technologies and processes to mitigate cyber risks. We have a number of complex information systems used for a variety of functions ranging from services we deliver to our customers to how we support our operations. We depend on the proper functioning of these information systems. Like any information system, they are susceptible to cyber-attack. Any cyber-attack could impact the availability, reliability, speed, accuracy, or other proper functioning of these systems or result in confidential data being compromised which could have a significant impact on our reputation, results of operations, and financial condition. Our information systems are protected through physical and technological safeguards as well as backup systems considered appropriate by management. We also provide employee awareness training about phishing, malware, social engineering, and other cyber risks. Further, we have cybersecurity specific risk management steering committee that meets periodically to fully coordinate all enterprise level cybersecurity issues, and our Board of Directors and executive leadership team are updated at least quarterly on progress and status of our cybersecurity priorities. We must continuously monitor and develop our information technology networks and infrastructure to prevent, detect, address, and mitigate the risk of unauthorized access, distributed denial of service attacks, malware attacks, computer viruses, cyber fraud, and other events intended to disrupt information systems, wrongfully obtain valuable information, or cause other types of malicious events that result in harm to our business. Investment in cybersecurity is not expected to decrease in the foreseeable future, and there can be no assurance that a sophisticated cyber-attack can be detected or thwarted. Recently Issued Accounting Pronouncements We discuss the potential impact of recent accounting pronouncements in Part II, Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 1 to the Consolidated Financial Statements. ITEM 7A. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK Market risk represents the risk of loss that may impact our consolidated financial position, consolidated results of operations, or consolidated cash flows due to adverse changes in financial and commodity market prices and rates. Market risk also includes credit and non-performance risk by counterparties to our various financial instruments. We are exposed to market risks due to changes in interest rates and foreign currency exchange rates (as measured against the U.S. dollar); as well as credit risk associated with potential non-performance of our counterparty banks. These exposures are directly related to our normal operating and funding activities. We enter into derivative instruments to manage and reduce the impact of currency exchange rate changes, primarily between the U.S. dollar/Philippine peso, the U.S. dollar/Mexican peso, and the Australian dollar/Philippine peso. We enter into interest rate derivative instruments to reduce our exposure to interest rate fluctuations associated with our variable rate debt. To mitigate against credit and non-performance risk, it is our policy to only enter into derivative contracts and other financial instruments with investment grade counterparty financial institutions and, correspondingly, our derivative valuations reflect the creditworthiness of our counterparties. As of the date of this report, we have not experienced, nor do we anticipate, any issue related to derivative counterparty defaults. Interest Rate Risk We entered into interest rate derivative instruments to reduce our exposure to interest rate fluctuations associated with our variable rate debt. The interest rate on our Credit Agreement is variable based upon the Prime Rate and LIBOR and, therefore, is affected by changes in market interest rates. As of December 31, 2017, we had $344.0 million of outstanding borrowings under the Credit Agreement. Based upon average daily outstanding borrowings during the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016, interest accrued at a rate of approximately 2.2% and 1.5% per annum, respectively. If the Prime Rate or LIBOR increased by 100 basis points, there would be $1.0 million of additional interest expense per $100.0 million of outstanding borrowing under the Credit Agreement. 43 The Company’s interest rate swap arrangement expired as of May 31, 2017 and no additional swaps have been entered into. As of December 31, 2016 the outstanding interest rate swap was as follows: Contract Contract Notional Variable Rate Fixed Rate Commencement Maturity December 31, 2016 Amount Received Paid Date Date Swap $ 15 million 1 - month LIBOR 3.14 % May 2012 May 2017 Foreign Currency Risk Our subsidiaries in the Philippines, Mexico, India, Costa Rica, Bulgaria and Poland use the local currency as their functional currency for paying labor and other operating costs. Conversely, revenue for these foreign subsidiaries is derived principally from client contracts that are invoiced and collected in U.S. dollars or other foreign currencies. As a result, we may experience foreign currency gains or losses, which may positively or negatively affect our results of operations attributed to these subsidiaries. For the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015, revenue associated with this foreign exchange risk was 26%, 32% and 30% of our consolidated revenue, respectively. The following summarizes relative (weakening) strengthening of local currencies that are relevant to our business: Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 2015 Canadian Dollar vs. U.S. Dollar 6.6 % 3.1 % (19.3) % Philippine Peso vs. U.S. Dollar (0.8) % (5.9) % (4.7) % Mexican Peso vs. U.S. Dollar 5.0 % (19.5) % (17.5) % Australian Dollar vs. U.S. Dollar 7.7 % (1.3) % (11.8) % Euro vs. U.S. Dollar 12.1 % (3.6) % (11.5) % Philippine Peso vs. Australian Dollar (9.2) % (4.5) % 6.3 % In order to mitigate the risk of these non-functional foreign currencies weakening against the functional currencies of the servicing subsidiaries, which thereby decreases the economic benefit of performing work in these countries, we may hedge a portion, though not 100%, of the projected foreign currency exposure related to client programs served from these foreign countries through our cash flow hedging program. While our hedging strategy can protect us from adverse changes in foreign currency rates in the short term, an overall weakening of the non-functional revenue foreign currencies would adversely impact margins in the segments of the servicing subsidiary over the long term. Cash Flow Hedging Program To reduce our exposure to foreign currency exchange rate fluctuations associated with forecasted revenue in non-functional currencies, we purchase forward and/or option contracts to acquire the functional currency of the foreign subsidiary at a fixed exchange rate at specific dates in the future. We have designated and account for these derivative instruments as cash flow hedges for forecasted revenue in non-functional currencies. While we have implemented certain strategies to mitigate risks related to the impact of fluctuations in currency exchange rates, we cannot ensure that we will not recognize gains or losses from international transactions, as this is part of transacting business in an international environment. Not every exposure is or can be hedged and, where hedges are put in place based on expected foreign exchange exposure, they are based on forecasts for which actual results may differ from the original estimate. Failure to successfully hedge or anticipate currency risks properly could adversely affect our consolidated operating results. 44 Our cash flow hedging instruments as of December 31, 2017 and 2016 are summarized as follows (in thousands). All hedging instruments are forward contracts, except as noted. Local Currency U.S. Dollar % Maturing Contracts Notional Notional in the next Maturing As of December 31, 2017 Amount Amount 12 months Through Philippine Peso 10,685,000 219,917 (1) 62.3 % August 2021 Mexican Peso 1,609,000 93,589 41.0 % May 2021 $ 313,506 Local Currency U.S. Dollar Notional Notional As of December 31, 2016 Amount Amount Philippine Peso 14,315,000 301,134 (1) Mexican Peso 2,089,000 129,375 $ 430,509 (1) Includes contracts to purchase Philippine pesos in exchange for New Zealand dollars and Australian dollars, which are translated into equivalent U.S. dollars on December 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016. The fair value of our cash flow hedges at December 31, 2017 was a liability (in thousands): Maturing in the December 31, 2017 Next 12 Months Philippine Peso (8,766) (5,751) Mexican Peso (17,490) (9,632) $ (26,256) $ (15,383) Our cash flow hedges are valued using models based on market observable inputs, including both forward and spot foreign exchange rates, implied volatility, and counterparty credit risk. The fair value liability of our cash flow hedges decreased by $27.8 million from December 31, 2016 to December 31, 2017. The decrease in fair value liability from December 31, 2016 largely reflects a reduction in the total notional value of outstanding cash flow hedges and an increase in average hedge exchange rates. We recorded net losses of $22.8 million, $28.0 million, and $12.4 million for settled cash flow hedge contracts for the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016, and 2015, respectively. These losses were reflected in Revenue in the accompanying Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). If the exchange rates between our various currency pairs were to increase or decrease by 10% from current period-end levels, we would incur a material gain or loss on the contracts. However, any gain or loss would be mitigated by corresponding increases or decreases in our underlying exposures. Other than the transactions hedged as discussed above and in Part II. Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data, Note 8 to the Consolidated Financial Statements, the majority of the transactions of our U.S. and foreign operations are denominated in their respective local currency. However, transactions are denominated in other currencies from time-to-time. We do not currently engage in hedging activities related to these types of foreign currency risks because we believe them to be insignificant as we endeavor to settle these accounts on a timely basis. For the years ended 2017 and 2016, approximately 24% and 22%, respectively, of revenue was derived from contracts denominated in currencies other than the U.S. Dollar. Our results from operations and revenue could be adversely affected if the U.S. Dollar strengthens significantly against foreign currencies. Fair Value of Debt and Equity Securities We did not have any investments in marketable debt or equity securities as of December 31, 2017 or 2016. 45 ITEM 8. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA The financial statements required by this item are located beginning on page F-1 of this report and incorporated herein by reference. ITEM 9. CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING AND FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE Not applicable. ITEM 9A. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES This Form 10-K includes the certifications of our Chief Executive Officer (the “CEO”) and Chief Financial Officer (the “CFO”) required by Rule 13a-14 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”). See Exhibits 31.1 and 31.2. This Item 9A includes information concerning the controls and control evaluations referred to in those certifications. Disclosure Controls and Procedures Disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Exchange Act) are designed to provide reasonable assurance that information required to be disclosed in reports filed or submitted under the Exchange Act is recorded, processed, summarized, and reported within the time periods specified in SEC rules and forms and that such information is accumulated and communicated to management, including our CEO and CFO, as appropriate, to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure. We carried out an evaluation under the supervision and with the participation of management, including the CEO and CFO, of the effectiveness of our disclosure controls and procedures, as of December 31, 2017, the end of the period covered by this Form 10-K. Based on this evaluation, our CEO and CFO have concluded that the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended) were effective at the reasonable assurance level. Inherent Limitations of Internal Controls Our management, including the CEO and CFO, believes that any disclosure controls and procedures or internal control over financial reporting, no matter how well conceived and operated, can provide only reasonable, not absolute, assurance that the objectives of internal controls are met. Further, the design of internal controls must consider the benefits of controls relative to their costs. Inherent limitations within internal controls include the realities that judgments in decision-making can be faulty, and that breakdowns can occur because of simple error or mistake. Additionally, controls can be circumvented by the individual acts of some persons, by collusion of two or more people, or by unauthorized override of the control. Over time, control may become inadequate because of changes in conditions or deterioration in the degree of compliance with associated policies or procedures. While the objective of the design of any system of controls is to provide reasonable assurance of the effectiveness of controls, such design is also based in part upon certain assumptions about the likelihood of future events, and such assumptions, while reasonable, may not take into account all potential future conditions. Thus, even effective internal control over financial reporting can only provide reasonable assurance of achieving their objectives. Therefore, because of the inherent limitations in cost effective internal controls, misstatements due to error or fraud may occur and may not be prevented or detected. 46 Management’s Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting Management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting, as defined in Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f) under the Exchange Act. Internal control over financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Internal control over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures which (a) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of assets, (b) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, (c) provide reasonable assurance that receipts and expenditures are being made only in accordance with appropriate authorization of management and the Board of Directors, and (d) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use or disposition of assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements. In connection with the preparation of this Annual Report on Form 10-K, our management, under the supervision and with the participation of our CEO and CFO, conducted an evaluation of the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2017 based on the framework established in Internal Control — Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (“COSO”). As a result of that evaluation, our management concluded that the Company’s internal control over financial reporting was effective as of December 31, 2017, the end of the period covered by this Form 10-K. We excluded Connextions, Inc. (“Connextions”) and Motif, Inc. (“Motif”) from our assessment of internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2017 because these companies were acquired by the Company in purchase business combinations during 2017. Connextions total assets and total revenues represent 5.8% and 6.5%, respectively, of the related consolidated financial amounts. Motif represents 1.2% and 0.3%, respectively, of the related consolidated financial amounts as of and for the year ended December 31, 2017. The effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2017 has been audited by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, our independent registered public accounting firm, as stated in their report, which is included herein. Remediation of Prior Material Weaknesses The following captures the progress made by management related to each of the material weaknesses as previously reported which have been remediated. Revenue: Management previously identified a material weakness in the design and operating effectiveness of controls over the revenue process. During 2016, management took the necessary steps to redesign the control framework, including the implementation of (i) a revenue quality assurance organization, (ii) standardized contract and invoice review and approval templates, and (iii) a document storage system for improved organization and evidence of review. Additionally, management established a quarterly control owner certification process and invested in employee training. Management completed the design and implementation of this control framework in the quarter ended December 31, 2016. Based on the results of our testing during 2017, management has concluded that the controls are adequately designed and have operated effectively for a sufficient period of time. Accordingly, the revenue material weakness was remediated as described in our Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the period ended September 30, 2017. Impairments: Management previously identified a material weakness in the design and operating effectiveness of controls over the review of cash flow forecasts used in the accounting for long-lived asset recoverability and goodwill impairment and determination of impairment charge in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. During 2016, management took the necessary steps to redesign the control framework, including implementation of specific preparation and review procedures to (i) ensure the accuracy of the valuation models used to calculate fair market values, (ii) validate the source of the financial forecasts, and (iii) evidence the assessment of the models for reasonableness. In addition, TTEC engaged a third-party valuation expert to assist management with the underlying valuation models supporting the goodwill and intangible impairment assessments. Management completed the design and implementation of the control framework during the 47 quarter ended December 31, 2016. Based on the results of our testing during 2017, management has concluded that the controls are adequately designed and have operated effectively for a sufficient period of time during 2017. Accordingly, the impairments material weakness is remediated. Control Environment: Management previously identified a material weakness of the effectiveness of the control environment as we did not have a sufficient complement of qualified personnel commensurate with our financial reporting requirements. During 2016 and 2017 TTEC invested significantly in the quality of our accounting talent including management, technical, process improvement and financial system roles. Additionally, we implemented a number of programs to: improve our talent acquisition and retention platforms; enhance technical, transactional and control knowledge of our accounting teams; and create a culture of accountability and control. These programs have significantly improved the stability of our global accounting organization. Management has demonstrated for a sufficient period of time the sustainability of our internal controls over financial reporting and improvements made to our complement of resources and concluded our control environment is effective. Accordingly, the control environment material weakness is remediated. Changes in Internal Control over Financial Reporting There has been no change in our internal control over financial reporting during the most recent quarter that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting. ITEM 9B. OTHER INFORMATION None. PART III ITEM 10. DIRECTORS, EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE The information in our 2018 Definitive Proxy Statement on Schedule 14A, which will be filed no later than 120 days after December 31, 2017 (the “2018 Proxy Statement”) regarding our executive officers under the heading “Information Regarding Executive Officers” is incorporated herein by reference. We have both a Code of Ethical Conduct for Executive and Financial Managers and a Code of Conduct. The Code of Ethical Conduct for Executive and Financial Officers applies to our Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer, presidents of our business segments, Controller, Treasurer, the General Counsel, Chief Audit executive, senior financial officers of each operating segment and other persons performing similar functions. The Code of Conduct applies to all directors, officers, employees and members of our supply chain (as applicable). Both the Code of Ethical Conduct for Executive and Financial Officers and the Code of Conduct are posted on our website at www.ttec.com on the Corporate Governance page. We will post on our website any amendments to or waivers of the Code of Ethical Conduct for Executive and Financial Officers and our Code of Conduct, in accordance with applicable laws and regulations. There have been no material changes to the procedures by which stockholders may recommend nominees to the board of directors. The remaining information called for by this Item 10 is incorporated by reference herein from our 2018 Proxy Statement. ITEM 11. EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION The information in our 2018 Proxy Statement is incorporated herein by reference. 48 ITEM 12. SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT AND RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS The information regarding these matters is included in Part II, Item 5. Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities. Also the information in our 2018 Proxy Statement is incorporated herein by reference. ITEM 13. CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS, AND DIRECTOR INDEPENDENCE The information in our 2018 Proxy Statement is incorporated herein by reference. ITEM 14. PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANTS FEES AND SERVICES The information in our 2018 Proxy Statement is incorporated herein by reference. PART IV ITEM 15. EXHIBITS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES (a) The following documents are filed as part of this report: 1. Consolidated Financial Statements. The Index to Consolidated Financial Statements is set forth on page F-1 of this report. 2. Financial Statement Schedules. All schedules for TTEC have been omitted since the required information is not present or not present in amounts sufficient to require submission of the schedule, or because the information is included in the respective Consolidated Financial Statements or notes thereto. 