Thank you, Drew. Today, I'll walk through some financial highlights for Q1 and provide an outlook for Q2 as well as an update on our 2023 guidance and our financial targets for 2024, all within the context of the current macro environment and last week's restructuring, which Drew discussed. I'll start with our first quarter results. Total revenue for the first quarter increased 8.7% year-over-year to $611 million, beating our guidance range of $600 million to $603 million. Foreign exchange rates provided an approximate $16 million headwind to growth, in line with our previous guidance. On a constant currency basis, revenue grew 11.6% year-over-year. The upside to our revenue guidance was driven by an outperformance from FormSwift as well as some improving trends in our individual plans exiting this quarter. Total ARR for the quarter grew 7.8% year-over-year, for a total of $2.468 billion. On a constant currency basis, ARR grew by $37 million sequentially and 11.6% year-over-year, primarily driven by FormSwift and pricing and packaging changes to our teams plans that we announced last June. We exited the quarter with 17.9 million paying users and added approximately 120,000 net new paying users sequentially. Average revenue per paying user for Q1 was $138.97, an increase of over $4 compared to Q4 2022. The driven by another quarter of Teams customers renewing at higher prices, which we announced last June as well as a full quarter of FormSwift revenue. Before we continue with further discussion of our P&L, I would like to note that unless otherwise indicated, all income statement figures mentioned are non-GAAP and exclude stock-based compensation, amortization of purchased intangibles and certain acquisition-related expenses. Our non-GAAP net income also includes the income tax effect of the aforementioned adjustments. Moving to our real estate strategy, where we have been taking steps to de-cost our real estate portfolio as a result of our transition to a virtual-first model. In the first quarter, we continued to actively seek subleases and considered buyouts of our San Francisco headquarters. We did not incur any additional impairment charges in the quarter with our cumulative impairment incurred to date remaining at $604 million. Given the current corporate real estate market, we have maintained our assumption that we will not enter into additional subleases in San Francisco in the next few years. With that, let's continue with the first quarter P&L. Gross margin was 82% for the quarter, representing an increase of one percentage point on a year-over-year basis. The improvement in our gross margin was primarily driven by a greater mix of higher density storage that can store more data within the same physical space, which resulted in lower depreciation as a percentage of revenue. Operating margin was 28.6%, down nearly two percentage points year-over-year mostly driven by an approximate 80 basis point headwind from FX and a 50 basis point headwind from FormSwift. We exceeded our operating margin guidance by approximately 2 points mainly due to our revenue outperformance and lower-than-expected workforce costs. Operating expenses were $329 million, up about 15% year-over-year driven by increased R&D hiring in 2022. As Drew mentioned, we've been adding engineers in early-stage product leaders as we invest in our longer-term growth initiatives around organizing all cloud content, leveraging artificial intelligence and machine learning. In addition, our operating expenses increased year-over-year due to higher advertising expenses associated with FormSwift. Net income for the first quarter was $146 million, up 3% versus the first quarter of 2022 as higher operating expenses offset most of the revenue increase. Diluted EPS was $0.42 per share based on 349 million diluted weighted average shares outstanding, up from $0.38 per share based on 373 million diluted weighted average shares outstanding for the first quarter of 2022. Moving on to our cash balance and cash flow. We ended the quarter with cash and short-term investments of $1.3 billion. Cash flow from operations was $140 million in the first quarter. Capital expenditures were $2 million during the quarter. This resulted in quarterly free cash flow of $138 million compared to $131 million in Q1 of 2022. In the quarter, we also added $35 million to our finance leases for data center equipment. Let's turn to our share repurchase activity. In Q1, we continued executing against a $1.2 billion authorization that was approved in 2022 by repurchasing 8 million shares, spending approximately $175 million. As of the end of the first quarter, we have approximately $573 million remaining under the current authorization. I'd like to now share our guidance for the second quarter and provide an update to our full year 2023 guidance, where I will also provide some context on the thinking behind this guidance. For the second quarter of 2023, we expect revenue to be in the range of $612 million to $615 million. On a constant currency revenue basis, we expect revenue to be in the range of $627 million to $630 million. We are assuming a currency headwind of approximately $15 million in the second quarter which translates to over a 250 basis point headwind to growth. We expect non-GAAP operating margin to be approximately 31.5%. This margin guidance excludes approximately $40 million related to the severance and benefits we expect to pay to employees impacted by a reduction in force in Q2. This also includes a roughly 130 basis points of headwind from FX and 50 basis points of headwind from forms. Finally, we expect diluted weighted average shares outstanding to be in the range of 343 million to 348 million shares based on our trailing 30-day average share price. For the full year due to the strengthening of the U.S. dollar since our last update, we are revising our as reported revenue guidance range down by $5 million to $2.470 billion the $2.485 billion from our previous range of $2.475 billion to $2.490 billion. However, on a constant currency revenue basis, we are maintaining our prior guidance range of $2.510 billion to $2.525 billion. Now estimated full year 2023 currency headwinds of approximately $40 million or approximately 170 basis point headwind to growth with the FX headwinds moderating significantly in the second half. We