Thank you very much, Julie. And thanks to everyone for joining us on today's call. In Q2, our billings growth was 21%, our total revenue growth was 20% and our subscription revenue growth was 23%. Our key leading indicator metrics such as ARR and CRPO were about 20% growth as well. However, when you parse these results there is a significant divergence between our two major sales groups that I'll highlight. In corporate, we had very good growth. We classify corporate as companies with up to $1 billion in revenue. And to be clear, corporate deals are not small, our average selling price is over $50,000 and deal sizes can range well into the six figures. In corporate we experienced over 25% growth in new ACV, revenue growth of over 30% with this group and our growth with North American corporate customers was even higher. We have an incredibly differentiated offering that provides not only high impact business solutions for corporate businesses, but the power of the platform provides those customers with the technology stack that eliminates the need for large technical staff to support the data infrastructure needs of their businesses. This complete stack makes alternative technologies typically visualization tools pale in comparison to our rich value-added customer proposition and allows us to produce strong sales results. In the enterprise, we experienced revenue growth of only about 10% and ACV growth of 6%, well below our overall target growth rate. The changes we made to our enterprise go to market earlier this year has not produced the results we were looking for. And in fact have led to recent rep turnover. So on the enterprise side we are entering Q3 with less ramped sales capacity than planned. Our value proposition for enterprises is extremely strong. We provide unique and transformative data experiences, especially for the line of business that help solve the last mile challenge of data leverage. However, the costs and the time it takes to sell to these customers have been significantly more than for our corporate customers. Enterprise is still about half of our recurring revenue, but given the more efficient higher growth we are seeing in corporate we are realigning more of our new logos sales force in favor of corporate so we can generate higher long-term growth and do it more cost effectively. We think this reallocation of resources, particularly makes sense in an uncertain macroeconomic environment. To be clear, this is not about the value we deliver in the enterprise or about our commitment to the success of our enterprise customers. It's about the cost to acquire new enterprise customers at this stage of Domo’s growth. We remain committed to our enterprise customer success and expect these moves to set us up for higher more predictable, more efficient and sustained long-term growth. To drive up profitability and cash flow, which we believe will strengthen us for the long term we have also implemented a cost reduction plan for the second half of the year. These changes for the sales realignment and overall cost reductions have already been implemented. The cost reductions are across the Board and do somewhat further reduce some of our sales capacity in the near term. And we believe this puts us in a very good position to march toward non-GAAP positive operating margin, meaningful cash flow and operating excellence. Domo is uniquely positioned to help organizations of all sizes drive digital transformation deeper into their businesses, which we believe will fuel our long-term growth. Bruce will also share how the reduced capacity and cost reduction impact our financial outlook in a few minutes. We continue to add new logo customers at a good pace, including new marque enterprise customers. And internationally, our Japan region had a particularly strong quarter. Now let me talk about a few highlights that demonstrate the value we deliver to customers through the line of business. One significant win in the quarter was an energy company with more than $15 billion in sales and more than 7,000 employees. This customer was looking to deliver a self-service analytics solution for the line of business to drive digital transformation deeper into its organization. After a one month POC, we delivered a self-service solution that one of our primary competitors couldn't deliver after two years. Another enterprise new logo win was with a Fortune 50 pharmaceutical company that needed to collect siloed data sources for their digital marketing department. This company chose Domo based on our ability to connect to dozens of disparate data sources and provide real time insights on specific KPIs for marketers to quickly assess and react to digital channels and spend to maximize the return on marketing investments. Another new logo win this quarter was with HelloFresh, the world's leading integrated food solutions group which chose Domo to power its growing human resources operations. This win was driven by a short proof of concept that demonstrated that Domo was best able to efficiently integrate datasets and deliver actionable workforce insights to the line of business quickly and effectively. Domo Everywhere, which allows our customers to share data with customers and partners continues to be very differentiated and it resonates well in the market. One significant up sell this quarter was with a leading private university that wanted to expand data access from a portion to all of its clients. This university initially chose Domo to analyze the effectiveness of its corporate learning offering for its corporate customers. Domo was chosen after providing a solution in two months that the combination of two legacy solutions was unable to deliver in two years. The common theme for these customer wins is speed-to-value for the line of business decision maker. Before I hand this over to Bruce, I have a few more business highlights I want to touch on. First, I'm very pleased to announce that we have hired Wendy Steinle as almost Chief Marketing Officer. Wendy joins us from Degreed where she was also CMO and she has extensive B2B software marketing experience, including six years at Adobe where she led new cross-functional go-to-market strategy and enablement initiatives that played a significant role in helping Adobe's Digital Experience business almost double in just three years. Second we continue to receive validation from industry analysts of the strength of our technology and our ability to deliver speed to value for our customers. Most recently Domo was named a leader in IDC's market scape for business intelligence and analytics platforms. This was based in part on our speed, the breadth of our capabilities and our ability to serve the business user, as well as the analyst. Domo was also named an overall leader in the 2022 Dresner Wisdom of Crowds BI market study for the sixth consecutive year. Third, culture is critically important to us as we look to build a workplace where the best talent thrives. Domo was named to Parity.Org Best Companies for Women to Advance list for the third consecutive year. And we continued on our commitments towards a diverse, equitable and inclusive culture. In Q2, 35% of all new hires for open positions were diverse candidates. I believe the changes we are making now position Domo very well heading into next year. And I am optimistic as ever about our compelling value proposition for companies of all sizes, our position in the market and our long-term growth opportunity. Now, I'll hand it over to Bruce.