3. Exhibits. EXHIBIT INDEX Exhibit No. Description 3.01** Restated Certificate of Incorporation of TeleTech Holdings, Inc. filed with the State of Delaware on August 1, 1996 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to TeleTech’s Amendment No. 2 to Form S-1 Registration Statement (Registration No. 333-04097) filed on July 5, 1996) 3.02** Amended and Restated Bylaws of TeleTech Holdings, Inc., effective February 22, 2017 (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.02 to TeleTech’s Report on Form 8-K filed on February 27, 2017) 3.03** Certificate of Amendment of Restated Certificate of Incorporation of TTEC Holdings, Inc. (reflecting name change) filed with the State of Delaware on December 18, 2017 with an effective date of January 1, 2018 (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 3.03 to Form 8-K filed on January 9, 2018) 3.04** Amended and Restated Bylaws of TTEC Holdings, Inc. (reflecting name change) (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 3.04 to Form 8-K filed on January 9, 2018) 10.06** TeleTech Holdings, Inc. 2010 Equity Incentive Plan (incorporated by reference as Appendix A to TeleTech’s Definitive Proxy Statement, filed April 12, 2010) 49 Exhibit No. Description 10.24** Form of Restricted Stock Unit Agreement (Section 16 Officers) (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 4.3 to TeleTech’s Form S-8 Registration Statement (Registration No. 333-167300) filed on June 3, 2010) 10.25** Form of Restricted Stock Unit Agreement (Non-Section 16 Employees) (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 4.4 to TeleTech’s Form S-8 Registration Statement (Registration No. 333-167300) filed on June 3, 2010) 10.27** Form of Global Restricted Stock Unit Agreement (Operating Committee Member) (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to TeleTech’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q filed on May 1, 2013) 10.28** Form of Global Restricted Stock Unit Agreement (Non-Operating Committee Member) (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 10.2 to TeleTech’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q filed on May 1, 2013) 10.29** Form of TeleTech Holdings, Inc. Restricted Stock Unit Award Agreement (other employees) effective July 1, 2014 (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 10.29 to TeleTech’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2014) 10.30** Form of TeleTech Holdings, Inc. Restricted Stock Unit Award Agreement (Directors and Executive Committee Members) effective July 1, 2014 (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 10.30 to TeleTech’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2014) 10.32** Independent Director Compensation Arrangements (effective January 1, 2016) (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 10.32 to TeleTech’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2015) 10.33** Form of Indemnification Agreement with Directors (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 10.1 to TeleTech’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed on February 22, 2010) 10.40** Employment Agreement between Kenneth D. Tuchman and TeleTech dated October 15, 2001 (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 10.68 to TeleTech’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2001) 10.41** Amendment to Employment Agreement between Kenneth D. Tuchman and TeleTech dated December 31, 2008 (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 10.17 to TeleTech’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2008) 10.60** Employment Agreement between Regina Paolillo and TeleTech Holdings, Inc. effective as of November 3, 2011 (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 10.1 to TeleTech’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed October 27, 2011) 10.81** Employment Agreement between Robert N. Jimenez and TeleTech Services Corporation effective as of April 20, 2015 (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 10.81 to TeleTech’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2015) 50 Exhibit No. Description 10.82** Employment Agreement between Judi Hand and TeleTech Services Corporation effective as of July 1, 2016 (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 10.82 to TeleTech’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2016) 10.83** Employment Agreement between Martin DeGhetto and TeleTech Services Corporation effective as of July 1, 2016 (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 10.83 to TeleTech’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2016) 10.85** Employment Agreement between Anthony Y. Tsai and TeleTech Services Corporation effective as of September 5, 2017 (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 10.85 to TeleTech’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2017) 10.90** First Amendment to Amended and Restated Credit Agreement and First Amendment to Amended and Restated Security Agreement for the senior secured revolving credit facility with a syndicate of lenders led by Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as agent, swing line and fronting lender (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.90 to TeleTech’s Form 8-K filed on February 16, 2016) 10.91 Second Amendment to Amended and Restated Credit Agreement for the senior secured revolving credit facility with a syndicate of lenders led by Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as agent, swing line and fronting lender dated as of February 27, 2017 (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 10.91 to TeleTech’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2017) 10.92 Third Amendment to Amended and Restated Credit Agreement and Incremental Increase Amendment for a senior secured revolving credit facility with a syndicate of lenders led by Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as agent, swing line and fronting lender, executed to be effective as of October 31, 2017 (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 10.92 to TeleTech’s Report on Form 8-K filed on November 1, 2017) 10.95 Share Purchase Agreement between TeleTech Europe BV and TeleTech Canada and Kilmer Capital Fund II L.P., 8169306 Canada Inc. Bank of Montreal, doing business as BMO Capital Partners, and certain management shareholders of November 9, 2016 (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 10.2 to TeleTech’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2016) 10.96 Purchase Agreement dated as of April 3, 2017 by and among OptumHealth Holdings, LLC, Connextions, Inc., and TeleTech Healthcare Solutions, Inc. (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 10.96 to TeleTech’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2017) 10.97 Stock Purchase Agreement of November 8, 2017 by and among TeleTech Services Corporation, Motif, Inc. (“Motif”), Kaushal Mehta and Parul Mehta (referred to collectively as the “Founders”), the shareholders of Motif (other than Founders, referred to as “Sellers”), and Outforce LLC (the Seller’s Agent) (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 10.97 to TeleTech’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2017) 51 Exhibit No. Description 10.98 Share Purchase Agreement of November 8, 2017 by and among TeleTech Services Corporation, the Founders, the Anishi Mehta Irrevocable Trust, the Ishan Mehta Irrevocable Trust, Anishi Meht and Ishan Mehta (incorporated by reference as Exhibit 10.98 to TeleTech’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2017) 21.1* List of subsidiaries 23.1* Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm 24.1* Power of Attorney 31.1* Rule 13a-14(a) Certification of CEO of TTEC 31.2* Rule 13a-14(a) Certification of CFO of TTEC 32.1* Written Statement of Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (18 U.S.C. Section 1350) 32.2* Written Statement of Chief Financial Officer Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (18 U.S.C. Section 1350) 101.INS*** XBRL Instance Document 101.SCH*** XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema Document 101.CAL*** XBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase Document. 101.LAB*** XBRL Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase Document 101.PRE*** XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase Document 101.DEF*** XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition Linkbase Document * Filed or furnished herewith. ** Identifies exhibit that consists of or includes a management contract or compensatory plan or arrangement. *** Attached as Exhibit 101 to this report are the following documents formatted in XBRL (Extensible Business Reporting Language): (i) Consolidated Balance Sheets as of December 31, 2017 and 2016, (ii) Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss) for the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015, (iii) Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity for the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015, (iv) Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015, and (v) Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements. ITEM 16. FORM 10-K SUMMARY None 52 SIGNATURES Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned; thereunto duly authorized on March 12, 2018. TTEC HOLDINGS, INC. By: /s/ KENNETH D. TUCHMAN Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below on March 12, 2018, by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities indicated: Signature Title /s/ KENNETH D. TUCHMAN PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE OFFICER Kenneth D. Tuchman Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board /s/ REGINA M. PAOLILLO PRINCIPAL FINANCIAL AND ACCOUNTING OFFICER Regina M. Paolillo Chief Financial Officer * DIRECTOR Steven J. Anenen * DIRECTOR Tracy L. Bahl * DIRECTOR Gregory A. Conley * DIRECTOR Robert N. Frerichs * DIRECTOR Marc L. Holtzman * DIRECTOR Ekta Singh-Bushell * By /s/ Regina M. Paolillo under Power of Attorney as attached hereto as Exhibit 24.1 F-1 INDEX TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF TTEC HOLDINGS, INC. Page No. Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm F-2 Consolidated Balance Sheets as of December 31, 2017 and 2016 F-4 Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss) for the Years Ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015 F-5 Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity for the Years Ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015 F-6 Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the Years Ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015 F-7 Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements F-8 F-2 Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm To the Stockholders and Board of Directors of TTEC Holdings, Inc. Opinions on the Financial Statements and Internal Control over Financial Reporting We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of TTEC Holdings, Inc. and its subsidiaries as of December 31, 2017 and 2016, and the related consolidated statements of comprehensive income (loss), of stockholders’ equity and of cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2017, including the related notes (collectively referred to as the “consolidated financial statements”). We also have audited the Company's internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2017, based on criteria established in Internal Control - Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO). In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Company as of December 31, 2017 and 2016, and the results of their operations and their cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2017 in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. Also in our opinion, the Company maintained, in all material respects, effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2017, based on criteria established in Internal Control - Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the COSO. Basis for Opinions The Company's management is responsible for these consolidated financial statements, for maintaining effective internal control over financial reporting, and for its assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting, included in Management's Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting appearing under Item 9A. Our responsibility is to express opinions on the Company’s consolidated financial statements and on the Company's internal control over financial reporting based on our audits. We are a public accounting firm registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) ("PCAOB") and are required to be independent with respect to the Company in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB. We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audits to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the consolidated financial statements are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud, and whether effective internal control over financial reporting was maintained in all material respects. Our audits of the consolidated financial statements included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the consolidated financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the consolidated financial statements. Our audits also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the consolidated financial statements. Our audit of internal control over financial reporting included obtaining an understanding of internal control over financial reporting, assessing the risk that a material weakness exists, and testing and evaluating the design and operating effectiveness of internal control based on the assessed risk. Our audits also included performing such other procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinions. As described in Management’s Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting, management has excluded Connextions, Inc. (“Connextions”) and Motif, Inc. (“Motif”) from its assessment of internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2017 because they were acquired by the Company in purchase business combinations during 2017. We have also excluded Connextions and Motif from our audit of internal control over financial reporting. Connextions and Motif are wholly-owned subsidiaries, whose total assets and total revenues excluded from management’s assessment and our audit of internal control over financial reporting represent approximately 5.8% and 1.2% of total assets, respectively and approximately 6.5% and 0.3% of total revenue, respectively, of the related consolidated financial statement amounts as of and for the year ended December 31, 2017. F-3 Definition and Limitations of Internal Control over Financial Reporting A company’s internal control over financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. A company’s internal control over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures that (i) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; (ii) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of the company; and (iii) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of the company’s assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements. Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. Also, projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate. /s/ PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP Denver, Colorado March 12, 2018 We have served as the Company’s auditor since 2007. F-4 TTEC HOLDINGS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES Consolidated Balance Sheets (Amounts in thousands, except share amounts) December 31, December 31, 2017 2016 ASSETS Current assets Cash and cash equivalents $ 74,437 $ 55,264 Accounts receivable, net 385,751 300,808 Prepaids and other current assets 63,668 59,905 Deferred tax assets, net — — Income tax receivable 11,099 7,035 Assets held for sale 7,835 10,715 Total current assets 542,790 433,727 Long-term assets Property, plant and equipment, net 163,297 151,037 Goodwill 206,694 129,648 Deferred tax assets, net 12,012 53,585 Other intangible assets, net 92,086 30,787 Other long-term assets 61,857 47,520 Total long-term assets 535,946 412,577 Total assets $ 1,078,736 $ 846,304 LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY Current liabilities Accounts payable $ 46,029 $ 38,197 Accrued employee compensation and benefits 83,997 66,133 Other accrued expenses 18,993 14,830 Income tax payable 7,497 7,040 Deferred revenue 21,628 23,318 Other current liabilities 22,312 29,154 Liabilities held for sale 1,322 1,357 Total current liabilities 201,778 180,029 Long-term liabilities Line of credit 344,000 217,300 Deferred tax liabilities, net 11,285 160 Non-current income tax payable 47,871 — Deferred rent 15,714 15,256 Other long-term liabilities 95,243 71,664 Total long-term liabilities 514,113 304,380 Total liabilities 715,891 484,409 Commitments and contingencies (Note 14) Mandatorily redeemable noncontrolling interest — — Stockholders’ equity Preferred stock; $0.01 par value; 10,000,000 shares authorized; zero shares outstanding as of December 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016 — — Common stock; $0.01 par value; 150,000,000 shares authorized; 45,861,959 and 46,113,693 shares outstanding as of December 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016, respectively 459 462 Additional paid-in capital 351,725 348,739 Treasury stock at cost: 36,190,294 and 35,938,560 shares as of December 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016, respectively (615,677) (603,262) Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) (102,304) (126,964) Retained earnings 721,664 735,939 Noncontrolling interest 6,978 6,981 Total stockholders’ equity 362,845 361,895 Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity $ 1,078,736 $ 846,304 The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements. F-5 TTEC HOLDINGS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss) (Amounts in thousands, except per share amounts) Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 2015 Revenue $ 1,477,365 $ 1,275,258 $ 1,286,755 Operating expenses Cost of services (exclusive of depreciation and amortization presented separately below) 1,110,068 941,592 928,247 Selling, general and administrative 182,314 175,797 194,606 Depreciation and amortization 64,507 68,675 63,808 Restructuring and integration charges, net 14,665 4,392 1,814 Impairment losses 5,322 32,050 8,100 Total operating expenses 1,376,876 1,222,506 1,196,575 Income from operations 100,489 52,752 90,180 Other income (expense) Interest income 2,841 1,234 1,090 Interest expense (13,734) (7,943) (7,538) Other income (expense), net 1,869 9,555 2,157 Loss on assets held for sale (2,578) (5,300) — Total other income (expense) (11,602) (2,454) (4,291) Income before income taxes 88,887 50,298 85,889 Provision for income taxes (78,075) (12,863) (20,004) Net income 10,812 37,435 65,885 Net income attributable to noncontrolling interest (3,556) (3,757) (4,219) Net income attributable to TTEC stockholders $ 7,256 $ 33,678 $ 61,666 Other comprehensive income (loss) Net income $ 10,812 $ 37,435 $ 65,885 Foreign currency translation adjustments 8,285 (21,055) (38,200) Derivative valuation, gross 27,931 (7,838) (15,768) Derivative valuation, tax effect (11,284) 2,330 7,228 Other, net of tax 105 721 (2,707) Total other comprehensive income (loss) 25,037 (25,842) (49,447) Total comprehensive income (loss) 35,849 11,593 16,438 Less: Comprehensive income attributable to noncontrolling interest (3,933) (3,514) (3,026) Comprehensive income (loss) attributable to TTEC stockholders $ 31,916 $ 8,079 $ 13,412 Weighted average shares outstanding Basic 45,826 47,423 48,370 Diluted 46,382 47,736 49,011 Net income per share attributable to TTEC stockholders Basic $ 0.16 $ 0.71 $ 1.27 Diluted $ 0.16 $ 0.71 $ 1.26 The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements. F-6 TTEC HOLDINGS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity (Amounts in thousands) Stockholders’ Equity of the Company Accumulated Other Preferred Stock Common Stock Treasury Additional Comprehensive Retained Noncontrolling Shares Amount Shares Amount Stock Paid-in Capital Income (Loss) Earnings interest Total Equity Balance as of December 31, 2014 — $ — 48,453 $ 485 $ (527,595) $ 356,792 $ (52,274) $ 677,859 $ 7,983 $ 463,250 Net income — — — — — — — 61,666 3,382 65,048 Dividends to shareholders ( $0.36 per common share) — — — — — — — (17,423) — (17,423) Dividends distributed to noncontrolling interest — — — — — — — — (3,960) (3,960) Adjustments to redemption value of mandatorily redeemable noncontrolling interest — — — — — — — (1,113) — (1,113) Foreign currency translation adjustments — — — — — — (37,844) — (356) (38,200) Derivatives valuation, net of tax — — — — — — (8,540) — — (8,540) Vesting of restricted stock units — — 372 4 5,768 (10,016) — — — (4,244) Exercise of stock options — — 342 3 5,307 (9,737) — — — (4,427) Excess tax benefit from equity-based awards — — — — — (823) — — — (823) Equity-based compensation expense — — — — — 11,035 — — 152 11,187 Purchases of common stock — — (686) (7) (17,224) — — — — (17,231) Other, net of tax — — — — — — (2,707) — — (2,707) Balance as of December 31, 2015 — $ — 48,481 $ 485 $ (533,744) $ 347,251 $ (101,365) $ 720,989 $ 7,201 $ 440,817 Net income — — — — — — — 33,678 3,757 37,435 Dividends to shareholders ( $0.385 per common share) — — — — — — — (18,262) — (18,262) Dividends distributed to noncontrolling interest — — — — — — — — (3,825) (3,825) Adjustments to redemption value of mandatorily redeemable noncontrolling interest — — — — — — — (466) — (466) Foreign currency translation adjustments — — — — — — (20,812) — (243) (21,055) Derivatives valuation, net of tax — — — — — — (5,508) — — (5,508) Vesting of restricted stock units — — 297 3 4,681 (8,614) — — — (3,930) Exercise of stock options — — 29 — 458 (82) — — — 376 Excess tax benefit from equity-based awards — — — — — 557 — — — 557 Equity-based compensation expense — — — — — 9,627 — — 81 9,708 Purchases of common stock — — (2,693) (26) (74,657) — — — — (74,683) Other, net of tax — — — — — — 721 — 10 731 Balance as of December 31, 2016 — $ — 46,114 $ 462 $ (603,262) $ 348,739 $ (126,964) $ 735,939 $ 6,981 $ 361,895 Net income — — — — — — — 7,256 3,556 10,812 Dividends to shareholders ( $0.47 per common share) — — — — — — — (21,531) — (21,531) Dividends distributed to noncontrolling interest — — — — — — — — (3,645) (3,645) Foreign currency translation adjustments — — — — — — 7,908 — 377 8,285 Derivatives valuation, net of tax — — — — — — 16,647 — — 16,647 Vesting of restricted stock units — — 298 3 4,913 (10,313) — — — (5,397) Exercise of stock options — — 60 — 994 1,156 — — — 2,150 Equity-based compensation expense — — — — — 12,143 — — (291) 11,852 Purchases of common stock — — (610) (6) (18,322) — — — — (18,328) Other, net of tax — — — — — — 105 — — 105 Balance as of December 31, 2017 — $ — 45,862 $ 459 $ (615,677) $ 351,725 $ (102,304) $ 721,664 $ 6,978 $ 362,845 The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements. F-7 TTEC HOLDINGS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows (Amounts in thousands) Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 2015 Cash flows from operating activities Net income $ 10,812 $ 37,435 $ 65,885 Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities: Depreciation and amortization 64,507 68,675 63,808 Amortization of contract acquisition costs 1,678 659 900 Amortization of debt issuance costs 745 753 712 Imputed interest expense and fair value adjustments to contingent consideration 51 (4,523) 716 Provision for doubtful accounts 458 1,164 1,465 (Gain) loss on disposal of assets 3,694 (44) (166) Gain on sale of businesses and dissolution of entity (908) — — Impairment losses 5,322 32,050 8,100 Non-cash loss on held for sale assets — 5,300 — Deferred income taxes 16,777 (1,583) 9,317 Excess tax benefit from equity-based awards (2,192) (601) (662) Equity-based compensation expense 11,852 9,773 11,304 (Gain) loss on foreign currency derivatives (681) 1,710 (1,469) Changes in assets and liabilities, net of acquisitions: Accounts receivable (59,284) (7,858) (19,867) Prepaids and other assets (19,266) (92) (5,379) Accounts payable and accrued expenses 18,968 (19,141) 16,189 Deferred revenue and other liabilities 60,619 (11,847) (12,855) Net cash provided by operating activities 113,152 111,830 137,998 Cash flows from investing activities Proceeds from sale of long-lived assets 39 114 202 Purchases of property, plant and equipment, net of acquisitions (51,958) (50,832) (66,595) Proceeds from sale of business 636 — — Investments in non-marketable equity investments (1,384) (3,179) (9,000) Acquisitions, net of cash acquired of $5,997, $2,655, and zero, respectively (116,320) (46,460) (1,776) Net cash used in investing activities (168,987) (100,357) (77,169) Cash flows from financing activities Proceeds from line of credit 2,293,587 2,093,500 2,262,350 Payments on line of credit (2,166,887) (1,976,200) (2,262,350) Payments on other debt (6,041) (3,222) (3,222) Payments of contingent consideration and hold-back payments to acquisitions (1,409) (9,467) (11,883) Dividends paid to shareholders (21,531) (18,262) (17,423) Payments to noncontrolling interest (3,645) (4,317) (4,593) Purchase of mandatorily redeemable noncontrolling interest — (4,105) — Proceeds from exercise of stock options 2,150 371 825 Tax payments related to issuance of restricted stock units (5,397) (3,933) (4,248) Excess tax benefit from equity-based awards — 601 662 Payments of debt issuance costs (918) (1,888) (35) Purchase of treasury stock (18,328) (74,683) (17,231) Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities 71,581 (1,605) (57,148) Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents 3,427 (14,908) (20,693) Increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents 19,173 (5,040) (17,012) Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of period 55,264 60,304 77,316 Cash and cash equivalents, end of period $ 74,437 $ 55,264 $ 60,304 Supplemental disclosures Cash paid for interest $ 11,727 $ 6,976 $ 6,052 Cash paid for income taxes $ 18,813 $ 19,741 $ 15,178 Non-cash investing and financing activities Acquisition of long-lived assets through capital leases $ 9,836 $ 584 10,492 Acquisition of equipment through increase in accounts payable, net $ 97 $ (681) $ 386 Contract acquisition costs credited to accounts receivable $ — $ 206 1,055 The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements. Table of Contents F-8 (1) OVERVIEW AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES Overview TTEC Holdings, Inc. (“TTEC”, “the Company”) (formerly known as TeleTech Holdings, Inc. until the name was changed in January 2018) is a global customer experience company that designs, builds and operates omnichannel customer experiences on behalf of the world's most innovative brands. The Company helps large global companies increase revenue and reduce costs by delivering personalized customer experiences across every interactional channel and phase of the customer lifecycle as an end-to-end provider of customer engagement services, technologies, insights and innovations. TTEC’s 56,000 employees serve clients in the automotive, communication, financial services, government, healthcare, logistics, media and entertainment, retail, technology, transportation and travel industries via operations in the U.S., Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, China, Costa Rica, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Ireland, Lebanon, Macedonia, Mexico, New Zealand, the Philippines, Poland, Singapore, South Africa, Thailand, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, and the United Kingdom. Basis of Presentation The Consolidated Financial Statements are comprised of the accounts of TTEC, its wholly owned subsidiaries, its 55% equity owned subsidiary Percepta, LLC, its 100% interest in iKnowtion, LLC effective January 2016, and its 100% interest in Motif, Inc. (see Note 2 and 16). All intercompany balances and transactions have been eliminated in consolidation. During the three months ended March 31, 2016, the Company recorded an additional tax expense of $1.1 million that should have been recorded in prior periods related to operations by an entity outside its country of incorporation. The total amount of $1.1 million should have been recorded as additional expense in the amount of $180 thousand in 2011, $123 thousand in 2012, $137 thousand in 2013, $358 thousand in 2014 and $301 thousand in 2015. During the three months ended June 30, 2015, the