Thanks, Sanjay, and good morning everyone. I will start with a quick recap of the quarter with growth rates on a year-over-year basis unless otherwise stated. Total revenues for the quarter were $195 million, an increase of 1% on a constant currency basis. Software and products revenue for the quarter was approximately $90 million, a decline of 5% on a constant currency basis. The variance against our Q3 guidance was the result of a weaker-than-forecasted enterprise market and execution on close rates. Revenue from large deals, which we define as transactions with greater than $100,000 of software and products revenue was down $10 million versus the prior year and represented 72% of software revenue in the current quarter compared to 76% in Q3 of the prior year. The average deal size in the quarter for large deals was $312,000. This shortfall in large deals was particularly evident in the Americas, with total software revenue was down 20%. Our international region delivered strong software revenue results increasing 17% on a constant currency basis. On a consolidated view, software revenue transactions under $100,000 increased 6% as we saw a modest acceleration in the velocity side of our software business, driven by new customer transactions. Now that I've discussed the large deal headwind, I'd like to provide more color on some positive trends in the quarter, particularly around our subscription and SaaS momentum. Subscription software revenue was approximately $70 million and represented 78% of total software revenue, which compares to only 71% of total software revenue in Q3 of the prior year. Our subscription transition has been driven by new customer acquisition and the strategic conversion of existing perpetual customers to a subscription model. Services revenue, which includes revenue from our customer support agreements, professional services and Metallic was $106 million, an increase of 7% on a constant currency basis, driven by the continued acceleration of Metallic revenue. From a customer perspective, we had our best quarter for new customer count in many years. We saw new customer growth in subscription software customers, Metallic SaaS customers and the combination of both. As Sanjay noted, we are the only provider that can offer customers the best of software and the best of SaaS. I will now give some insights into our annualized recurring revenue or ARR metrics. Our total ARR increased 14% to $641 million as reported and 18% year-over-year growth in constant currency. Subscription and Metallic software revenue ARR increased 43% to $443 million and now represents approximately 70% of our total ARR balance. Moving on, I will discuss expenses and profitability. Gross margin for the third quarter of 83% reflects a lower mix of software revenue, first is our Q3 expectations. Total operating expenses were $121 million, down 5% year-over-year. During Q3, our global headcount was down 4% to 2,820 employees compared to 2,933 at the start of the quarter. We are managing our people, facilities and third-party expenses by focusing investments on our most critical priorities. We will continue to evaluate our resource base against the market demand environment. Non-GAAP EBIT was $38.5 million resulting in an EBIT margin of 19.7%. The decline in non-GAAP EBIT was primarily attributable to our lower software revenue results. Moving on to some key balance sheet and cash flow metrics for the quarter. We ended the quarter with no debt and $273 million in cash, $117 million of this balance or 43% of total cash is now in the United States. Quarter-end deferred revenue was up 20% on a constant currency basis, driven by the continued acceleration of Metallic. Q3 free cash flow was $29 million, up 15%. On a nine month year-to-date basis, we generated $100 million of free cash flow, an increase of 16% versus the same nine month period of the prior year. As a reminder, fiscal second half cash flow will be burdened by approximately $7 million of federal tax payments related to the TCJA capitalization of R&D provisions. While our software and Metallic models diverge and how they are accounted for in our P&L, they're both strong cash flow generating businesses. As our Metallic business becomes a more meaningful part of our results, we believe ARR growth and cash flow will be key operating metrics to demonstrate the strength of our business model. During Q3, we repurchased 507,000 shares of our common stock for $31 million. Fiscal year-to-date, we've repurchased 1.5 million shares of common stock, returning $90 million to our shareholders, representing 90% of free cash flow. Today, we're also announcing our intent to sell our corporate headquarters in Tinton Falls, New Jersey and leaseback only a small footprint of the existing space. We believe this is fiscally responsible. Like many companies in our industry, we have evolved into a more flexible, hybrid workplace. The sales transaction is expected to close in the first half of fiscal 2024 with proceeds of approximately $40 million. Now, I will discuss our outlook for the fiscal fourth quarter. We are diligently monitoring the macroeconomic outlook and customer spending on large transformational projects. We believe, new business may continue to take longer to close, especially if it is part of larger IT consolidation and transformation projects. We expect Q4 software revenue will be flat quarter-on-quarter at approximately $89.5 million. Services revenue, which includes revenue from our customer support agreements, professional services, and Metallic is expected to be approximately $107.5 million with sequential revenue growth driven by our Metallic business. As a result, fiscal Q4 total revenue is expected to be approximately $197 million. At these revenue levels, we expect Q4 consolidated gross margins to be approximately 82%. We will see some incremental pressure on our gross margins due to the forecasted increase in services revenue, which includes Metallic SaaS as lower margins relative to our current software outlook. Q4 operating expenses are expected to be approximately $122 million, down 3% year-over-year. We expect Q4 EBIT margins will be approximately 19%. We continue to be maniacally focused on managing people, facilities and third-party expenses, balancing profitability, while investing in growth initiatives such as Metallic. Moving to cash flows and share repurchases. We expect cash flows will sequentially improve in Q4 and continue to believe that share repurchases currently represent the best use of excess cash. Given the year-to-date cash flow results and current U.S. cash balance, our Q4 share repurchases will increase from Q3 levels. Our projected share count for Q4 is approximately 45 million shares. Our team is focused on execution, and we will maintain our responsible growth operating philosophy. I will now turn the call back to Sanjay for his closing remarks. Sanjay?