expect gross margin to be approximately 81.5% to 82%, which is up from our prior guidance of 81% to 82%. We expect non-GAAP operating margin to be between 31% to 32%, up from our prior guidance of approximately 30%. This also excludes the aforementioned severance and benefits we expect to pay in Q2. This is inclusive of an approximately 80 basis point headwind from FX as well as an approximate 50 basis point headwind from our FormSwift acquisition. We are revising the midpoint of our free cash flow guidance down by $10 million and narrowing the range to $820 million to $840 million from our previous guidance range of $825 million to $855 million. This includes cash outflows of approximately $23 million in cash outflows for the 2023 installments of acquisition-related deal consideration holdback for DocSend and Command E. Onetime severance payments of approximately $40 million related to our reduction in force. And consistent with our initial guidance, this includes an approximate $50 million headwind as a result of R&D tax legislation. As related to our capital expenditures, we are maintaining our prior guidance. We continue to expect our additions to finance leases to be approximately 5% of revenue and for cash CapEx to be in the range of $25 million to $35 million in 2023. Finally, we expect 2023 diluted weighted average shares outstanding to be in the range of 340 million to 345 million shares down from our previous guidance range of 346 million to 351 million shares. This reduction in our share count reflects our commitment to an anticipated impact of our share repurchase program. Here's some additional context on this guidance. Let me first elaborate on our restructuring decisions, where our intent is to identify and address areas of inefficient spend and then to rotate our investments towards areas of higher future potential growth. The reductions were thus largely targeted towards R&D and sales and marketing teams supporting our mature buy all Sync and Share category as well as some reductions against business lines that are facing distinct macroeconomic and competitive pressures. We also intend to be more efficient with our marketing spend across these same areas. In light of these changes and as related to revenue, we are maintaining our constant currency revenue guidance for 2023. We saw outperformance in Q1 largely stemming from FormSwift as well as some improving trends in our individual plans exiting the quarter. Conversely, we continue to see macro headwinds weighing on our teams customers as well as both DocSend and Sign. These opposing trends, combined with the potential impact of billings as a result of our reduced levels of headcount and marketing investments stemming from our restructuring are leading us to maintain our full year guidance despite the first quarter outperformance. As related to operating margins, we are raising our operating margin guidance to approximately 31% to 32%, up over 150 basis points at the midpoint as compared to our prior guidance, driven by net savings from our reduction in store. As Drew mentioned, while we are restructuring our existing business lines to increase their efficiency, we will also be investing in long-term growth initiatives around organizing all cloud content. Thus, some of the savings will be offset by hiring talent skilled in AI and early-stage product development, which has been factored into this guidance. As related to full year free cash flow, we are lowering our free cash flow expectations by $10 million at the midpoint. There are a few factors leading to this reduced estimate. First, while we will derive cash savings from our restructuring events over time, the benefit in 2023 is largely offset by severance payments and the timing of bonus payment savings, which will be a benefit next year. Additionally, as mentioned above, we may see an impact to our billings in the second half of 2023 as a result of our reduced levels of headcount and marketing investments, given our restructuring, which would have a more pronounced impact on cash as opposed to revenue this year. Lastly, this guidance incorporates an approximately $8 million deterioration in foreign exchange rates since our initial guidance. Which brings me to our long-term financial targets of delivering gross margins of 80% to 82%, operating margins of 30% to 32% and $1 billion of annual free cash flow by 2024. We continue to operate within our long-term margin ranges where our recent restructuring activities are pushing us to the top end of these ranges. While we are not offering more specific 2024 guidance at this time, we expect to see continued net savings in 2024 and for our operating margins to be at or above the 2023 levels. As related to our $1 billion of annual free cash flow by 2024 target, we are maintaining our $1 billion target at this time. Our restructuring activities will increase our efficiency and will be a benefit to free cash flow in 2024. However, we still have work to do to achieve our target. We need to closely monitor the impact of our restructuring decisions and any corresponding impact on billings to ensure that we maintain an appropriate pace of growth across our existing business lines. Additionally, we need to monitor our investments in organizing cloud content and AI to ensure that we are remaining disciplined with our spend and to validate that our new products are gaining an appropriate level of customer traction. Lastly, we need to -- we continue to need to navigate numerous exogenous factors such as R&D tax legislation, a softer subleasing environment and deteriorating FX rates that continue to serve as headwinds. Thus, while we are taking actions that bring us closer to our targets, we need to execute well and remain disciplined with our spend amidst these varying dynamics. In conclusion, as Drew mentioned, we've been making a number of changes to set up Dropbox for long-term success. We are mindful of the difficult macro environment and the inherent challenges that come with businesses and transition, and we remain optimistic about our strategy as we improve our execution while investing towards our future in this new AI era. We will remain focused on our customers, operating the business efficiently and driving long-term value for our shareholders. With that, I'll now turn it over to the operator for Q&A.