Company recorded an additional expense of $1.75 million as an additional estimated tax liability that should have been recorded in prior periods related to ongoing discussions with relevant government authorities related to site compliance with tax advantaged status. The total amount of $1.75 million should have been recorded as additional tax expense in the amount of $466 thousand in 2012, $406 thousand in 2013, $645 thousand in 2014 and $234 thousand in the first quarter of 2015. During the three months ended June 30, 2015, the Company recorded an additional $3.2 million loss related to foreign currency translation within Other comprehensive income (loss) that should have been recorded in 2014 and the three months ended March 31, 2015 to correct for an error in translating the financial results of Sofica Group AD, which the Company acquired on February 28, 2014. Of the $3.2 million recorded, approximately $1.7 million and $1.5 million should have been recorded in the year ended December 31, 2014, and the three months ended March 31, 2015, respectively. The Company also recorded an additional $2.7 million loss to Other, net of tax within Other comprehensive income (loss) in the three months ended March 31, 2015 related to the annual actuarial analysis for the Company’s Philippines pension liability that should have been recorded in the fourth quarter of 2014. During the three months ended December 31, 2015, the Company recorded an additional $2.9 million impairment to correct for an error in the goodwill impairment annual assessment and quarterly assessment for the WebMetro reporting unit. The Company should have recorded a $2.3 million impairment in the three months ended December 31, 2014 and an additional $0.6 million impairment in the three months ended September 30, 2015. The Company has evaluated the aggregate impact of these adjustments and concluded that these adjustments were not material to the previously issued or current period Consolidated Financial Statements. Table of Contents F-9 Use of Estimates The preparation of the Consolidated Financial Statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the U.S. (“GAAP”) requires management to make estimates and assumptions in determining the reported amounts of assets and liabilities, disclosure of contingent liabilities at the date of the Consolidated Financial Statements and the reported amounts of revenue and expenses during the reporting period. On an on-going basis, the Company evaluates its estimates including those related to derivatives and hedging activities, income taxes including the valuation allowance for deferred tax assets, self-insurance reserves, litigation reserves, restructuring reserves, allowance for doubtful accounts, contingent consideration, and valuation of goodwill, long-lived and intangible assets. The Company bases its estimates on historical experience and on various other assumptions that are believed to be reasonable, the results of which form the basis for making judgments about the carrying values of assets and liabilities. Actual results may differ materially from these estimates under different assumptions or conditions. Concentration of Credit Risk The Company is exposed to credit risk in the normal course of business, primarily related to accounts receivable and derivative instruments. Historically, the losses related to credit risk have been immaterial. The Company regularly monitors its credit risk to mitigate the possibility of current and future exposures resulting in a loss. The Company evaluates the creditworthiness of its clients prior to entering into an agreement to provide services and as necessary through the life of the client relationship. The Company does not believe it is exposed to more than a nominal amount of credit risk in its derivative hedging activities, as the Company diversifies its activities across six well-capitalized, investment-grade financial institutions. Fair Value of Financial Instruments Fair values of cash equivalents, accounts receivable and payable and debt approximate the carrying amounts because of their short-term nature. Cash and Cash Equivalents The Company considers all cash and highly liquid short-term investments with an original maturity of 90 days or less to be cash equivalents. The Company manages a centralized global treasury function in the United States with a focus on concentrating and safeguarding its global cash and cash equivalents. While the majority of the Company’s cash is held outside the U.S., the Company prefers to hold U.S. Dollars in addition to the local currencies of the foreign subsidiaries. The Company believes that it has effectively mitigated and managed its risk relating to its global cash through its cash management practices, banking partners, and utilization of diversified, high quality investments. However, the Company can provide no assurances that it will not sustain losses. Accounts Receivable An allowance for doubtful accounts is determined based on the aging of the Company’s accounts receivable, historical experience, client financial condition, and management judgment. The Company writes off accounts receivable against the allowance when the Company determines a balance is uncollectible. Derivatives The Company enters into foreign exchange forward and option contracts to reduce its exposure to foreign currency exchange rate fluctuations that are associated with forecasted revenue earned in foreign locations. The Company also enters into interest rate derivatives which consist of interest rate swaps to reduce the Company’s exposure to interest rate fluctuations associated with its variable rate debt. Upon proper qualification, these contracts are designated as cash flow hedges. The Company formally documents at the inception of the hedge all relationships between hedging instruments and hedged items as well as its risk management objective and strategy for undertaking various hedging activities. Table of Contents F-10 All derivative financial instruments are reported at fair value and recorded in Prepaids and other current assets, Other assets, Other current liabilities, and Other liabilities in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets as applicable for each period end. Changes in fair value of derivative instruments designated as cash flow hedges are recorded in Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss), a component of Stockholders’ Equity, to the extent they are deemed effective. Ineffectiveness is measured based on the change in fair value of the forward contracts and the fair value of the hypothetical derivatives with terms that match the critical terms of the risk being hedged. Based on the criteria established by current accounting standards, the Company’s cash flow hedge contracts are deemed to be highly effective. Any realized gains or losses resulting from the foreign currency cash flow hedges are recognized together with the hedged transaction within Revenue. Any realized gains or losses from the interest rate swaps are recognized in Interest expense. Gains and losses from the settlements of the Company’s net investment hedges remain in Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) until partial or complete liquidation of the applicable net investment. The Company also enters into fair value derivative contracts that hedge against foreign currency exchange gains and losses primarily associated with short-term payables and receivables. Changes in the fair value of derivative instruments designated as fair value hedges affect the carrying value of the asset or liability hedged, with changes in both the derivative instrument and the hedged asset or liability being recognized in Other income (expense), net in the accompanying Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). Property, Plant and Equipment Property, plant and equipment are stated at historical cost less accumulated depreciation and amortization. Maintenance, repairs and minor renewals are expensed as incurred. Depreciation and amortization are computed on the straight-line method based on the following estimated useful lives: Building 30 years Computer equipment and software 3 to 7 years Telephone equipment 4 to 7 years Furniture and fixtures 5 years Leasehold improvements Lesser of economic useful life (typically 10 years) or original lease term Other 3 to 7 years The Company evaluates the carrying value of property, plant and equipment for impairment whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amounts may not be recoverable. An asset is considered to be impaired when the forecasted undiscounted cash flows of an asset group are estimated to be less than its carrying value. The amount of impairment recognized is the difference between the carrying value of the asset group and its fair value. Fair value estimates are based on assumptions concerning the amount and timing of forecasted future cash flows. Software Development Costs The Company capitalizes costs incurred to acquire or develop software for internal use. Capitalized software development costs are amortized using the straight-line method over the estimated useful life equal to the lesser of the license term or 4 or 7 years depending on the software type. The amortization expense is recorded in Depreciation and amortization in the accompanying Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). Table of Contents F-11 Goodwill The Company evaluates goodwill for possible impairment at least annually on December 1, and whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount of such assets may not be recoverable. The Company uses a two step process to assess the realizability of goodwill. The first step, Step 0, is a qualitative assessment that analyzes current economic indicators associated with a particular reporting unit. For example, the Company analyzes changes in economic, market and industry conditions, business strategy, cost factors, and financial performance, among others, to determine if there would be a significant decline to the fair value of a particular reporting unit. A qualitative assessment also includes analyzing the excess fair value of a reporting unit over its carrying value from impairment assessments performed in previous years. If the qualitative assessment indicates a stable or improved fair value, no further testing is required. If a qualitative assessment indicates that a significant decline to fair value of a reporting unit is more likely than not, or if a reporting unit’s fair value has historically been closer to its carrying value, the Company will proceed to Step 1 testing where the Company calculates the fair value of a reporting unit. If Step 1 indicates that the carrying value of a reporting unit is in excess of its fair value, the Company will record an impairment equal to the amount by which a reporting unit’s carrying value exceeds its fair value. Other Intangible Assets The Company has other intangible assets that include customer relationships (definite-lived) and trade names (indefinite-lived and definite-lived) and non-compete agreements (definite-lived). Definite-lived intangible assets are amortized on a straight-line basis over their estimated useful lives, which range from three to 12 years. The Company evaluates the carrying value of its definite-lived intangible assets whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount may not be recoverable. A definite-lived intangible asset is considered to be impaired when the forecasted undiscounted cash flows of its asset group are estimated to be less than its carrying value. The Company evaluates indefinite-lived intangible assets for possible impairment at least annually or whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount of such assets may not be recoverable. Similar to goodwill, the Company may first use a qualitative analysis to assess the realizability of its indefinite-lived intangible assets. The qualitative analysis will include a review of changes in economic, market and industry conditions, business strategy, cost factors, and financial performance, among others, to determine if there would be a significant decline to the fair value of an indefinite-lived intangible asset. If a quantitative analysis is completed, an indefinite-lived intangible asset (i.e. trade name) is evaluated for possible impairment by comparing the fair value of the asset with its carrying value. Fair value is estimated as the discounted value of future revenues arising from a trade name using a royalty rate that a market participant would pay for use of that trade name. An impairment charge is recorded if the trade name’s carrying value exceeds its estimated fair value. Self Insurance Liabilities The Company self-insures for certain levels of workers’ compensation, employee health, property, errors and omissions, cyber risks, and general liability insurance. The Company records estimated liabilities for these insurance lines based upon analyses of historical claims experience. The most significant assumption the Company makes in estimating these liabilities is that future claims experience will emerge in a similar pattern with historical claims experience. The liabilities related to workers’ compensation and employee health insurance are included in Accrued employee compensation and benefits in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets. The liability for other general liability insurance is included in Other accrued expenses in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets. Table of Contents F-12 Restructuring Liabilities The Company routinely assesses the profitability and utilization of its customer engagement centers and existing markets. In some cases, the Company has chosen to close under-performing customer engagement centers and complete reductions in workforce to enhance future profitability. Severance payments that occur from reductions in workforce are in accordance with the Company’s postemployment plans and/or statutory requirements that are communicated to all employees upon hire date; therefore, severance liabilities are recognized when they are determined to be probable and reasonably estimable. Other liabilities for costs associated with an exit or disposal activity are recognized when the liability is incurred, rather than upon commitment to a plan. Income Taxes Accounting for income taxes requires recognition of deferred tax assets and liabilities for the expected future income tax consequences of transactions that have been included in the Consolidated Financial Statements or tax returns. Under this method, deferred tax assets and liabilities are determined based on the difference between the financial statement and tax basis of assets and liabilities using enacted tax rates in effect for the year in which the differences are expected to reverse. Gross deferred tax assets may then be reduced by a valuation allowance for amounts that do not satisfy the realization criteria established by current accounting standards. The Company accounts for uncertain tax positions using a two-step approach to recognizing and measuring uncertain tax positions. The first step is to determine if the weight of available evidence indicates that it is more likely than not that the tax position will be sustained on audit. The second step is to estimate and measure the tax benefit as the amount that has a greater than 50% likelihood of being realized upon ultimate settlement with the tax authority. The Company evaluates these uncertain tax positions on a quarterly basis. This evaluation is based on the consideration of several factors including changes in facts or circumstances, changes in applicable tax law, and settlement of issues under audit. The Company recognizes interest and penalties related to uncertain tax positions as a part of the Provision for income taxes in the accompanying Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). The Company provided for U.S. income tax expense on the earnings of foreign subsidiaries under the 2017 Tax Act. This lead to a reassessment of the determination as to whether the US subsidiaries’ foreign earnings are considered permanently reinvested outside the U.S. No amount was booked related to withholding taxes on the changes in indefinite reinvestment assertion on the potential repatriation of foreign earnings as it is the Company’s determination that there would be no material additional amount of tax if the related foreign cash was repatriated to the United States. The Company has not completed its analysis in regard to the full tax impact related to a change in indefinite reinvestment reassertion as the computation is complex and impacted by the provisional calculations outlined above. No additional income taxes have been provided for any remaining outside basis difference inherent in our foreign subsidiaries as these amounts continue to be indefinitely reinvested in foreign operations. Determination of any unrecognized deferred tax liability related to the outside basis difference in investments in foreign subsidiaries is not practicable due to the inherent complexity of the multi-national tax environment in which we operate. Table of Contents F-13 Tax Reform The United States recently enacted comprehensive tax reform legislation known as the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (the "2017 Tax Act") that, among other things, reduces the U.S. federal corporate income tax rate from 35% to 21% and implements a territorial tax system, but imposes an alternative “base erosion and anti-abuse tax” (“BEAT”), and an incremental tax on global intangible low taxed foreign income (“GILTI”) effective January 1, 2018. In addition, the law imposes a one-time mandatory repatriation tax on accumulated foreign earnings on domestic corporations effective for the 2017 tax year. In response, the SEC staff issued Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 118 (“SAB 118”) to address the application of U.S. GAAP in situations when a registrant does not have the necessary information available, prepared, or analyzed (including computations) in reasonable detail to complete the accounting for certain income tax effects of the 2017 Tax Act and allows the registrant to record provisional amounts during a measurement period not to extend beyond one year of the enactment date. We have recognized the provisional impacts related to the one-time transition tax and revaluation of deferred tax balances and included these estimates in our consolidated financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2017. The ultimate impact may materially differ from these provisional amounts, due to, among other things, additional analysis, changes in interpretations and assumptions we have made, additional regulatory guidance that may be issued, and actions we may take as a result of the Tax Act. Equity-Based Compensation Expense Equity-based compensation expense for all share-based payment awards granted is determined based on the grant-date fair value net of an estimated forfeiture rate on a straight-line basis over the requisite service period of the award, which is typically the vesting term of the share-based payment award. The Company estimates the forfeiture rate annually based on its historical experience of forfeited awards. Foreign Currency Translation The assets and liabilities of the Company’s foreign subsidiaries, whose functional currency is not the U.S. Dollar, are translated at the exchange rates in effect on the last day of the period and income and expenses are translated using the monthly average exchange rates in effect for the period in which the items occur. Foreign currency translation gains and losses are recorded in Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) within Stockholders’ Equity. Foreign currency transaction gains and losses are included in Other income (expense), net in the accompanying Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). Revenue Recognition The Company recognizes revenue when evidence of an arrangement exists, the delivery of service has occurred, the fee is fixed or determinable and collection is reasonably assured. The BPO inbound and outbound service fees are based on either a per minute, per hour, per FTE, per transaction or per call basis. Certain client programs provide for adjustments to monthly billings based upon whether the Company achieves, exceeds or fails certain performance criteria. Adjustments to monthly billings consist of contractual bonuses/penalties, holdbacks and other performance based contingencies. Revenue recognition is limited to the amount that is not contingent upon delivery of future services or meeting other specified performance conditions. Table of Contents F-14 Revenue also consists of services for agent training, program launch, professional consulting, fully-hosted or managed technology and learning innovation services. These service offerings may contain multiple element arrangements whereby the Company determines if those service offerings represent separate units of accounting. A deliverable constitutes a separate unit of accounting when it has standalone value and delivery or performance of the undelivered item is considered probable and substantially within our control. If those deliverables are determined to be separate units of accounting, revenue is recognized as services are provided. If those deliverables are not determined to be separate units of accounting, revenue for the delivered services are bundled into one unit of accounting and recognized over the life of the arrangement or at the time all services and deliverables have been delivered and satisfied. The Company allocates revenue to each of the deliverables based on a selling price hierarchy of vendor specific objective evidence (“VSOE”), third-party evidence, and then estimated selling price. VSOE is based on the price charged when the deliverable is sold separately. Third-party evidence is based on largely interchangeable competitor services in standalone sales to similarly situated customers. Estimated selling price is based on the Company’s best estimate of what the selling prices of deliverables would be if they were sold regularly on a standalone basis. Estimated selling price is established considering multiple factors including, but not limited to, pricing practices in different geographies, service offerings, and customer classifications. Once the Company allocates revenue to each deliverable, the Company recognizes revenue when all revenue recognition criteria are met. Deferred Revenue and Costs The Company records amounts billed and received, but not earned, as deferred revenue. These amounts are recorded in Deferred revenue or as a component of Other long-term liabilities in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets based on the period over which the Company expects to render services. We defer revenue for initial training that occurs upon commencement of a new contract if that training is billed separately because the training is not considered to provide standalone value from other services. Accordingly, the corresponding training costs, consisting primarily of labor and related expenses, are also deferred. In these circumstances, both the training revenue and costs are amortized straight-line over the life of the contract as a component of Revenue and Cost of services, respectively. In situations where these initial training costs are not billed separately, but rather included in the hourly service rates paid by the client over the life of the contract, no deferral is necessary as the revenue is being recognized over the life of the contract and the associated training costs are expensed as incurred. Rent Expense The Company has negotiated certain rent holidays, landlord/tenant incentives and escalations in the base price of rent payments over the initial term of its operating leases. The initial term could include the “build-out” period of leases, where no rent payments are typically due. The Company recognizes rent holidays and rent escalations on a straight-line basis to rent expense over the lease term. The landlord/tenant incentives are recorded as an increase to deferred rent liabilities and amortized on a straight line basis to rent expense over the initial lease term. Asset Retirement Obligations Asset retirement obligations relate to legal obligations associated with the retirement of long-lived assets resulting from the acquisition, construction, development and/or normal use of the underlying assets. The Company records all asset retirement obligations at estimated fair value. The Company’s asset retirement obligations primarily relate to clauses in its customer engagement center operating leases which require the Company to return the leased premises to its original condition. The associated asset retirement obligations are capitalized as part of the carrying amount of the underlying asset and depreciated over the estimated useful life of the asset. The liability, reported within Other long-term liabilities, is accreted through charges to operating expenses. If the asset retirement obligation is settled for an amount other than the carrying amount of the liability, the Company recognizes a gain or loss on settlement. Table of Contents F-15 Recently Issued Accounting Pronouncements In May 2014, the FASB issued Accounting Standards Update (“ASU”) 2014-09, “Revenue from Contracts with Customers”. ASU 2014-09 provides new guidance related to how an entity should recognize revenue to depict the transfer of promised goods or services to customers in an amount that reflects the consideration to which the entity expects to be entitled in exchange for those goods or services. In addition, ASU 2014-09 specifies new accounting for costs associated with obtaining or fulfilling contracts with customers and expands the required disclosures related to revenue and cash flows from contracts with customers. While ASU-2014-09 was originally effective for fiscal years and interim periods within those years beginning after December 15, 2016, in August 2015, the FASB issued ASU 2015-14, “Deferral of Effective Date”, deferring the effective date by one year, to be effective for fiscal years, and interim periods within those years, beginning after December 15, 2017. Earlier adoption was permitted only as of annual reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2016, including interim reporting periods within that reporting period. ASU 2014-09 can be adopted either retrospectively to each prior reporting period presented or as a cumulative-effect adjustment as of the date of adoption, with early application not permitted. In June 2017, FASB issued ASU 2017-10, “Service Concession Arrangements”, which will be adopted along with the ASU 2014-09 guidance. The Company assigned a project manager and team, selected an external consulting company to assist through the project, completed the project assessment phase, and has finalized its implementation approach. The Company has evaluated the adoption impact of the updated accounting guidance on our consolidated financial statements and continues to evaluate the impact on disclosures and internal controls. The new guidance will impact: (i) revenue associated with certain taxes, which will be recognized on a net basis versus the current gross treatment; (ii) the timing of revenue recognition associated with upfront fees on certain contracts; and (iii) the timing of recognition related to certain elements of variable consideration. The Company adopted this updated accounting guidance beginning January 1, 2018 using the modified retrospective method under which it will recognize a cumulative-effect adjustment in the range of $9 million to $12 million. In February 2016, the FASB issued ASU 2016-02, “Leases”, which amends the existing accounting standards for lease accounting, including requiring lessees, to recognize most leases on their balance sheets related to the rights and obligations created by those leases and making targeted changes to lessor accounting. The ASU also requires new disclosures regarding the amounts, timing, and uncertainty of cash flows arising from leases. The ASU is effective for interim and annual periods beginning on or after December 15, 2018 and early adoption is permitted. The new leases standard requires a modified retrospective transition approach for all leases existing at, or entered into after, the date of initial application, with an option to use certain transition relief. The Company is currently assessing the impact on the consolidated financial statements and related disclosures, evaluating software solutions and other tracking methods, and finalizing the implementation approach. In March 2016, the FASB issued ASU 2016-09, “Compensation – Stock Compensation: Improvements to Employee Share-Based Payment Accounting”, which amends the existing accounting standards related to stock-based compensation. The ASU simplifies several aspects of accounting for share-based payment transactions, including the accounting for income taxes, forfeitures, statutory tax withholding requirements, as well as classification in the statement of cash flows. The ASU is effective for interim and annual periods beginning on or after December 15, 2016. Beginning with the first quarter of 2017, the Company has adopted the new guidance as applicable and this adoption did not have a material impact on its financial position, results of operation or related disclosures. In August 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-15, “Statement of Cash Flows”. ASU 2016-15 is intended to reduce diversity in practice regarding how certain cash transactions are presented and classified in the Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows by providing guidance on eight specific cash flow issues. The ASU is effective for interim and annual periods beginning on or after December 15, 2017 and early adoption is permitted. The Company is currently assessing the impact on the consolidated statements and related disclosures. Table of Contents F-16 In January 2017, the FASB issued ASU No. 2017-04, “Intangibles – Goodwill and Other: Simplifying the Accounting for Goodwill Impairment”. ASU 2017-04 removes the need to complete Step 2 of any goodwill impairment test that has failed Step 1. The goodwill impairment will now be calculated as the amount by which a reporting unit’s carrying value exceeds its fair value. The ASU is effective for interim and annual periods beginning on or after December 15, 2019 and early adoption is permitted. The Company early adopted this standard as of January 1, 2017. In August 2017, the FASB issued ASU 2017-12, “Derivatives and Hedging (Topic 815): Targeted Improvements to Accounting for Hedging Activities”. ASU 2017-12 amends and simplifies existing guidance for derivatives and hedges including aligning accounting with companies’ risk management strategies and increasing disclosure transparency regarding both the scope and results of hedging programs. The changes include designation and measurement guidance for qualifying hedging relationships and the presentation of hedge results. The ASU is effective for interim and annual periods beginning after December 15, 2018 and early adoption is permitted. The Company is currently assessing the impact on the consolidated statements and related disclosures. In February 2018, the FASB issued ASU 2018-02, “Income Statement - Reporting Comprehensive Income (Topic 220), Reclassification of Certain Tax Effects from Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income”. ASU 2018-02 allows companies the option to reclassify stranded tax effects from Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) (AOCI) to retained earnings resulting from the newly enacted corporate tax rate in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. If adopted, the ASU is effective in years beginning after December 15, 2018, and early adoption is permitted. The Company is currently assessing the impact on the consolidated statements and related disclosures. (2) ACQUISITIONS AND DIVESTITURES Motif On November 8, 2017, the Company agreed to acquire all of the outstanding shares in Motif, Inc., a California corporation (“Motif”). Motif is a digital trust and safety services company serving eCommerce marketplaces, online retailers, travel agencies and financial services companies. Motif provides omni-channel community moderation services via voice, email and chat from delivery centers in India and the Philippines via approximately 2,700 employees. Motif will be integrated into the Customer Management Services (“CMS”) segment. The acquisition will be implemented through two separate transactions. In November 2017, the Company completed the acquisition of 70% of all outstanding shares in Motif from private equity and certain individual investors for $46.8 million, subject to customary representations and warranties, and working capital adjustments. The Company also agreed to purchase the remaining 30% interest in Motif from Motif’s founders (“founders’ shares”) no later than May 2020 (“30% buyout period”). The Company agreed to pay for the founders’ shares at a purchase price based on Motif’s fiscal year 2020’s adjusted normalized EBITDA, $5.0 million in cash, and 30% of the excess cash present in the business at the time of the buyout; or if the buyout occurs prior to May 2020, the trailing twelve months EBITDA, calculated from the most recently completed full monthly period ending prior to the date of the buyout triggering event, $5.0 million in cash, and 30% of the excess cash in the business at that point. In connection with this mandatory buyout, the Company has recorded a $27.8 million liability as of December 31, 2017 which is included in Other long-term liabilities in the Consolidated Balance Sheet. As a part of the transition, the Motif founders agreed to continue to stay as executives in the acquired business, at least through the 30% buyout period, as part of the Company’s CMS segment, and not to compete with the Company with respect to the acquired business. Table of Contents F-17 The following summarizes the preliminary estimated fair values of the identifiable assets acquired and liabilities assumed as of the acquisition date. (in thousands): Preliminary Estimate of Acquisition Date Fair Value Cash $ 5,997 Accounts receivable, net 5,187 Prepaid expenses 1,248 Other current assets 670 Property, plant and equipment 2,182 Income tax receivable 1,691 Customer relationships 37,200 Goodwill 39,272 $ 93,447 Accounts payable $ 2,914 Accrued employee compensation and benefits 5,249 Accrued expenses 104 Deferred tax liability 11,402 Other 340 $ 20,009 Total purchase price $ 73,438 The estimates of fair value of identifiable assets acquired and liabilities assumed are preliminary, pending finalization of a valuation, thus are subject to revisions that may result in adjustments to the values presented above. The Motif customer relationships have been estimated based on the initial valuation and are amortized over an estimated useful life of 11 years. The goodwill recognized from the Motif acquisition is estimated to be attributable, but not limited to, the acquired workforce and expected synergies with CMS. None of the tax basis of the acquired intangibles and goodwill will be deductible for income tax purposes. The acquired goodwill and intangibles, and operating results of Motif are reported within the CMS segment from the date of acquisition. Connextions On April 3, 2017, the Company acquired all of the outstanding shares of Connextions, Inc., a health care customer service provider company, from OptumHealth Holdings, LLC. Connextions is being integrated into the health care vertical of the CMS segment of the Company. Connextions employed approximately 2,000 at several centers in the U.S. The total cash paid at acquisition was $80 million. The purchase price is subject to customary representations and warranties, indemnities, and net working capital adjustment. In connection with the acquisition, the Company and OptumHealth (directly and through affiliates) also entered into long-term technology and customer services agreements, and into transition services agreements to facilitate the transfer of the business. The Company was required to pay an additional $1.8 million for the working capital adjustment, which was paid during the third quarter of 2017. Additionally, fair value adjustments related to the transition services agreements reduced the purchase price by $4.1 million resulting in a net purchase price of $77.7 million. Table of Contents F-18 The following summarizes the fair values of the identifiable assets acquired and liabilities assumed as of the acquisition date (in thousands): Acquisition Date Fair Value Cash $ — Accounts receivable, net 15,959 Prepaid expenses 241 Other current assets 51 Property, plant and equipment 7,594 Customer relationships 35,000 Goodwill 35,272 $ 94,117 Accounts payable $ 1 Accrued employee compensation and benefits 346 Accrued expenses 386 Deferred tax liabilities 15,273 Deferred revenue 399 $ 16,405 Total purchase price $ 77,712 In the fourth quarter of 2017, the Company finalized its valuation of Connextions for the acquisition date assets acquired and liabilities assumed and determined that no material adjustments to any of the balances were required. The Connextions customer relationships will be amortized over a useful life of 12 years. The goodwill recognized from the Connextions acquisition is attributable, but not limited to, the acquired work force and expected synergies with CMS. None of the tax basis of the acquired intangibles and goodwill will be deductible for income tax purposes. The acquired goodwill and the operating results of Connextions are reported within the CMS segment from the date of acquisition. Atelka On November 9, 2016, the Company acquired all of the outstanding shares of Atelka Enterprise Inc. (“Atelka”), a Canadian customer contact center management and business process outsourcing services company that serves Canadian telecommunications, logistics, and entertainment clients. This acquisition was an addition to the CMS segment. Atelka employs approximately 2,800 in Quebec, Ontario, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. The total purchase price was $48.4 million ($65.0 million CAD), including certain working capital adjustments, and consisted of $47.5 million in cash at closing and a $1.4 million hold-back for contingencies as defined in the sale and purchase agreement, which will be released to the seller in 12 and 24 months, post acquisition, if not used. During the fourth quarter of 2017, $0.6 million ($0.8 million CAD) of the hold-back was released to the seller. Table of Contents F-19 The following summarizes the fair values of the identifiable assets acquired and liabilities assumed as of the acquisition date. (in thousands): Acquisition Date Fair Value Cash $ 2,655 Accounts receivable, net 18,449 Other assets 615 Property, plant and equipment 3,161 Deferred tax assets, net 638 Customer relationships 10,500 Goodwill 20,275 56,293 Accounts payable 1,199 Accrued employee compensation and benefits 2,418 Accrued expenses 2,597 Other 1,678 7,892 Total purchase price $ 48,401 In the third quarter of 2017, the Company finalized its valuation of Atelka for the acquisition date assets and liabilities assumed and determined that no material adjustments to any of the balances were required. The Atelka customer relationships will be amortized over a useful life of 12 years. The goodwill recognized from the Atelka acquisition is attributable, but not limited to, the acquired work force and expected synergies with CMS. None of the tax basis of the acquired intangibles and goodwill will be deductible for income tax purposes. The acquired goodwill and the operating results of Atelka are reported within the CMS segment from the date of acquisition. Financial Impact of Acquired Businesses The acquired businesses purchased in 2017 and 2016 noted above contributed revenues of $172.3 million and $10.0 million, and a net loss of $(0.7) million and $(0.3) million, inclusive of $3.5 million and $0.1 million of acquired intangible amortization, to the Company for the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively. The unaudited proforma financial results for the twelve months ended 2017 and 2016 combines the consolidated results of the Company, Motif, Connextions and Atelka assuming the Motif and Connextions acquisitions had been completed on January 1, 2016 and the Atelka acquisition on January 1, 2015. The reported revenue and net income of $1,275.3 million and $37.4 million would have been $1,489.1 million and $31.1 million for the twelve months ended December 31, 2016, respectively, on an unaudited proforma basis. For 2017, the reported revenue and net income of $1,477.4 million and $7.3 million would have been $1,541.6 million and $11.5 million for the year ended December 31, 2017, respectively, on an unaudited proforma basis. The unaudited pro forma consolidated results are not to be considered indicative of the results if these acquisitions occurred in the periods mentioned above, or indicative of future operations or results. Additionally, the pro forma consolidated results do not reflect any anticipated synergies expected as a result of the acquisition. Table of Contents F-20 Assets and Liabilities Held for Sale During the third quarter of 2016, the Company determined that one business unit from the Customer Growth Services (“CGS”) segment and one business unit from the Customer Strategy Services (“CSS”) segment would be divested from the Company’s operations. These business units met the criteria to be classified as held for sale. The Company had engaged a broker for both business units and was working with potential buyers for both business units. The Company took into consideration the discounted cash flow models, management input based on early discussions with brokers and potential buyers, and third-party evidence from similar transactions to complete the fair value analysis as there had not been a selling price determined at this point for either unit. For the two business units in CGS and CSS losses of $2.6 million and $2.7 million, respectively, were recorded as of December 31, 2016 in Loss on assets held for sale in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). No adjustments were made for this business unit as this continues to be reflective of the fair value at December 31, 2017. For the business unit in CGS, based on further discussion and initial offers, management determined that the estimated selling price assumed should be revised and an additional $3.2 million loss was recorded in June 30, 2017 and included in Loss on assets held for sale in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). Effective December 22, 2017, the business unit was sold to The Search Agency (“TSA”) for an up-front payment of $245 thousand and future contingent earnout on the one year anniversary of the closing date. During the fourth quarter of 2017, a net $0.6 million gain was recorded in Loss on assets held for sale in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). The following table presents information related to the major components of assets and liabilities that were classified as held for sale in the Consolidated Balance Sheet as of December 31, 2017. As of December 31, 2017 Cash $ — Accounts receivable, net 6,151 Allowance for doubtful accounts — Other assets 303 Property, plant and equipment 49 Deferred tax assets, net — Customer relationships 999 Goodwill 3,033 Other intangible assets — Allowance for reduction of assets held for sale (2,700) Total assets $ 7,835 Accounts payable $ 413 Accrued employee compensation and benefits 833 Accrued expenses 54 Other 22 Total liabilities $ 1,322 Table of Contents F-21 Investments CaféX In the first quarter of 2015, the Company invested $9.0 million in CafeX Communications, Inc. (“CaféX”) through the purchase of a portion of the Series B Preferred Stock of CaféX. CaféX is a provider of omni-channel web-based real time communication (WebRTC) solutions that enhance mobile applications and websites with in-app video communication and screen share technology to increase customer satisfaction and enterprise efficiency. TTEC anticipates deploying the CaféX technology as part of the TTEC customer experience offerings within the CMS business segment and as part of its Humanify platform. At December 31, 2015, the Company owned 17.2% of the total equity of CaféX. During the fourth quarter of 2016, the Company invested an additional $4.3 million to purchase a portion of the Series C Preferred Stock; $3.2 million was paid in the fourth quarter of 2016 and $1.1 million was paid in the first quarter of 2017. At December 31, 2017, the Company owns 17.2% of the total equity of CaféX. The investment is accounted for under the cost method of accounting. The Company evaluates its investments for possible other-than-temporary impairment at least annually or whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount of such assets may not be recoverable. The Company tested the investment in CaféX for impairment and concluded that the investment was not impaired at December 31, 2017 or December 31, 2016. During the first quarter of 2018, the Company provided to CaféX $2.1 million in the form of a bridge loan which accrues interest at a rate of 12% until maturity or conversion, which will be no later than June 30, 2020. Based on certain events, the loan could convert into Series D preferred stock. Divestitures Technology Solutions Group (“TSG”) Effective June 30, 2017, the Company sold the Technology Solutions Group to SKC Communication Products, LLC (“SKC”) for an upfront payment of $250 thousand and future contingent royalty payments over the next 3 years. TSG had been included in the CTS segment. During the second quarter of 2017, a $30 thousand gain, which included the write-off of $0.7 million of goodwill, was recorded and included in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). During the third quarter of 2017, a $141 thousand gain was recorded as a result of TSG delivering to SKC working capital in excess of the target set forth in the stock purchase agreement, and the gain was included in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). During the fourth quarter of 2017, TTEC received $259 thousand related to quarterly royalty payments which was included in Other Income (expense) in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). TeleTech Spain Holdings SL In the third quarter of 2017, the Company dissolved TeleTech Spain Holdings SL, a fully owned foreign subsidiary domiciled in Spain. Upon complete liquidation, $3.2 million attributable to the accumulated translation adjustment component of equity has been removed from Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) and recognized as part of the gain on liquidation. The $3.2 million gain was included in Other income (expense), net in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss) for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2017. (3) SEGMENT INFORMATION The Company reports the following four segments: • the CMS segment includes the customer experience delivery solutions which integrate innovative technology with highly-trained customer experience professionals to optimize the customer experience across all channels and all stages of the customer lifecycle from an onshore, offshore or work-from-home environment; Table of Contents F-22 • the CGS segment provides technology-enabled sales and marketing solutions that support revenue generation across the customer lifecycle, including sales advisory, search engine optimization, digital demand generation, lead qualification, and acquisition sales, growth and retention services; • the CTS segment includes system design consulting, customer experience technology product, implementation and integration consulting services, and management of clients’ cloud and on-premise solutions; and • the CSS segment provides professional services in customer experience strategy and operations, insights, system and operational process optimization, and culture development and knowledge management. The Company allocates to each segment its portion of corporate operating expenses. All intercompany transactions between the reported segments for the periods presented have been eliminated. The following tables present certain financial data by segment (in thousands): Year Ended December 31, 2017 Depreciation Gross Intersegment Net & Income from Revenue Sales Revenue Amortization Operations Customer Management Services $ 1,141,779 $ (19) $ 1,141,760 $ 52,193 $ 78,206 Customer Growth Services 128,698 — 128,698 2,959 7,803 Customer Technology Services 138,918 (337) 138,581 7,092 12,047 Customer Strategy Services 68,326 — 68,326 2,263 2,433 Total $ 1,477,721 $ (356) $ 1,477,365 $ 64,507 $ 100,489 Year Ended December 31, 2016 Depreciation Gross Intersegment Net & Income from Revenue Sales Revenue Amortization Operations Customer Management Services $ 924,654 $ (329) $ 924,325 $ 48,770 $ 50,541 Customer Growth Services 141,005 — 141,005 5,905 6,969 Customer Technology Services 141,865 (611) 141,254 10,645 933 Customer Strategy Services 68,674 — 68,674 3,355 (5,691) Total $ 1,276,198 $ (940) $ 1,275,258 $ 68,675 $ 52,752 Year Ended December 31, 2015 Depreciation Gross Intersegment Net & Income from Revenue Sales Revenue Amortization Operations Customer Management Services $ 913,272 $ — $ 913,272 $ 44,633 $ 58,018 Customer Growth Services 129,021 — 129,021 6,065 3,077 Customer Technology Services 157,838 (232) 157,606 9,775 13,339 Customer Strategy Services 86,856 — 86,856 3,335 15,746 Total $ 1,286,987 $ (232) $ 1,286,755 $ 63,808 $ 90,180 For the Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 2015 Capital Expenditures Customer Management Services $ 48,069 $ 40,321 $ 56,570 Customer Growth Services 871 4,185 4,681 Customer Technology Services 2,308 5,217 4,216 Customer Strategy Services 710 1,109 1,128 Total $ 51,958 $ 50,832 $ 66,595 Table of Contents F-23 December 31, 2017 2016 2015 Total Assets Customer Management Services $ 869,594 $ 585,679 $ 525,470 Customer Growth Services 41,036 71,540 75,291 Customer Technology Services 100,351 115,537 146,480 Customer Strategy Services 67,755 73,548 96,086 Total $ 1,078,736 $ 846,304 $ 843,327 December 31, 2017 2016 2015 Goodwill Customer Management Services $ 119,497 $ 42,589 $ 23,218 Customer Growth Services 24,439 24,439 24,439 Customer Technology Services 40,839 41,500 41,500 Customer Strategy Services 21,919 21,120 25,026 Total $ 206,694 $ 129,648 $ 114,183 The following tables present certain financial data based upon the geographic location where the services are provided (in thousands): As of and for the Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 2015 Revenue United States $ 820,597 $ 693,023 $ 679,959 Philippines 353,122 351,853 343,013 Latin America 130,082 122,347 147,267 Europe / Middle East / Africa 62,597 65,866 78,182 Asia Pacific / India 36,715 28,219 32,554 Canada 74,252 13,950 5,780 Total $ 1,477,365 $ 1,275,258 $ 1,286,755 Property, plant and equipment, gross United States $ 490,110 $ 441,222 $ 415,918 Philippines 137,683 133,214 140,712 Latin America 51,451 50,605 49,464 Europe / Middle East / Africa 10,231 8,805 14,567 Asia Pacific / India 24,592 23,484 23,181 Canada 15,912 19,988 16,239 Total $ 729,979 $ 677,318 $ 660,081 Other long-term assets United States $ 46,029 $ 36,442 $ 34,007 Philippines 7,753 8,194 5,220 Latin America 1,475 1,161 1,161 Europe / Middle East / Africa 1,950 1,099 811 Asia Pacific / India 4,326 110 165 Canada 324 514 1,122 Total $ 61,857 $ 47,520 $ 42,486 Table of Contents F-24 (4) ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE AND SIGNIFICANT CLIENTS Accounts receivable, net in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets consists of the following (in thousands): December 31, 2017 2016 Accounts receivable $ 386,672 $ 301,470 Less: Allowance for doubtful accounts (921) (662) Accounts receivable, net $ 385,751 $ 300,808 Activity in the Company’s Allowance for doubtful accounts consists of the following (in thousands): December 31, 2017 2016 2015 Balance, beginning of year $ 662 $ 2,176 $ 3,425 Provision for doubtful accounts 458 1,164 1,465 Uncollectible receivables written-off (180) (2,670) (2,035) Effect of foreign currency and other (19) (8) (679) Balance, end of year $ 921 $ 662 $ 2,176 Significant Clients The Company had no clients that contributed in excess of 10% of total revenue for the year ended December 31, 2017. The Company had one client that contributed 10% of total revenue in the years ended December 31, 2016 and 2015. This client operates in the communications industry and is included in the CMS segment. The revenue from this client as a percentage of total revenue was as follows: Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 2015 Telecommunications client 9 % 10 % 10 % Accounts receivable from this client was as follows (in thousands): Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 2015 Telecommunications client $ 26,920 $ 28,080 $ 23,953 The loss of one or more of its significant clients could have a material adverse effect on the Company’s business, operating results, or financial condition. The Company does not require collateral from its clients. To limit the Company’s credit risk with its clients, management performs periodic credit evaluations, maintains allowances for uncollectible accounts and may require pre-payment for services from certain clients. Based on currently available information, management does not believe significant credit risk exists as of December 31, 2017. Table of Contents F-25 (5) PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT Property, plant and equipment consisted of the following (in thousands): December 31, 2017 2016 Land and buildings $ 38,858 $ 38,868 Computer equipment and software 390,899 364,854 Telephone equipment 46,521 42,858 Furniture and fixtures 76,856 68,248 Leasehold improvements 176,467 162,232 Motor vehicles 158 143 Construction-in-progress and other 220 115 Property, plant and equipment, gross 729,979 677,318 Less: Accumulated depreciation and amortization (566,682) (526,281) Property, plant and equipment, net $ 163,297 $ 151,037 Depreciation and amortization expense for property, plant and equipment was $57.0 million, $59.1 million and $54.0 million for the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015, respectively. Included in the computer equipment and software is internally developed software of $8.5 million net and $10.1 million net as of December 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively. (6) GOODWILL Goodwill consisted of the following (in thousands): Effect of December 31, Acquisitions / Foreign December 31, 2016 Adjustments Impairments Currency 2017 Customer Management Services $ 42,589 $ 73,934 $ — $ 2,974 $ 119,497 Customer Growth Services 24,439 — — — 24,439 Customer Technology Services 41,500 (661) — — 40,839 Customer Strategy Services 21,120 — — 799 21,919 Total $ 129,648 $ 73,273 $ — $ 3,773 $ 206,694 Effect of December 31, Acquisitions / Foreign December 31, 2015 Adjustments Impairments Currency 2016 Customer Management Services $ 23,218 $ 21,030 $ (1,363) $ (296) $ 42,589 Customer Growth Services 24,439 — — — 24,439 Customer Technology Services 41,500 — — — 41,500 Customer Strategy Services 25,026 (3,033) — (873) 21,120 Total $ 114,183 $ 17,997 $ (1,363) $ (1,169) $ 129,648 Impairment The Company has six reporting units with goodwill and performs a goodwill impairment test on at least an annual basis. The Company conducts its annual goodwill impairment test during the fourth quarter, or more frequently, if indicators of impairment exist. Table of Contents F-26 For the annual goodwill impairment analysis, the Company elected to perform a Step 1 evaluation for all of its reporting units, which includes comparing a reporting unit’s estimated fair value to its carrying value. The determination of fair value requires significant judgments including estimation of future cash flows, which is dependent on internal forecasts, estimation of the long-term growth rates for the businesses, the useful lives over which the cash flows will occur and determination of appropriate discount rates (based in part on the Company’s weighted average cost of capital). Changes in these estimates and assumptions could materially affect the determination of fair value and/or conclusions on goodwill impairment for each reporting unit. As of December 1, 2017, the date of the annual impairment testing, the Company concluded that for all six of the reporting units the fair values were in excess of their respective carrying values and the goodwill for those reporting units was not impaired. During the Company’s annual impairment testing as of December 1, 2017, the Company identified triggering events that could lead to impairment of goodwill for the CSS reporting unit, including lower revenues and profits than had been anticipated over the past two years. The carrying value of CSS was $43.4 million at December 1, 2017, including approximately $22.0 million of goodwill. Based on the Company’s assessment, the estimated fair value of the CSS reporting unit exceeded its carrying value by approximately 44.0%, but based on additional sensitivity analysis, the amount of cushion could fall to 10% if the performance of the business does not improve as expected. The estimate of fair value was based on generally accepted valuation techniques and information available at the date of the assessment, which incorporated management’s assumptions about expected revenues and future cash flows and available market information for comparable companies. The process of evaluating the fair value of the reporting units is highly subjective and requires significant judgment and estimates as the reporting units operate in a number of markets and geographical regions. We used a market approach and an income approach to determine our best estimates of fair value which incorporated the following significant assumptions: • Revenue projections, including revenue growth during the forecast periods ranging from (3.2)% to 7.8%; • EBITDA margin projections held relatively flat over the forecast periods ranging from 10% to 21.4%; • Estimated income tax rates of 14.6% to 34.3%; • Estimated capital expenditures ranging from $0.8 million to $40.4 million; and • Discount rates ranging from 10% to 16% based on various inputs, including the risks associated with the specific reporting units, the country of operations as well as their revenue growth and EBITDA margin assumptions. CMS - Humanify reporting unit As of December 1, 2016, the calculated fair value for the Humanify reporting unit was below the carrying value which necessitated an impairment analysis. The Company tested all of the assets of the reporting unit for impairment. Definite-lived long-lived assets consisted of internally developed software and purchased IP. Based on a decision to change the strategy of this business unit in December 2016 which will not use these assets on a go forward basis, the Company has determined that there is no value associated with these assets and recorded a $10.8 million impairment in the three months ended December 31, 2016, which was included in Impairment losses in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). For the goodwill impairment analysis, the Company calculated the fair value of the Humanify reporting unit and compared that to the updated carrying value and determined that the fair value was not in excess of its carrying value. Key assumptions used in the fair value calculation for goodwill impairment testing include, but are not limited to, revenue growth of approximately $300 thousand to $1 million per year through 2027, a perpetual growth rate of 3%, a discount rate of 16.75%, and negative EBITDA through 2020 growing to a 15.6% EBITDA for the terminal year. Estimated future cash flows under the income approach were based on the Company’s internal business plan adjusted as appropriate for the Company’s view of market participant assumptions. Table of Contents F-27 The fair value of the Humanify reporting unit was determined to be zero. Upon completing this assessment, the Company determined that the implied fair value of goodwill was below the carrying value and the entire goodwill balance of $1.4 million was impaired and expensed in the three months ended December 31, 2016 which is included in Impairment losses in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). CSS reporting unit During the quarter ended September 30, 2016, the Company identified negative indicators such as lower financial performance and the reversal of contingent consideration for the CSS reporting unit and thus the Company updated its quantitative assessment for the CSS reporting unit fair value using an income based approach. The determination of fair value requires significant judgments including estimation of future cash flows, which is dependent on internal forecasts, estimation of the long-term growth rates for the businesses, the useful lives over which the cash flows will occur and determination of appropriate discount rates (based in part on the Company’s weighted average cost of capital). Changes in these estimates and assumptions could materially affect the determination of fair value and/or conclusions on goodwill impairment for each reporting unit. At September 30, 2016, the fair value for the CSS reporting unit exceeded the carrying value and thus no impairment was required. The Company also determined that effective September 30, 2016 the assets of one of the business units within the CSS reporting unit will be held for sale (see discussion in Note 2). Therefore the CSS reporting unit was separated into the component that will be held for sale and the components that will be held for use and two separate fair value analyses were completed. At September 30, 2016 the fair value for the CSS held for use component exceeded the carrying value and thus no impairment was required. The fair value for the CSS held for sale component also exceeded the carrying value and thus no impairment was required. (7) OTHER INTANGIBLE ASSETS Other intangible assets which are included in Other long-term assets in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets consisted of the following (in thousands): Acquisitions Effect of December 31, and Foreign December 31, 2016 Amortization Impairments Adjustments Currency 2017 Customer relationships, gross $ 50,454 $ — $ — $ 72,492 $ 1,829 $ 124,775 Customer relationships - accumulated amortization (25,943) (7,213) — (210) (194) (33,560) Other intangible assets, gross 4,589 — — 151 44 4,784 Other intangible assets - accumulated amortization (3,978) (254) — 1 318 (3,913) Trade name - indefinite life 5,665 — (5,322) — (343) — Other intangible assets, net $ 30,787 $ (7,467) $ (5,322) $ 72,434 $ 1,654 $ 92,086 Acquisitions Effect of December 31, and Foreign December 31, 2015 Amortization Impairments Adjustments Currency 2016 Customer relationships, gross $ 62,257 $ — $ (17,150) $ 6,588 $ (1,241) $ 50,454 Customer relationships - accumulated amortization (30,180) (7,246) 6,120 5,097 266 (25,943) Other intangible assets, gross 13,750 — (5,566) (3,701) 106 4,589 Other intangible assets - accumulated amortization (8,755) (2,285) 3,956 2,929 177 (3,978) Trade name - indefinite life 14,143 — (8,682) — 204 5,665 Other intangible assets, net $ 51,215 $ (9,531) $ (21,322) $ 10,913 $ (488) $ 30,787 Table of Contents F-28 The acquisitions and adjustments recorded during 2017 relate to the purchase of Connextions and Motif (see Note 2 for further information) and the impairment of intangible assets during the fourth quarter of 2017 (see below). The acquisitions and adjustments recorded during 2016 relate to the purchase of Atelka (see Note 2 for further information) and the impairment of several intangible assets during the third and fourth quarters of 2016 (see below). CTS - eLoyalty During the fourth quarter of 2017 in connection with the rebranding of the consolidated company, management has determined that it will no longer be using the name of eLoyalty and will be transitioning to TTEC Digital. Based on this change in branding strategy, an evaluation of the indefinite-lived trade name was completed and it was determined that the fair value of the asset was zero. The Company recorded an impairment expense of $3.3 million in the three months ended December 31, 2017 which was included in Impairment losses in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). CSS - PRG During the fourth quarter of 2017 in connection with the rebranding of the consolidated company and the full integration of the CSS segment, management has determined that it will no longer be using the name of PRG and will be transitioning all CSS entities to TTEC Consulting. Based on this change in branding strategy, an evaluation of the indefinite-lived trade name was completed and it was determined that the fair value of the asset was zero. The Company recorded impairment expense of $2.0 million in the three months ended December 31, 2017 which was included in Impairment losses in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). CTS - Avaya In connection with reduced profitability for the Avaya component of the CTS segment an interim impairment analysis was completed during the third quarter of 2016. The Company modified the sales focus of the Avaya component away from premise product and services towards cloud solutions. The indefinite-lived intangible asset evaluated for impairment consisted of the TSG trade name. The Company calculated the fair value of the trade name using a relief from royalty method based on forecasted revenues sold under the trade name using significant inputs not observable in the market (Level 3 inputs). The valuation assumptions included an estimated royalty rate of 0.5%, a discount rate specific to the trade name of 19.0%, which was equal to the reporting unit’s equity risk premium adjusted for its size and company specific risk factors. and a perpetuity growth rate of 3.0%. Based on the calculated fair value of $0.4 million, the Company recorded impairment expense of $0.7 million in the three months ended September 30, 2016 which was included in Impairment losses in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). Additional triggering events occurred related to continued lower than expected financial performance and the bankruptcy filing for Avaya. In connection with this event, the forecasted revenue and operating income for the future years has decreased and thus an impairment analysis was completed during the fourth quarter of 2016 for both the indefinite-lived TSG trade name and the TSG customer relationship asset. The Company completed an asset group recoverability analysis using significant inputs not observable in the market (Level 3 inputs). These included a declining revenue stream from 2017 through 2019 and a negative EBITDA for the next 4 years. The estimated fair value was a negative $0.9 million. Based on this recoverability analysis, an impairment of $9.2 million of customer relationships, $0.4 million of trade name and $0.4 million of non-compete intangible assets was recorded. In addition $1.3 million of fixed assets were also impaired. The total $11.3 million of expense was recorded in the three months ended December 31, 2016 and was included in Impairment losses in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). Table of Contents F-29 CSS - rogenSi In connection with reduced profitability of the rogenSi component of the CSS segment, an interim impairment analysis was completed during the third quarter of 2016. The indefinite-lived intangible asset evaluated for impairment consisted of the trade name. The Company calculated the fair value of the trade name using a relief from royalty method based on forecasted revenues sold under the trade name using significant inputs not observable in the market (Level 3 inputs). The valuation assumptions included an estimated royalty rate of 2.0%, a discount rate specific to the trade name of 18.2%, which was equal to the reporting unit’s equity risk premium adjusted for its size and company specific risk factors, and a perpetuity growth rate of 3.0%. Based on the calculated fair value of $3.1 million, the Company recorded impairment expense of $1.2 million in the three months ended September 30, 2016 which was included in Impairment losses in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss) During the fourth quarter of 2016 in connection with the full integration of the CSS segment, management has determined that it will no longer be using the name rogenSi and will be transitioning all CSS entities to TTEC Consulting. Based on this change in branding strategy, an evaluation of the indefinite-lived trade name was completed and it was determined that the fair value of the asset was zero. The Company recorded impairment expense of $3.0 million in the three months ended December 31, 2016 which was included in Impairment losses in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). CSS – component held-for-sale The Company calculated the fair value of the trade name using a relief from royalty method based on forecasted revenues sold under the trade name using significant inputs not observable in the market (Level 3 inputs). The valuation assumptions included an estimated royalty rate of 3.75%, a discount rate specific to the trade name of 19.2% and a perpetuity growth rate of 3.0%. Based on the calculated fair value of $2.0 million, the Company recorded impairment expense of $3.3 million in the three months ended September 30, 2016 which was included in Impairment losses in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). Customer relationships are being amortized over the remaining weighted average useful life of 8.8 years and other intangible assets are being amortized over the remaining weighted average useful life of 3.8 years. Amortization expense related to intangible assets was $7.5 million, $9.5 million and $9.7 million for the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015, respectively. Expected future amortization of other intangible assets as of December 31, 2017 is as follows (in thousands): 2018 $ 10,903 2019 10,682 2020 9,381 2021 8,850 2022 8,160 Thereafter 44,110 Total $ 92,086 Table of Contents F-30 (8) DERIVATIVES Cash Flow Hedges The Company enters into foreign exchange and interest rate related derivatives. Foreign exchange derivatives entered into consist of forward and option contracts to reduce the Company’s exposure to foreign currency exchange rate fluctuations that are associated with forecasted revenue earned in foreign locations. Interest rate derivatives consist of interest rate swaps to reduce the Company’s exposure to interest rate fluctuations associated with its variable rate debt. Upon proper qualification, these contracts are designated as cash flow hedges. It is the Company’s policy to only enter into derivative contracts with investment grade counterparty financial institutions, and correspondingly, the fair value of derivative assets consider, among other factors, the creditworthiness of these counterparties. Conversely, the fair value of derivative liabilities reflects the Company’s creditworthiness. As of December 31, 2017, the Company had not experienced, nor does it anticipate, any issues related to derivative counterparty defaults. The following table summarizes the aggregate unrealized net gain or loss in Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) for the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015 (in thousands and net of tax): Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 2015 Aggregate unrealized net gain/(loss) at beginning of period $ (32,393) $ (26,885) $ (18,345) Add: Net gain/(loss) from change in fair value of cash flow hedges 31,053 11,242 (16,349) Less: Net (gain)/loss reclassified to earnings from effective hedges (14,406) (16,750) 7,809 Aggregate unrealized net gain/(loss) at end of period $ (15,746) $ (32,393) $ (26,885) The Company’s foreign exchange cash flow hedging instruments as of December 31, 2017 and 2016 are summarized as follows (in thousands). All hedging instruments are forward contracts. Local Currency U.S. Dollar % Maturing Contracts Notional Notional in the next Maturing As of December 31, 2017 Amount Amount 12 months Through Philippine Peso 10,685,000 219,917 (1) 62.3 % August 2021 Mexican Peso 1,609,000 93,589 41.0 % May 2021 $ 313,506 Local Currency U.S. Dollar Notional Notional As of December 31, 2016 Amount Amount Philippine Peso 14,315,000 301,134 (1) Mexican Peso 2,089,000 129,375 $ 430,509 (1) Includes contracts to purchase Philippine pesos in exchange for New Zealand dollars and Australian dollars, which are translated into equivalent U.S. dollars on December 31, 2017 and December 31, 2016. Table of Contents F-31 The Company’s interest rate swap arrangement expired as of May 31, 2017 and no additional swaps have been entered into. As of December 31, 2016, the outstanding interest rate swap was as follows: Contract Contract Notional Variable Rate Fixed Rate Commencement Maturity December 31, 2016 Amount Received Paid Date Date Swap $ 15 million 1 - month LIBOR 3.14 % May 2012 May 2017 Fair Value Hedges The Company enters into foreign exchange forward contracts to economically hedge against foreign currency exchange gains and losses on certain receivables and payables of the Company’s foreign operations. Changes in the fair value of derivative instruments designated as fair value hedges are recognized in earnings in Other income (expense), net. As of December 31, 2017 and 2016, the total notional amount of the Company’s forward contracts used as fair value hedges was $176.2 million and $227.8 million, respectively. Derivative Valuation and Settlements The Company’s derivatives as of December 31, 2017 and 2016 were as follows (in thousands): December 31, 2017 Designated Not Designated as Hedging as Hedging Designation: Instruments Instruments Foreign Interest Foreign Derivative contract type: Exchange Rate Exchange Derivative classification: Cash Flow Cash Flow Fair Value Fair value and location of derivative in the Consolidated Balance Sheet: Prepaids and other current assets $ 220 $ — $ 1,603 Other long-term assets 393 — — Other current liabilities (15,603) — (133) Other long-term liabilities (11,266) — — Total fair value of derivatives, net $ (26,256) $ — $ 1,470 December 31, 2016 Designated Not Designated as Hedging as Hedging Designation: Instruments Instruments Foreign Interest Foreign Derivative contract type: Exchange Rate Exchange Derivative classification: Cash Flow Cash Flow Fair Value Fair value and location of derivative in the Consolidated Balance Sheet: Prepaids and other current assets $ 1,178 $ — $ 1,606 Other long-term assets — — — Other current liabilities (23,503) (147) (866) Other long-term liabilities (31,714) — — Total fair value of derivatives, net $ (54,039) $ (147) $ 740 Table of Contents F-32 The effect of derivative instruments on the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss) for the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016 were as follows (in thousands): Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 Designated as Hedging Designated as Hedging Designation: Instruments Instruments Foreign Interest Foreign Interest Derivative contract type: Exchange Rate Exchange Rate Derivative classification: Cash Flow Cash Flow Cash Flow Cash Flow Amount of gain or (loss) recognized in Other comprehensive income (loss) - effective portion, net of tax $ (14,336) $ (70) $ (16,438) $ (312) Amount and location of net gain or (loss) reclassified from Accumulated OCI to income - effective portion: Revenue $ (22,792) $ — $ (28,025) $ — Interest expense — (115) — (534) Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 Designation: Not Designated as Hedging Instruments Not Designated as Hedging Instruments Derivative contract type: Foreign Exchange Foreign Exchange Forward Forward Derivative classification: Contracts Fair Value Contracts Fair Value Amount and location of net gain or (loss) recognized in the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income (Loss): Cost of services $ — $ — $ — $ — Other income (expense), net — 1,350 — (5,826) (9) FAIR VALUE The authoritative guidance for fair value measurements establishes a three-level fair value hierarchy that prioritizes the inputs used to measure fair value. This hierarchy requires that the Company maximize the use of observable inputs and minimize the use of unobservable inputs. The three levels of inputs used to measure fair value are as follows: Level 1 — Quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities. Level 2 — Observable inputs other than quoted prices included in Level 1, such as quoted prices for similar assets and liabilities in active markets, similar assets and liabilities in markets that are not active or can be corroborated by observable market data. Level 3 — Unobservable inputs that are supported by little or no market activity and that are significant to the fair value of the assets or liabilities. This includes certain pricing models, discounted cash flow methodologies and similar techniques that use significant unobservable inputs. Table of Contents F-33 The following presents information as of December 31, 2017 and 2016 of the Company’s assets and liabilities required to be measured at fair value on a recurring basis, as well as the fair value hierarchy used to determine their fair value. Accounts Receivable and Payable - The amounts recorded in the accompanying balance sheets approximate fair value because of their short-term nature. Investments – The Company measures investments, including cost and equity method investments, at fair value on a nonrecurring basis when they are deemed to be other-than-temporarily impaired. The fair values of these investments are determined based on valuation techniques using the best information available, and may include market observable inputs and discounted cash flow projections. An impairment charge is recorded when the cost of the investment exceeds its fair value and this condition is determined to be other-than-temporary. As of December 31, 2017, the investment in CaféX Communications, Inc., which consists of the Company’s first quarter 2015 $9.0 million investment, the fourth quarter 2016 $3.2 million investment, and the first and second quarters of 2017 $1.3 million investment, is recorded at $13.5 million. Debt - The Company’s debt consists primarily of the Company’s Credit Agreement, which permits floating-rate borrowings based upon the current Prime Rate or LIBOR plus a credit spread as determined by the Company’s leverage ratio calculation (as defined in the Credit Agreement). As of December 31, 2017 and 2016, the Company had $344.0 million and $217.3 million, respectively, of borrowings outstanding under the Credit Agreement. During 2017 and 2016, borrowings accrued interest at an average rate of 2.2% and 1.5% per annum, respectively, excluding unused commitment fees. The amounts recorded in the accompanying Balance Sheets approximate fair value due to the variable nature of the debt based on level 2 inputs. Derivatives - Net derivative assets (liabilities) are measured at fair value on a recurring basis. The portfolio is valued using models based on market observable inputs, including both forward and spot foreign exchange rates, interest rates, implied volatility, and counterparty credit risk, including the ability of each party to execute its obligations under the contract. As of December 31, 2017, credit risk did not materially change the fair value of the Company’s derivative contracts. The following is a summary of the Company’s fair value measurements for its net derivative assets (liabilities) as of December 31, 2017 and 2016 (in thousands): As of December 31, 2017 Fair Value Measurements Using Quoted Prices in Significant Active Markets Other Significant for Identical Observable Unobservable Assets Inputs Inputs (Level 1) (Level 2) (Level 3) At Fair Value Cash flow hedges $ — $ (26,256) $ — $ (26,256) Interest rate swaps — — — — Fair value hedges — 1,470 — 1,470 Total net derivative asset (liability) $ — $ (24,786) $ — $ (24,786) As of December 31, 2016 Fair Value Measurements Using Quoted Prices in Significant Active Markets Other Significant for Identical Observable Unobservable Assets Inputs Inputs (Level 1) (Level 2) (Level 3) At Fair Value Cash flow hedges $ — $ (54,039) $ — $ (54,039) Interest rate swaps — (147) — (147) Fair value hedges — 740 — 740 Total net derivative asset (liability) $ — $ (53,446) $ — $ (53,446) Table of Contents F-34 The following is a summary of the Company’s fair value measurements as of December 31, 2017 and 2016 (in thousands): As of December 31, 2017 Fair Value Measurements Using Quoted Prices in Significant Active Markets for Significant Other Unobservable Identical Assets Observable Inputs Inputs (Level 1) (Level 2) (Level 3) Assets Derivative instruments, net $ — $ — $ — Total assets $ — $ — $ — Liabilities Deferred compensation plan liability $ — $ (13,219) $ — Derivative instruments, net — (24,786) — Contingent consideration — — (399) Total liabilities $ — $ (38,005) $ (399) As of December 31, 2016 Fair Value Measurements Using Quoted Prices in Significant Active Markets for Significant Other Unobservable Identical Assets Observable Inputs Inputs (Level 1) (Level 2) (Level 3) Assets Derivative instruments, net $ — $ — $ — Total assets $ — $ — $ — Liabilities Deferred compensation plan liability $ — $ (10,841) $ — Derivative instruments, net — (53,446) — Contingent consideration — — (1,808) Total liabilities $ — $ (64,287) $ (1,808) Deferred Compensation Plan - The Company maintains a non-qualified deferred compensation plan structured as a Rabbi trust for certain eligible employees. Participants in the deferred compensation plan select from a menu of phantom investment options for their deferral dollars offered by the Company each year, which are based upon changes in value of complementary, defined market investments. The deferred compensation liability represents the combined values of market investments against which participant accounts are tracked. Contingent Consideration — The Company recorded contingent consideration related to the acquisitions of iKnowtion, Sofica, rogenSi, and Atelka. These contingent payables were recognized at fair value using a discounted cash flow approach and a discount rate of 21.0%, 5.0%, 4.6%, or 0%, respectively. The discount rates vary dependent on the specific risks of each acquisition including the country of operation, the nature of services and complexity of the acquired business, and other factors. These measurements were based on significant inputs not observable in the market. The Company recorded interest expense each period using the effective interest method until the future value of these contingent payables reached their expected future value. Interest expense related to all recorded contingent payables is included in Interest expense in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). Table of Contents F-35 The Company recorded contingent consideration related to a revenue servicing agreement with Welltok in the fourth quarter of 2016, in which a maximum of $1.25 million will be paid over eight quarters based on the dollar value of revenue earned by the Company. The contingent payable was recognized at fair value of $1.25 million as of December 31, 2016. During the second quarter of 2015, the Company recorded a fair value adjustment of the contingent consideration associated with the Sofica reporting unit within the CMS segment based on revised estimates reflecting Sofica earnings will be lower than anticipated for 2015. Accordingly a $0.5 million decrease in the payable was recorded as of June 30, 2015 and was included in Other income (expense) in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). During the third and fourth quarters of 2015, and the third quarter of 2016, the Company recorded fair value adjustments of the contingent consideration associated with the rogenSi reporting unit within the CSS segment based on revised estimates reflecting that rogenSi earnings would be higher and then lower than anticipated for 2015 and 2016. Accordingly a $0.8 million increase, a $0.3 million decrease, and a $4.3 million decrease to the payable was recorded as of September 30, 2015, December 31, 2015, and September 30, 2016, respectively, and were included in Other income (expense) in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). As of September 30, 2016, the fair value of the remaining contingent consideration was reduced to zero given the remote possibility of any additional payments. As of December 31, 2016, the payment was finalized at a value of zero and thus no additional expense was required. A rollforward of the activity in the Company’s fair value of the contingent consideration is as follows (in thousands): Imputed December 31, Interest / December 31, 2016 Acquisitions Payments Adjustments 2017 Welltok 1,250 — (851) — 399 Atelka 558 — (582) 24 — Total $ 1,808 $ — $ (1,433) $ 24 $ 399 Imputed December 31, Interest / December 31, 2015 Acquisitions Payments Adjustments 2016 iKnowtion $ 500 $ — $ (500) $ — $ — Sofica 3,153 — (3,146) (7) — rogenSi 9,797 — (5,793) (4,004) — Welltok — 1,250 — — 1,250 Atelka — 558 — — 558 Total $ 13,450 $ 1,808 $ (9,439) $ (4,011) $ 1,808 (10) INCOME TAXES The sources of pre-tax operating income are as follows (in thousands): Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 2015 Domestic $ 10,909 $ (6,216) $ 25,402 Foreign 77,978 56,514 60,487 Total $ 88,887 $ 50,298 $ 85,889 Table of Contents F-36 The United States recently enacted comprehensive tax reform legislation known as the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (the "2017 Tax Act") that, among other things, reduces the U.S. federal corporate income tax rate from 35% to 21% and implements a territorial tax system, but imposes an alternative “base erosion and anti-abuse tax” (“BEAT”), and an incremental tax on global intangible low taxed foreign income (“GILTI”) effective January 1, 2018. In addition, the law imposes a one-time mandatory repatriation tax on accumulated foreign earnings on domestic corporations effective for the 2017 tax year. In response, the SEC staff issued Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 118 (“SAB 118”) to address the application of U.S. GAAP in situations when a registrant does not have the necessary information available, prepared, or analyzed (including computations) in reasonable detail to complete the accounting for certain income tax effects of the 2017 Tax Act and allows the registrant to record provisional amounts during a measurement period not to extend beyond one year of the enactment date. The Company has not completed its final analysis of the full impact of the 2017 Act on its tax provisions. However, the Company has recognized the provisional impacts related to the one-time transition tax and revaluation of deferred tax balances and included these estimates in our consolidated financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2017. The significant components of this expense include (i) the remeasurement of net deferred tax assets at the lower enacted U.S. federal corporate tax rate, which resulted in a net $1.1 million increase in income tax expense; and (ii) the deemed repatriation tax on unremitted non-U.S. earnings and profits that were previously tax deferred and other tax impacts of the 2017 Tax Act, which resulted in a $62.4 million increase in income tax expense, net of deductions and credits. No amount was booked related to withholding taxes on the changes in indefinite reinvestment assertion on the potential repatriation of foreign earnings as it is the Company’s determination that there would be no material additional amount of tax if the related foreign cash was repatriated to the United States. The Company has not completed its analysis in regard to the full tax impact related to a change in indefinite reinvestment reassertion as the computation is complex and impacted by the provisional calculations outlined above. No additional income taxes have been provided for any remaining outside basis difference inherent in our foreign subsidiaries as these amounts continue to be indefinitely reinvested in foreign operations. Determination of any unrecognized deferred tax liability related to the outside basis difference in investments in foreign subsidiaries is not practicable due to the inherent complexity of the multi-national tax environment in which we operate. The ultimate impact of the 2017 Tax Act may materially differ from the provisional amounts recorded, due to, among other things, additional analysis, changes in interpretations and assumptions we have made, additional regulatory guidance that may be issued, and actions we may take as a result of the Tax Act. In addition, foreign and state governments may enact tax laws in response to the Tax Act that could result in further changes to global taxation and materially affect our financial position and results of operations. Our selection of an accounting policy with respect to the new GILTI rules will depend in part on analyzing our global income to determine whether we expect to have future U.S. inclusions in taxable income related to GILTI, and if so, what the impact is expected to be. We have not yet computed a reasonable estimate of the effect of this provision, and therefore, we have not made a policy decision regarding whether to record deferred taxes related to GILTI nor have we made any adjustments related to GILTI tax in our year-end financial statements. We expect to complete our analysis of the impacts of the 2017 Tax Act within the measurement period in accordance with SAB 118. Table of Contents F-37 The components of the Company’s Provision for (benefit from) income taxes are as follows (in thousands): Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 2015 Current provision for (benefit from) Federal $ 48,556 $ (373) $ 4,094 State 99 372 1,829 Foreign 12,643 14,447 4,764 Total current provision for (benefit from) 61,298 14,446 10,687 Deferred provision for (benefit from) Federal 14,441 (2,390) (1,895) State 707 103 1,085 Foreign 1,629 704 10,127 Total deferred provision for (benefit from) 16,777 (1,583) 9,317 Total provision for (benefit from) income taxes $ 78,075 $ 12,863 $ 20,004 The following reconciles the Company’s effective tax rate to the federal statutory rate (in thousands): Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 2015 Income tax per U.S. federal statutory rate (35%) $ 31,110 $ 17,605 $ 30,062 State income taxes, net of federal deduction 460 (158) 1,603 Change in valuation allowances (924) (129) 3,923 Foreign income taxes at different rates than the U.S. (14,417) (10,206) (14,490) Foreign withholding taxes 323 590 958 Losses in international markets without tax benefits 1,098 2,474 1,999 Nondeductible compensation under Section 162(m) 647 104 512 Liabilities for uncertain tax positions 1,607 (133) 1,756 Permanent difference related to foreign exchange gains 142 388 162 (Income) losses of foreign branch operations (824) (635) (517) Non-taxable earnings of noncontrolling interest (1,030) (1,128) (1,349) Foreign dividend less foreign tax credits (4,798) (4,646) (4,425) Increase in deferred tax liability - branch losses in UK — — (2,530) Decrease (increase) to deferred tax asset - change in tax rate 1,101 443 (526) State income tax credits 207 100 (1,477) Foreign earnings taxed currently in U.S. 3,143 3,673 2,839 Taxes related to prior year filings (865) 2,554 344 Taxes related to US tax reform 61,569 — — Other (474) 1,967 1,160 Income tax per effective tax rate $ 78,075 $ 12,863 $ 20,004 Table of Contents F-38 The Company’s deferred income tax assets and liabilities are summarized as follows (in thousands): Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 Deferred tax assets, gross Accrued workers compensation, deferred compensation and employee benefits $ 8,597 $ 11,212 Allowance for doubtful accounts, insurance and other accruals 2,197 3,348 Amortization of deferred rent liabilities 2,352 3,362 Net operating losses 17,887 20,253 Equity compensation 1,481 2,489 Customer acquisition and deferred revenue accruals 7,026 11,739 Federal and state tax credits, net 50 7,439 Depreciation and amortization — 4,671 Unrealized losses on derivatives 3,137 13,815 Contract acquisition costs — 1,044 Other 1,557 2,331 Total deferred tax assets, gross 44,284 81,703 Valuation allowances (9,526) (9,949) Total deferred tax assets, net 34,758 71,754 Deferred tax liabilities Depreciation and amortization (12,850) — Contract acquisition costs (5,331) — Intangible assets (15,405) (17,971) Other (446) (357) Total deferred tax liabilities (34,032) (18,328) Net deferred tax assets $ 726 $ 53,426 Quarterly, the Company assesses the likelihood by jurisdiction that its net deferred tax assets will be recovered. Based on the weight of all available evidence, both positive and negative, the Company records a valuation allowance against deferred tax assets when it is more-likely-than-not that a future tax benefit will not be realized. As of December 31, 2017 the Company had approximately $4.2 million of net deferred tax assets in the U.S. and $3.5 million of net deferred tax liabilities related to certain international locations whose recoverability is dependent upon their future profitability. As of December 31, 2017 the deferred tax valuation allowance was $9.5 million and related primarily to tax losses in foreign jurisdictions which do not meet the “more-likely-than-not” standard under current accounting guidance. When there is a change in judgment concerning the recovery of deferred tax assets in future periods, a valuation allowance is recorded into earnings during the quarter in which the change in judgment occurred. In 2017, the Company made adjustments to its deferred tax assets and corresponding valuation allowances. The net change to the valuation allowance consisted of the following: a $0.1 million increase in certain state credits and NOLs that are now expected to be utilized prior to expiration, a $2.1 million increase in valuation allowance in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada, Luxembourg and Australia for deferred tax assets that do not meet the “more-likely-than-not” standard, and a $2.5 million release of valuation allowance in Argentina, New Zealand, Belgium, Turkey, United States and various other jurisdictions related to the utilization or write-off of deferred tax assets. Activity in the Company’s valuation allowance accounts consists of the following (in thousands): Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 2015 Beginning balance $ 9,949 $ 10,139 $ 10,721 Additions of deferred income tax expense 2,044 1,914 4,300 Reductions of deferred income tax expense (2,467) (2,104) (4,882) Ending balance $ 9,526 $ 9,949 $ 10,139 Table of Contents F-39 As of December 31, 2017, after consideration of all tax loss and tax credit carry back opportunities, the Company had tax affected tax loss carry forwards worldwide expiring as follows (in thousands): 2018 $ 98 2019 205 2020 319 2021 160 After 2021 9,687 No expiration 5,282 Total $ 15,751 The Company has been granted “Tax Holidays” as an incentive to attract foreign investment by the governments of the Philippines and Costa Rica. Generally, a Tax Holiday is an agreement between the Company and a foreign government under which the Company receives certain tax benefits in that country, such as exemption from taxation on profits derived from export-related activities. In the Philippines, the Company has been granted multiple agreements with an initial period of four years and additional periods for varying years, expiring at various times between 2017 and 2019. The aggregate benefit to income tax expense for the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015 was approximately $11.9 million, $12.4 million and $12.2 million, respectively, which had a favorable impact on diluted net income per share of $0.26, $0.27 and $0.25, respectively. Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes In accordance with ASC 740, the Company has recorded a reserve for uncertain tax positions. The total amount of interest and penalties recognized in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets and Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss) as of December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015 was approximately $1.8 million, $693 thousand and $709 thousand, respectively. The Company had a reserve for uncertain tax benefits, on a net basis, of $3.3 million and $3.5 million for the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively. The liability for uncertain tax positions was increased by $0.9 million during 2016 for new uncertain tax positions. The tabular reconciliation of the reserve for uncertain tax benefits on a gross basis without interest for the three years ended December 31, 2017 is presented below (in thousands): Balance as of December 31, 2014 $ 1,661 Additions for current year tax positions 1,048 Reductions in prior year tax positions — Balance as of December 31, 2015 2,709 Additions for current year tax positions 826 Reductions in prior year tax positions (1,153) Balance as of December 31, 2016 2,382 Additions for current year tax positions 916 Reductions in prior year tax positions — Balance as of December 31, 2017 $ 3,298 At December 31, 2017, the amount of uncertain tax benefits that, if recognized, would reduce tax expense was $5.1 million. Within the next 12 months, it is expected that the amount of unrecognized tax benefits will be reduced by $3.9 million as a result of the expiration of various statutes of limitation or the confirmation of tax positions by tax authorities. In accordance with ASC 740, the Company recorded a liability of $0.9 million related to an uncertain tax position. The Company recorded a liability during the second quarter of 2015 of $1.75 million and during the first quarter of 2016 of $1.1 million, inclusive of penalties and interest, for an uncertain tax position. See Note 1 for further information on these items. During the second quarter of 2016, $0.3 million of liability was released due to the closing of a statute of limitations. Table of Contents F-40 During the third quarter of 2016, $0.8 million of liability was released due to the favorable outcome of communications with a revenue authority related to site compliance for locations with tax advantaged status. During the third quarter of 2016, $0.5 million of liability was released due to the closing of a statute of limitations. The Company and its domestic and foreign subsidiaries (including Percepta LLC and its domestic and foreign subsidiaries) file income tax returns as required in the U.S. federal jurisdiction and various state and foreign jurisdictions. The following table presents the major tax jurisdictions and tax years that are open as of December 31, 2017 and subject to examination by the respective tax authorities: Tax Jurisdiction Tax Year Ended United States 2014 to present Australia 2013 to present Brazil 2012 to present Canada 2009 to present Mexico 2012 to present Philippines 2015 to present The Company’s U.S. income tax returns filed for the tax years ending December 31, 2014 to present, remain open tax years. The Company has been notified of the intent to audit, or is currently under audit of, income taxes for Canada for tax years 2009 and 2010, the Philippines for tax year 2015, Ireland for tax year 2016 and the state of Minnesota in the United States for tax years 2014 through 2016. Although the outcome of examinations by taxing authorities are always uncertain, it is the opinion of management that the resolution of these audits will not have a material effect on the Company’s Consolidated Financial Statements. The Company successfully closed their audit in the second quarter of 2017 in Hong Kong for the tax year 2014 with no material changes. The Company also recorded a benefit in the amount of $0.8 million in the financial statements during the fourth quarter related to the favorable resolution of tax audits. (11) RESTRUCTURING CHARGES, INTEGRATION CHARGES AND IMPAIRMENT LOSSES Restructuring Charges During the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015, the Company continued restructuring activities primarily associated with reductions in the Company’s capacity, workforce and related management in all of its segments to better align the capacity and workforce with current business needs. During 2017, several restructuring activities were completed related to the purchase of Connextions (see Note 2) including the closure of two delivery centers that came with the acquisition. During 2017, a net $0.4 million severance accrual was recorded in relation to these closures. In conjunction with closing these two delivery centers, a $0.6 million termination fee and a $1.4 million net lease liability and applicable expenses were recorded as of December 31, 2017. These net charges were included in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss) during the year ended December 31, 2017. A summary of the expenses recorded for restructuring and included in Restructuring and integration charges, net in the accompanying Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss) for the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015, respectively, is as follows (in thousands): Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 2015 Reduction in force Customer Management Services $ 1,012 $ 2,837 $ 1,482 Customer Growth Services — 147 22 Customer Technology Services 94 324 13 Customer Strategy Services 55 92 297 Total $ 1,161 $ 3,400 $ 1,814 Table of Contents F-41 Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 2015 Facility exit and other charges Customer Management Services $ 2,050 $ 959 $ — Customer Growth Services — — — Customer Technology Services 84 33 — Customer Strategy Services 85 — — Total $ 2,219 $ 992 $ — A rollforward of the activity in the Company’s restructuring accruals for the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively, is as follows (in thousands): Reduction Facility Exit and in Force Other Charges Total Balance as of December 31, 2015 $ 806 $ — $ 806 Expense 3,728 992 4,720 Payments (2,646) (894) (3,540) Changes due to foreign currency (92) — (92) Changes in estimates (328) — (328) Balance as of December 31, 2016 1,468 98 1,566 Expense 1,316 2,219 3,535 Payments (1,892) (908) (2,800) Changes due to foreign currency (43) — (43) Changes in estimates (155) — (155) Balance as of December 31, 2017 $ 694 $ 1,409 $ 2,103 The remaining restructuring accruals are expected to be paid or extinguished during 2018 and are all classified as current liabilities within Other accrued expenses in the Consolidated Balance Sheets. Integration Charges During the third and fourth quarters of 2017, as a result of the Connextions acquisition, certain integration activities were completed and $5.6 million and $3.9 million of additional expenses were incurred and paid, respectively. These integration activities included the hiring, training and licensing of a group of employees at new delivery centers as one of the acquired centers was closed during the third quarter of 2017 and one of the acquired centers was closed during the fourth quarter of 2017. In connection with these center closures, leasehold improvements of $3.5 million were written off as a related integration expense. The Company has also incurred significant expenses related to the integration of the IT systems and has paid duplicative software costs and facilities expenses for several areas during the transition period. Impairment Losses During each of the periods presented, the Company evaluated the annual recoverability of its leasehold improvement assets at certain customer engagement centers. An asset is considered to be impaired when the anticipated undiscounted future cash flows of its asset group are estimated to be less than the asset group’s carrying value. The amount of impairment recognized is the difference between the carrying value of the asset group and its fair value. To determine fair value, the Company used Level 3 inputs in its discounted cash flows analysis. Assumptions included the amount and timing of estimated future cash flows and assumed discount rates. During 2017, 2016 and 2015, the Company recognized impairment losses related to leasehold improvement assets of zero, zero, and $0.4 million, respectively, in its Customer Management Services segment. Table of Contents F-42 (12) INDEBTEDNESS Credit Facility On February 11, 2016, the Company entered into a First Amendment to our June 3, 2013 Amended and Restated Credit Agreement and Amended and Restated Security Agreement (collectively the “Credit Agreement”) for a senior secured revolving credit facility (the “Credit Facility”) with a syndicate of lenders led by Wells Fargo Bank, National Association. The Credit Agreement provides for a secured revolving credit facility that matures on February 11, 2021 with an initial maximum aggregate commitment of $900.0 million, and an accordion feature of up to $1.2 billion in the aggregate, if certain conditions are satisfied. On October 30, 2017, the Company entered into a Third Amendment to the Credit Agreement and exercised the Credit Facility’s accordion feature to increase the total commitment under the Credit Facility to $1.2 billion. All other material terms of the Credit Agreement remained unchanged. Base rate loans bear interest at a rate equal to the greatest of (i) Wells Fargo’s prime rate, (ii) one half of 1% in excess of the federal funds effective rate, and (iii) 1.25% in excess of the one month London Interbank Offered Rate (“LIBOR”); plus in each case a margin of 0% to 0.75% based on the Company’s net leverage ratio. Eurodollar loans bear interest at LIBOR plus a margin of 1.0% to 1.75% based on the Company’s net leverage ratio. Alternate currency loans bear interest at rates applicable to their respective currencies. Letter of credit fees are one eighth of 1% of the stated amount of the letter of credit on the date of issuance, renewal or amendment, plus an annual fee equal to the borrowing margin for Eurodollar loans. The Credit Facility commitment fees are payable to the lenders in an amount equal to the unused portion of the Credit Facility at a rate of 0.125% to 0.250% based on the Company’s net leverage ratio. The Company is obligated to maintain a maximum net leverage ratio of 3.25 to 1.00, and a minimum interest coverage ratio of 2.50 to 1.00. The Company primarily utilizes its Credit Agreement to fund working capital, general operations, stock repurchases, dividends, and other strategic activities, such as the acquisitions described in Note 2. As of December 31, 2017, and 2016, the Company had borrowings of $344.0 million and $217.3 million, respectively, under its Credit Agreement, and its average daily utilization was $494.7 million and $375.3 million for the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively. Based on the current level of availability based on the covenant calculations, the Company’s remaining borrowing capacity was approximately $350 million as of December 31, 2017. As of December 31, 2017, the Company was in compliance with all covenants and conditions under its Credit Agreement. (13) DEFERRED REVENUE AND COSTS Deferred revenue in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets consist of the following (in thousands): December 31, 2017 2016 Deferred Revenue - Current $ 21,628 $ 23,318 Deferred Revenue - Long-term 9,632 8,851 Total Deferred Revenue $ 31,260 $ 32,169 Deferred costs in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets consist of the following (in thousands): December 31, 2017 2016 Deferred Costs - Current $ 13,649 $ 14,755 Deferred Costs - Long-term 9,654 8,124 Total Deferred Costs $ 23,303 $ 22,879 Table of Contents F-43 (14) COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES Letters of Credit As of December 31, 2017, outstanding letters of credit under the Credit Agreement totaled $4.5 million and primarily guaranteed workers’ compensation and other insurance related obligations. As of December 31, 2017, letters of credit and contract performance guarantees issued outside of the Credit Agreement totaled $0.7 million. Guarantees Indebtedness under the Credit Agreement is guaranteed by certain of the Company’s present and future domestic subsidiaries. Legal Proceedings From time to time, the Company has been involved in legal actions, both as plaintiff and defendant, which arise in the ordinary course of business. The Company accrues for exposures associated with such legal actions to the extent that losses are deemed both probable and reasonably estimable. To the extent specific reserves have not been made for certain legal proceedings, their ultimate outcome, and consequently, an estimate of possible loss, if any, cannot reasonably be determined at this time. Based on currently available information and advice received from counsel, the Company believes that the disposition or ultimate resolution of any current legal proceedings, except as otherwise specifically reserved for in its financial statements, will not have a material adverse effect on the Company’s financial position, cash flows or results of operations. (15) LEASES The Company has various operating leases primarily for customer engagement centers, equipment, and office space, which generally contain renewal options. Rent expense under operating leases was approximately $46.3 million, $39.5 million and $37.7 million for the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015, respectively. In 2008, the Company sub-leased one of its customer engagement centers to a third party for the remaining term of the original lease. The sub-lease began on January 1, 2009 and rental income is recognized on a straight-line basis over the term of the sub-lease through 2021. Future minimum sub-lease rental receipts are shown in the table below. The future minimum rental payments and receipts required under non-cancelable operating leases as of December 31, 2017 are as follows (in thousands): Operating Sub-Lease Leases Income 2018 $ 44,177 $ (2,470) 2019 34,528 (2,470) 2020 26,471 (2,470) 2021 20,854 (206) 2022 17,215 — Thereafter 30,984 — Total $ 174,229 $ (7,616) The Company records operating lease expense on a straight-line basis over the life of the lease as described in Note 1. The deferred lease liability as of December 31, 2017 and 2016 was $15.7 million and $15.3 million, respectively. Table of Contents F-44 Asset Retirement Obligations The Company records asset retirement obligations (“ARO”) for several of its customer engagement center leases. Capitalized costs related to ARO’s are included in Other long-term assets in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets while the ARO liability is included in Other long-term liabilities in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets. Following is a summary of the amounts recorded (in thousands): Balance at Balance at December 31, Additions and December 31, 2016 Modifications Accretion Settlements 2017 ARO liability total $ 1,861 $ 317 $ 7 $ (247) $ 1,938 Balance at Balance at December 31, Additions and December 31, 2015 Modifications Accretion Settlements 2016 ARO liability total $ 1,641 $ 333 $ 15 $ (128) $ 1,861 Increases to ARO result from a new lease agreement or modifications on an ARO from a preexisting lease agreement. Modifications to ARO liabilities and accumulated accretion occur when lease agreements are amended or when assumptions change, such as the rate of inflation. Modifications are accounted for prospectively as changes in estimates. Settlements occur when leased premises are vacated and the actual cost of restoration is paid. Differences between the actual costs of restoration and the balance recorded as ARO liabilities are recognized as gains or losses in the accompanying Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss). (16) MANDATORILY REDEEMABLE NONCONTROLLING INTEREST The Company held an 80% interest in iKnowtion until January 1, 2016 when the additional 20% was purchased. In the event iKnowtion met certain EBITDA targets for calendar year 2015, the purchase and sale agreement required TTEC to purchase the remaining 20% interest in iKnowtion in 2016 for an amount equal to a multiple of iKnowtion’s 2015 EBITDA as defined in the purchase and sale agreement. These terms represented a contingent redemption feature which the Company determined was probable of being achieved. Based on final EBITDA for 2015, the payment for the remaining 20% was completed in April 2016 for the value shown in the table below in accordance with the purchase and sale agreement. The Company has recorded the mandatorily redeemable noncontrolling interest at the redemption value based on the corresponding EBITDA multiples as prescribed in the purchase and sale agreement at the end of each reporting period. At the end of each reporting period the changes in the redemption value are recorded in retained earnings. Since the EBITDA multiples as defined in the purchase and sale agreement are below the current market multiple, the Company has determined that there is no preferential treatment to the noncontrolling interest shareholders resulting in no impact to earnings per share. A rollforward of the mandatorily redeemable noncontrolling interest is as follows (in thousands): Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 Mandatorily redeemable noncontrolling interest, January 1 $ — $ 4,131 Net income attributable to mandatorily redeemable noncontrolling interest — — Working capital distributed to mandatorily redeemable noncontrolling interest — (492) Change in redemption value — 466 Purchase of mandatorily redeemable noncontrolling interest — (4,105) Mandatorily redeemable noncontrolling interest, December 31 $ — $ — Table of Contents F-45 (17) ACCUMULATED OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS) The following table presents changes in the accumulated balance for each component of Other comprehensive income (loss), including current period other comprehensive income (loss) and reclassifications out of accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) (in thousands): Foreign Currency Derivative Translation Valuation, Net Other, Net Adjustment of Tax of Tax Totals Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) at December 31, 2014 $ (33,352) $ (18,345) $ (577) $ (52,274) Other comprehensive income (loss) before reclassifications (37,844) (16,349) (3,614) (57,807) Amounts reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) — 7,809 907 8,716 Net current period other comprehensive (income) loss (37,844) (8,540) (2,707) (49,091) Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) at December 31, 2015 $ (71,196) $ (26,885) $ (3,284) $ (101,365) Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) at December 31, 2015 $ (71,196) $ (26,885) $ (3,284) $ (101,365) Other comprehensive income (loss) before reclassifications (20,812) 11,242 1,902 (7,668) Amounts reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) — (16,750) (1,181) (17,931) Net current period other comprehensive income (loss) (20,812) (5,508) 721 (25,599) Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) at December 31, 2016 $ (92,008) $ (32,393) $ (2,563) $ (126,964) Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) at December 31, 2016 $ (92,008) $ (32,393) $ (2,563) $ (126,964) Other comprehensive income (loss) before reclassifications 7,908 31,053 575 39,536 Amounts reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) — (14,406) (470) (14,876) Net current period other comprehensive income (loss) 7,908 16,647 105 24,660 Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) at December 31, 2017 $ (84,100) $ (15,746) $ (2,458) $ (102,304) Table of Contents F-46 The following table presents the classification and amount of the reclassifications from Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) to the Statement of Comprehensive Income (Loss) (in thousands): Statement of For the Year Ended December 31, Comprehensive Income 2017 2016 2015 (Loss) Classification Derivative valuation Loss on foreign currency forward exchange contracts $ (22,792) $ (28,025) $ (12,410) Revenue Loss on interest rate swaps (115) (534) (1,053) Interest expense Tax effect 8,501 11,809 5,654 Provision for income taxes $ (14,406) $ (16,750) $ (7,809) Net income (loss) Other Actuarial loss on defined benefit plan $ (522) $ (1,310) $ (1,008) Cost of services Tax effect 52 129 101 Provision for income taxes $ (470) $ (1,181) $ (907) Net income (loss) (18) NET INCOME PER SHARE The following table sets forth the computation of basic and diluted shares for the periods indicated (in thousands): Year Ended December 31, 2017 2016 2015 Shares used in basic earnings per share calculation 45,826 47,423 48,370 Effect of dilutive securities: Stock options 10 10 275 Restricted stock units 536 286 338 Performance-based restricted stock units 10 17 28 Total effects of dilutive securities 556 313 641 Shares used in dilutive earnings per share calculation 46,382 47,736 49,011 For the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015, zero, 0.1 million and 0.1 million, respectively, of options to purchase shares of common stock were outstanding but not included in the computation of diluted net income per share because the exercise price exceeded the value of the shares and the effect would have been anti-dilutive. For the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015, restricted stock units of 0.0 million, 0.1 million, and 0.4 million, respectively, were outstanding but not included in the computation of diluted net income per share because the effect would have been anti-dilutive. For the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015, there were no performance-based restricted stock units outstanding but not included in the computation of diluted net income per share. Table of Contents F-47 (19) EMPLOYEE COMPENSATION PLANS Employee Benefit Plan The Company currently has a 401(k) profit-sharing plan that allows participation by U.S. employees who have completed six months of service, as defined, and are 21 years of age or older. Participants may defer up to 75% of their gross pay, up to a maximum limit determined by U.S. federal law. Participants are also eligible for a matching contribution. The Company may from time to time, at its discretion, make a “matching contribution” based on the amount and rate of the elective deferrals. The Company determines how much, if any, it will contribute for each dollar of elective deferrals. Participants vest in matching contributions over a three-year period. Company matching contributions to the 401(k) plan(s) totaled $5.7 million, $5.1 million and $4.6 million for the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015, respectively. Equity Compensation Plans In February 1999, the Company adopted the TeleTech Holdings, Inc. 1999 Stock Option and Incentive Plan (the “1999 Plan”). An aggregate of 14.0 million shares of common stock were reserved for issuance under the 1999 Plan, which permitted the award of incentive stock options, non-qualified stock options, stock appreciation rights, shares of restricted common stock and restricted stock units (“RSUs”). The 1999 Plan also provided for annual equity-based compensation grants to members of the Company’s Board of Directors. Options granted to employees generally vested over four to five years and had a contractual life of ten years. Options issued to Directors vested immediately and had a contractual life of ten years. In May 2009, the Company adopted a policy to issue RSUs to Directors, which generally vest over one year. In May 2010, the Company adopted the 2010 Equity Incentive Plan (the “2010 Plan”). Upon adoption of the 2010 Plan, all authorized and unissued equity in the 1999 Plan were cancelled. An aggregate of 4.0 million shares of common stock has been reserved for issuance under the 2010 Plan, which permits the award of incentive stock options, non-qualified stock options, stock appreciation rights, shares of restricted common stock and RSUs. As of December 31, 2017, a total of 4.0 million shares were authorized and 1.1 million shares were available for issuance under the 2010 Plan. For the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016, and 2015, the Company recorded total equity-based compensation expense under all equity-based arrangements (stock options and RSUs) of $11.9 million, $9.8 million and $11.3 million, respectively. For 2017, 2016 and 2015, of the total compensation expense, $4.1 million, $3.1 million and $2.9 million was recognized in Cost of services and $7.8 million, $6.7 million and $8.4 million, was recognized in Selling, general and administrative in the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss), respectively. For the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016, and 2015, the Company recognized a tax benefit under all equity-based arrangements (stock options and RSUs) of $6.8 million, $5.0 million and $6.7 million, respectively. Restricted Stock Units 2017, 2016 and 2015 RSU Awards: The Company granted RSUs in 2017, 2016 and 2015 to new and existing employees that vest over four or five years. The Company also granted RSUs in 2017, 2016 and 2015 to members of the Board of Directors that vest over one year. During 2015, the Company granted performance-based RSUs to an executive the amount of which is determinable based on a reporting segment of the Company achieving incremental operating income for each year from 2015-2017. During 2015 and 2016, based on operating income performance for reporting segment of the Company, approximately $0.4 million and $0.1 million of RSUs were earned. These RSUs were granted in March 2016 and March 2017, respectively, and will vest 12 months from the grant date. During 2017, the Company cancelled the 2017 performance grant. Table of Contents F-48 Summary of RSUs: Settlement of the RSUs shall be made in shares of the Company’s common stock by delivery of one share of common stock for each RSU then being settled. The Company calculates the fair value for RSUs based on the closing price of the Company’s stock on the date of grant and records compensation expense over the vesting period using a straight-line method. The Company factors an estimated forfeiture rate in calculating compensation expense on RSUs and adjusts for actual forfeitures upon the vesting of each tranche of RSUs. The Company also factors in the present value of the estimated dividend payments that will have accrued as these RSUs are vesting. The weighted average grant-date fair value of RSUs, including performance-based RSUs, granted during the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016, and 2015 was $29.56, $26.60, and $26.52, respectively. The total intrinsic value and fair value of RSUs vested during the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016, and 2015 was $10.6 million, $10.8 million, and $13.0 million, respectively. A summary of the status of the Company’s non-vested RSUs and performance-based RSUs and activity for the year ended December 31, 2017 is as follows: Weighted Average Grant Date Shares Fair Value Unvested as of December 31, 2016 1,167,621 $ 25.29 Granted 731,817 $ 29.56 Vested (439,601) $ 24.25 Cancellations/expirations (169,410) $ 26.77 Unvested as of December 31, 2017 1,290,427 $ 27.87 All RSUs vested during the year ended December 31, 2017 were issued out of treasury stock. As of December 31, 2017, there was approximately $23.7 million of total unrecognized compensation expense and approximately $51.9 million in total intrinsic value related to non-vested RSU grants. The unrecognized compensation expense will be recognized over the remaining weighted-average vesting period of 1.5 years using the straight-line method. Stock Options During the year ended December 31, 2011, the Company granted 150,000 stock options to a key employee. The stock option award is made up of four separate tranches. Each tranche will vest based on certain stock price targets (market conditions). The grant date fair values of each tranche were calculated using a Monte Carlo simulation model in addition to a time-based binomial lattice model. The following table provides the assumptions used in the time-based binomial lattice model for each tranche granted: Year Ended December 31, 2011 Risk-free interest rate 2.1 % Expected life in years 1.3 - 2.7 Expected volatility 54.4 % Dividend yield — % Weighted-average volatility 54.4 % The Company estimated the expected term based on historical averages of option exercises and expirations. The calculation of expected volatility is based on the historical volatility of the Company’s common stock over the expected term. The risk-free interest rate is based on the yield on the grant measurement date of a traded zero-coupon U.S. Treasury bond, as reported by the U.S. Federal Reserve, with a term equal to the expected term of the stock option granted. The Company factored an estimated forfeiture rate and adjusted for actual forfeitures upon the vesting of each tranche of options. Table of Contents F-49 A summary of stock option activity for the year ended December 31, 2017 is as follows: Weighted Weighted Average Aggregate Average Remaining Intrinsic Exercise Contract Value Shares Price Term in Years (000’s) Outstanding as of December 31, 2016 191,666 $ 22.83 3.23 Exercises (60,000) $ 35.81 $ 194 Post-vest cancellations/expirations (16,666) $ 17.31 Outstanding as of December 31, 2017 115,000 $ 16.86 3.46 Vested and exercisable as of December 31, 2017 15,000 $ 13.87 0.71 $ 396 There were no stock options granted during 2017, 2016 or 2015. The total intrinsic value of options exercised during the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015 was $194 thousand, $400 thousand and $13.9 million, respectively. The total fair value of stock options vested during the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015 was zero, respectively. Cash received from option exercises under the Plans for the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015 was $2.1 million, $0.4 million and $0.8 million, respectively. The recognized tax benefit from option exercises for the years ended December 31, 2017, 2016 and 2015 was $0.0 million, $0.2 million and $1.0 million, respectively. Shares issued for options exercised during the year ended December 31, 2017 were issued out of treasury stock. (20) STOCK REPURCHASE PROGRAM Stock Repurchase Program The Company has a stock repurchase program, which was initially authorized by the Company’s Board of Directors in November 2001. As of December 31, 2017, the cumulative authorized repurchase allowance was $762.3 million. During the year ended December 31, 2017, the Company purchased 0.6 million shares for $18.3 million. Since inception of the program, the Company has purchased 46.1 million shares for $735.8 million. As of December 31, 2017, the remaining allowance under the program was approximately $26.6 million. For the period from January 1, 2018 through February 28, 2018, the Company did not purchase any additional shares. The stock repurchase program does not have an expiration date. (21) RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS The Company entered into an agreement under which Avion, LLC (“Avion”) and Airmax LLC (“Airmax”) provide certain aviation flight services as requested by the Company. Such services include the use of an aircraft and flight crew. Kenneth D. Tuchman, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the Company, has a 100% beneficial ownership interest in Avion and Airmax. During 2017, 2016 and 2015, the Company expensed $1.1 million, $1.0 million and $1.7 million, respectively, to Avion and Airmax for services provided to the Company. There was $375 thousand in payments due and outstanding to Avion and Airmax as of December 31, 2017. During 2014, the Company entered into a vendor contract with Convercent Inc. to provide learning management and web and telephony based global helpline solutions. This contract was renewed, after an arms-length market pricing review, in the fourth quarter of 2016. The majority owner of Convercent is a company which is owned and controlled by Kenneth D. Tuchman, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the Company. During 2017 and 2016, the Company expensed $70 thousand and $100 thousand, respectively, to Convercent and is expecting to spend another $60 thousand with Convercent during 2018. During 2015, the Company entered into a vendor contract with Netlink to help the Company develop a key stroke monitoring solution. Shrikant Mehta, one of the Board of Directors, has an ownership interest in Netlink. Table of Contents F-50 During 2015, the Company paid $98 thousand to Netlink for these services. The Company did not use Netlink services in 2016 or 2017 and has no plans to make additional payment to Netlink at this time. During 2015, the Company entered into a contract to purchase software from CaféX, which is a company that TTEC holds a 17.2% equity investment in. During 2017, 2016 and 2015, the Company purchased $0.1 million, $0.4 million and $0.25 million, respectively, of software from CaféX. See Note 2 for further information regarding this investment. During 2017, in connection with the Motif acquisition, the Company is now a party to a real estate lease for a building that is owned by one of the Motif Founders. The lease expires in 2020 and has future payments of approximately $142 thousand. (22) OTHER FINANCIAL INFORMATION Self-insurance liabilities of the Company which are included in Accrued employee compensation and benefits and Other accrued expenses in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets were as follows (in thousands): December 31, 2017 2016 Workers compensation $ 5,312 $ 1,523 Employee health and dental insurance 1,631 4,908 Total self-insurance liabilities $ 6,943 $ 6,431 (23) QUARTERLY FINANCIAL DATA (UNAUDITED) The following tables present certain quarterly financial data for the year ended December 31, 2017 (in thousands except per share amounts). First Second Third Fourth Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Revenue $ 338,277 $ 353,429 $ 359,036 $ 426,623 Cost of services 253,898 268,004 275,548 312,618 Selling, general and administrative 43,220 43,985 45,167 49,942 Depreciation and amortization 14,500 16,258 16,515 17,234 Restructuring and integration charges, net 169 3,593 6,006 4,897 Impairment losses — — — 5,322 Income from operations 26,490 21,589 15,800 36,610 Other income (expense) (932) (4,198) 1,846 (8,318) (Provision for) benefit from income taxes (5,391) (1,597) (2,071) (69,016) Non-controlling interest (922) (1,100) (806) (728) Net income (loss) attributable to TTEC stockholders $ 19,245 $ 14,694 $ 14,769 $ (41,452) Weighted average shares outstanding Basic 45,950 45,662 45,838 45,856 Diluted 46,315 46,150 46,367 46,461 Net income per share attributable to TTEC stockholders Basic $ 0.42 $ 0.32 $ 0.32 $ (0.90) Diluted $ 0.42 $ 0.32 $ 0.32 $ (0.89) Included in Other income (expense) in the second quarter is a $3.2 million expense related to additional estimated loss on one of the units being reported as Assets Held for Sale. In the fourth quarter, we sold this unit and a net $0.6 million gain was recorded. Included in Other income (expense) in the third quarter, was a $3.2 million gain related to dissolution of a foreign entity and a release of its cumulative translation adjustment. Table of Contents F-51 Included in Other income (expense) in the fourth quarter is a $5.25 million expense related to finalization of the transition services agreement for the Connextions acquisition, and a $1.2 million interest charge related to the future purchase for the remaining 30% of the Motif acquisition. Included in the Provision for Income Taxes is $62.4 million of expense in the fourth quarter related to the US 2017 Tax Act, $0.4 million of expense in the fourth quarter, $1.3 million of expense in the third quarter and $1.3 million of benefit in the second quarter related to the disposition of assets, $1.9 million of benefit in the fourth quarter related to impairments, a $1.9 million benefit in the fourth quarter, a $2.4 million benefit in the third quarter and a $1.5 million benefit in the second quarter related to restructuring charges. Also included is $0.6 million of expense in the fourth quarter related to changes in valuation allowances. Additionally, $0.3 million of benefit was recorded in the fourth quarter, $0.2 million of expense was recorded in the third quarter, $0.7 million of benefit recorded in the second quarter, and $0.3 million of expense was recorded in the first quarter related to return to provision adjustments. Also included in the fourth quarter was $2.1 million of benefit related to transition service agreement. Finally, a $0.2 million benefit was recorded in the fourth quarter, a $1.0 million benefit was recorded in the third quarter, a $0.7 million benefit was recorded in the second quarter and a $0.3 million benefit was recorded in the first quarter related to stock options. The following tables present certain quarterly financial data for the year ended December 31, 2016 (in thousands except per share amounts). First Second Third Fourth Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Revenue $ 312,410 $ 305,105 $ 312,796 $ 344,947 Cost of services 231,340 226,768 233,541 249,943 Selling, general and administrative 45,500 44,774 40,628 44,895 Depreciation and amortization 17,729 17,221 16,811 16,914 Restructuring and integration charges, net 88 114 3,688 502 Impairment losses — — 5,602 26,448 Income from operations 17,753 16,228 12,526 6,245 Other income (expense) (1,320) (734) (690) 290 Provision for income taxes (4,528) (2,952) 813 (6,196) Non-controlling interest (680) (926) (1,198) (953) Net income attributable to TTEC stockholders $ 11,225 $ 11,616 $ 11,451 $ (614) Weighted average shares outstanding Basic 48,368 47,873 47,081 46,386 Diluted 48,746 48,221 47,315 46,677 Net income per share attributable to TTEC stockholders Basic $ 0.23 $ 0.24 $ 0.24 $ (0.01) Diluted $ 0.23 $ 0.24 $ 0.24 $ (0.01) Included in Other income (expense) in the third quarter is $4.3 million benefit related to fair value adjustments to the contingent consideration related to revised estimates of the performance against the targets for one of the Company’s acquisitions. Included in Other income (expense) in the third quarter is a $5.3 million expense related to the determination that two business units would be divested and are being reported as Assets Held for Sale. Table of Contents F-52 Included in the Provision for Income Taxes is a $1.3 million benefit in the third quarter and a $0.2 million benefit in the fourth quarter related to restructuring charges. Also included are a $0.1 million of benefit in the first quarter, $1.0 million of expense in the second quarter, and $0.4 million of benefit in the fourth quarter related to changes in valuation allowances. Also included are $0.7 million of expense recorded in the second quarter, $0.6 million of expense recorded in the third quarter and $0.4 million of expense recorded in the fourth quarter related to return to provision adjustments. Additionally, in the fourth quarter there was $1.1 million of expense related to a transfer pricing adjustment for a prior period. Also included are a $0.5 million expense in the fourth quarter related to tax rate changes. Finally, there was a $1.5 million benefit in the third quarter and a $8.3 million benefit in the fourth quarter related to impairments and assets held for sale. List of Subsidiaries Exhibit 21.1 Subsidiary TTEC Canada Solutions, Inc. TTEC Technology, LLC (fka eLoyalty, LLC) TTEC Consulting, Inc. Peppers & Rogers Group B.V. Percepta, LLC rogenSi Pty Ltd. (Australia) TTEC Consulting (UK) Limited (fka rogenSi Limited) TeleTech Eastern Europe EAD TeleTech Brasil Servicos Ltda. TTEC Customer Management Costa Rica, S.R.L. (fka TeleTech Customer Care Jurisdiction Canada Colorado, USA Delaware, USA Netherlands Delaware, USA Australia England Bulgaria Brazil Costa Rica Management Costa Rica S.R.L.) TeleTech Customer Care Management Philippines, Inc. TeleTech Europe B.V. TTEC Financial Services Management, LLC (fka TeleTech Financial Services Philippines Netherlands Delaware, USA Management, LLC) TTEC Government Solutions, LLC (fka TeleTech Government Solutions, LLC) TTEC Healthcare Solutions, Inc. (fka TeleTech Healthcare Solutions, Inc.) TTEC International Pty Ltd (fka TeleTech International Pty Ltd) TeleTech Mexico, S.A. de C.V. TeleTech New Zealand TTEC Services Corporation (fka TeleTech Services Corporation) Motif India Infotech Private Limited Colorado, USA Delaware, USA NSW, Australia Mexico New Zealand Colorado, USA India Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm Exhibit 23.1 We hereby consent to the incorporation by reference in the Registration Statement on Form S-8 (No. 333-167300) of TeleTech Holdings, Inc. of our report dated March 12, 2018 relating to the consolidated financial statements and the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting, which appears in this Form 10-K. /s/ PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP Denver, Colorado March 12, 2018 Exhibit 24.1 POWER OF ATTORNEY Each person whose signature appears below does hereby make, constitute and appoint each of Kenneth D. Tuchman, Regina M. Paolillo and Margaret B. McLean, acting individually, as such person’s true and lawful attorney-in-fact and agent, with full power of substitution, resubstitution and revocation to execute, deliver and file with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, and the securities regulatory agency in each other country where a registration or filing may be necessary or advised in connection with any offering of the Company’s securities, including but not limited to: Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, India, Ireland, Mexico, the Philippines, Singapore, the United Arab Emirates, and the United Kingdom, for and on such person’s behalf, and in any and all capacities, 1. The Annual Report on Form 10-K of TeleTech Holdings, Inc. for the year ended December 31, 2017, any and all amendments (including post-effective amendments) thereto with all exhibits thereto and other documents in connection therewith, or foreign jurisdiction equivalent reports and statements; 2. A Prospectus for use in the member nations of the European Union pursuant to the EU Prospectus Directions and any and all amendments thereto with all exhibits and other documents in connection therewith; and 3. Such annual or other periodic reports on business, prospects, financial and results of operations as may be required in any such other country granting unto each of said attorneys-in fact and agents full power and authority to do and perform each and every act and thing requisite and necessary to be done as fully to all intents and purposes as such person might or could do in person, hereby ratifying and confirming all that said attorney-in-fact and agent or such person’s substitute or substitutes may lawfully do or cause to be done by virtue hereof. /s/ Kenneth D. Tuchman Feb. 28, 2018 Kenneth D. Tuchman /s/ Steven J. Anenen Steven J. Anenen Feb. 28, 2018 /s/ Tracy L. Bahl Tracy L. Bahl Feb. 28, 2018 /s/ Gregory A. Conley Gregory A. Conley Feb. 28, 2018 /s/ Robert N. Frerichs Feb. 28, 2018 Robert N. Frerichs /s/ Marc L. Holtzman Marc L. Holtzman Feb. 28, 2018 /s/ Ekta Singh-Bushell Feb. 28, 2018 Ekta Singh-Bushell Exhibit 31. 1 I, Kenneth D. Tuchman, certify that: 1. I have reviewed this Annual Report on Form 10-K of TeleTech Holdings, Inc.; CERTIFICATION 2. Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report; 3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report; 4. The registrant’s other certifying officer(s) and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and have: a. Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared; b. Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles; c. Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and d. Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant’s most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant’s fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting; and 5. The registrant’s other certifying officer(s) and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions): a. All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and b. Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting. By: /s/ Kenneth D. Tuchman Kenneth D. Tuchman Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (Principal Executive Officer) Date: March 12, 2018 Exhibit 31.2 I, Regina M. Paolillo, certify that: 1. I have reviewed this Annual Report on Form 10-K of TeleTech Holdings, Inc.; CERTIFICATION 2. Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report; 3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report; 4. The registrant’s other certifying officer(s) and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and have: a. Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared; b. Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles; c. Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and d. Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant’s most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant’s fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting; and 5. The registrant’s other certifying officer(s) and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions): a. All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and b. Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting. By: /s/ Regina M. Paolillo Regina M. Paolillo Chief Financial Officer (Principal Financial and Accounting Officer) Date: March 12, 2018 Written Statement of Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (18 U.S.C. Section 1350) Exhibit 32.1 The undersigned, the Chief Executive Officer of TeleTech Holdings, Inc. (the “Company”), hereby certifies that, to his knowledge on the date hereof: a. b. The Annual Report on Form 10-K of the Company for the year ended December 31, 2017 filed on the date hereof with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Report”) fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Company. By: /s/ Kenneth D. Tuchman Kenneth D. Tuchman Chief Executive Officer Date: March 12, 2018 Written Statement of Chief Financial Officer Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (18 U.S.C. Section 1350) Exhibit 32.2 The undersigned, the Chief Financial Officer of TeleTech Holdings, Inc. (the “Company”), hereby certifies that, to his knowledge on the date hereof: a. b. The Annual Report on Form 10-K of the Company for the year ended December 31, 2017 filed on the date hereof with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Report”) fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Company. By: /s/ Regina M. Paolillo Regina M. Paolillo Chief Financial Officer Date: March 12, 2018 Financial Highlights Financial Highlights ($ in millions, except per share data) ($ in millions, except per share data) Revenue Revenue Operating Income Operating Income Net Income Per Diluted Share Net Income Per Diluted Share $1,477.4 $1,477.4 $100.5 $100.5 $1.26 $1.26 $1,286.8 $1,286.8 $1,275.3 $1,275.3 $90.2 $90.2 $52.8 $52.8 $0.71 $0.71 2015 2015 2016 2016 2017 2017 2015 2015 2016 2016 2017 2017 2015 2015 2016 2016 2017 2017 *Non-GAAP *Non-GAAP **Includes one-time impact from enactment of the U.S. Tax Cuts and Jobs Act **Includes one-time impact from enactment of the U.S. Tax Cuts and Jobs Act $100.1* $100.1* $89.2* $89.2* $120.5* $120.5* $1.48* $1.48* $1.32* $1.32* $1.80* $1.80* $0.16** $0.16** Revenue Revenue EBITDA EBITDA Operating income Operating income Operating margin Operating margin EBIT EBIT Net income Net income 2015 2015 2016 2016 2017 2017 $ 1,286.8 $ 1,286.8 $ 1,275.3 $ 1,275.3 $ 1,477.4 $ 1,477.4 $ 151.9 $ 151.9 $ 121.9 $ 121.9 $ 160.7 $ 160.7 $ 90.2 $ 90.2 $ 52.8 $ 52.8 $ 100.5 $ 100.5 7.0% 7.0% 4.1% 4.1% 6.8% 6.8% $ 88.1 $ 88.1 $ 53.3 $ 53.3 $ 96.2 $ 96.2 $ 61.7 $ 61.7 $ 33.7 $ 33.7 $ 7.3* $ 7.3* Average diluted shares outstanding Average diluted shares outstanding 49.0 49.0 47.7 47.7 46.4 46.4 Net income per diluted share Net income per diluted share $ 1.26 $ 1.26 $ 0.71 $ 0.71 $ 0.16* $ 0.16* Cash and cash equivalents Cash and cash equivalents $ 60.3 $ 60.3 $ 55.3 $ 55.3 $ 74.4 $ 74.4 Total debt Total debt Capital expenditures Capital expenditures $ 107.3 $ 107.3 $ 229.6 $ 229.6 $ 361.3 $ 361.3 $ 66.6 $ 66.6 $ 50.8 $ 50.8 $ 52.0 $ 52.0 *Includes the one-time impact from enactment of the U.S. Tax Cuts and Jobs Act *Includes the one-time impact from enactment of the U.S. Tax Cuts and Jobs Act 2017 Revenue by Geography 2017 Revenue by Geography 2017 Revenue by Segment 2017 Revenue by Segment 4% 4% 9% 9% 5% 5% 9% 9% North America North America Asia Pacific Asia Pacific Customer Management Services Customer Management Services Customer Growth Services Customer Growth Services 9% 9% Latin America Latin America 26% 26% 61% 61% Customer Technology Services Customer Technology Services 77% 77% EMEA EMEA Customer Strategy Services Customer Strategy Services Corporate Information Corporate Information Directors Directors Kenneth D. Tuchman Kenneth D. Tuchman Founder, Chairman of the Board Founder, Chairman of the Board Steven J. Anenen Former Chief Executive Officer, CDK Global, Inc.; former President of ADP Dealer Services; former Senior Vice President of North America Systems Steven J. Anenen Former Chief Executive Officer, CDK Global, Inc.; former President of ADP Dealer Services; former Senior Vice President of North America Systems Tracy L. Bahl Executive Vice President, Health Plans, CVS Health; former Director, MedExpress; former Executive Chairman, Emdeon; former Chief Executive Officer, Uniprise Tracy L. Bahl Executive Vice President, Health Plans, CVS Health; former Director, MedExpress; former Executive Chairman, Emdeon; former Chief Executive Officer, Uniprise Gregory A. Conley Director, HaulHound.com; former Chief Executive Officer, Aha! Software; former Chief Executive Officer, Odyssey Group, SA Gregory A. Conley Director, HaulHound.com; former Chief Executive Officer, Aha! Software; former Chief Executive Officer, Odyssey Group, SA Robert N. Frerichs Former Director, Merkle, Inc.; former International Chairman, Accenture, Inc.; former Chairman, Aricent Group; former Chairman, Avanade Robert N. Frerichs Former Director, Merkle, Inc.; former International Chairman, Accenture, Inc.; former Chairman, Aricent Group; former Chairman, Avanade Marc L. Holtzman Chairman, Bank of Kigali; Director, FAT Brands Inc.; former Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Kazkommertsbank; former Director, FTI Consulting; former Chairman, Meridian Capital HK; former Vice Chairman, Barclays Capital Marc L. Holtzman Chairman, Bank of Kigali; Director, FAT Brands Inc.; former Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Kazkommertsbank; former Director, FTI Consulting; former Chairman, Meridian Capital HK; former Vice Chairman, Barclays Capital Ekta Singh-Bushell Former Global Client Services Partner, Ernst & Young; former Deputy to the First Vice President, Chief Operating Officer, Executive Office at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York; former Partner, DecisionGPS LLC; Director, LifeStream (Taxonometrics, Inc) Ekta Singh-Bushell Former Global Client Services Partner, Ernst & Young; former Deputy to the First Vice President, Chief Operating Officer, Executive Office at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York; former Partner, DecisionGPS LLC; Director, LifeStream (Taxonometrics, Inc) Executive Officers Kenneth D. Tuchman Chief Executive Officer Executive Officers Kenneth D. Tuchman Chief Executive Officer Regina M. Paolillo Executive Vice President, Chief Administrative and Financial Officer Regina M. Paolillo Executive Vice President, Chief Administrative and Financial Officer Martin F. DeGhetto Executive Vice President, Chief Operating Officer, Customer Management and Customer Growth Services, TTEC Engage Martin F. DeGhetto Executive Vice President, Chief Operating Officer, Customer Management and Customer Growth Services, TTEC Engage Judi A. Hand Executive Vice President, Chief Revenue Officer Judi A. Hand Executive Vice President, Chief Revenue Officer Anthony “Tony” Y. Tsai Executive Vice President, Chief Information & Innovation Officer Anthony “Tony” Y. Tsai Executive Vice President, Chief Information & Innovation Officer Margaret B. McLean Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Chief Risk Officer Margaret B. McLean Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Chief Risk Officer Stock Listing NASDAQ Global Select Market Symbol: TTEC Stock Listing NASDAQ Global Select Market Symbol: TTEC Website ttec.com Website ttec.com 2018 Annual Meeting of Stockholders The Annual Meeting of Stockholders will be held Wednesday, May 23, 2018, beginning at 10:00 a.m MDT at: TTEC Holdings, Inc. Global Headquarters 9197 South Peoria Street Englewood, CO 80112-5833 2018 Annual Meeting of Stockholders The Annual Meeting of Stockholders will be held Wednesday, May 23, 2018, beginning at 10:00 a.m MDT at: TTEC Holdings, Inc. Global Headquarters 9197 South Peoria Street Englewood, CO 80112-5833 Transfer Agent and Registrar Transfer Agent and Registrar Broadridge Corporate Issuer Solutions, Inc. Broadridge Corporate Issuer Solutions, Inc. 1717 Arch Street, Suite 1300 1717 Arch Street, Suite 1300 Philadelphia, PA 19103 Philadelphia, PA 19103 Telephone: 855.206.5002 Telephone: 855.206.5002 Facsimile: 215.553.5402 Facsimile: 215.553.5402 Email: shareholder@broadridge.com Email: shareholder@broadridge.com Investor Information Investor Information Investor information, including TTEC’s Investor information, including TTEC’s Annual Report, press releases and filings Annual Report, press releases and filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, may be obtained from Commission, may be obtained from TTEC’s website, ttec.com or by contacting TTEC’s website, ttec.com or by contacting TTEC Investor Relations at: TTEC Investor Relations at: 1.800.835.3832 1.800.835.3832 investor.relations@ttec.com investor.relations@ttec.com Independent Accountants PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, Denver, Colorado Independent Accountants PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, Denver, Colorado Audit Committee Audit Committee Gregory A. Conley, Chairman Gregory A. Conley, Chairman Robert N. Frerichs Robert N. Frerichs Ekta Singh-Bushell Ekta Singh-Bushell Compensation Committee Compensation Committee Tracy L. Bahl, Chairman Tracy L. Bahl, Chairman Gregory A. Conley Gregory A. Conley Robert N. Frerichs Robert N. Frerichs Nominating and Governance Committee Nominating and Governance Committee Robert N. Frerichs, Chairman Robert N. Frerichs, Chairman Steven J. Anenen Steven J. Anenen Tracy L. Bahl Tracy L. Bahl Executive Committee Executive Committee Kenneth D. Tuchman, Chairman Kenneth D. Tuchman, Chairman Tracy L. Bahl Tracy L. Bahl Steven J. Anenen Steven J. Anenen 2017 AR_cover-Final.indd 3-4 2017 AR_cover-Final.indd 3-4 310375_Cover.indd 2 3/23/18 3:21 PM 3/23/18 3:21 PM 4/6/18 12:48 PM TTEC ANNUAL REPORT 2017 TTEC ANNUAL REPORT 2017 TTEC ANNUAL REPORT 2017 TTEC (NASDAQ: TTEC) is a leading global technology and services provider TTEC (NASDAQ: TTEC) is a leading global technology and services provider TTEC (NASDAQ: TTEC) is a leading global technology and services provider focused exclusively on the design, implementation and delivery of transformative focused exclusively on the design, implementation and delivery of transformative focused exclusively on the design, implementation and delivery of transformative customer experience for many of the world’s most iconic and disruptive brands. customer experience for many of the world’s most iconic and disruptive brands. customer experience for many of the world’s most iconic and disruptive brands. The Company delivers outcome-based customer engagement solutions through The Company delivers outcome-based customer engagement solutions through The Company delivers outcome-based customer engagement solutions through TTEC Digital, its digital consultancy that designs and builds human centric, TTEC Digital, its digital consultancy that designs and builds human centric, TTEC Digital, its digital consultancy that designs and builds human centric, tech-enabled, insight-driven customer experience solutions for clients and TTEC tech-enabled, insight-driven customer experience solutions for clients and TTEC tech-enabled, insight-driven customer experience solutions for clients and TTEC Engage, its delivery center of excellence, that operates customer acquisition, care, Engage, its delivery center of excellence, that operates customer acquisition, care, Engage, its delivery center of excellence, that operates customer acquisition, care, growth and digital trust and safety services. growth and digital trust and safety services. growth and digital trust and safety services. Founded in 1982, the Company’s 56,000 employees operate on six continents across the globe and live by a set of customer-focused values that guide relationships with clients, their customers, and each other. Founded in 1982, the Company’s 56,000 employees operate on six continents Founded in 1982, the Company’s 56,000 employees operate on six continents across the globe and live by a set of customer-focused values that guide across the globe and live by a set of customer-focused values that guide relationships with clients, their customers, and each other. relationships with clients, their customers, and each other. To learn more about how TTEC is bringing humanity to the customer experience, visit www.ttec.com. To learn more about how TTEC is bringing humanity to the customer experience, To learn more about how TTEC is bringing humanity to the customer experience, visit www.ttec.com. visit www.ttec.com. 9197 South Peoria Street 9197 South Peoria Street 9197 South Peoria Street Englewood, CO 80112-5833 Englewood, CO 80112-5833 Englewood, CO 80112-5833 +1 303 397-8100 or 1-800 835-3832 +1 303 397-8100 or 1-800 835-3832 +1 303 397-8100 or 1-800 835-3832 ttec.com ttec.com ttec.com 310375_Cover.indd 1 4/6/18 12:48 PM
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