Thanks, Steven, and good morning, everyone. Thank you all for joining us. I want to start with some high-level comments given the stir-up murkiness in the marketplace created over the last 100-plus days by the new administration's priority of reshaping global trade patterns while prioritizing rebuilding domestic manufacturing and reinforcing trade with allies to improve long-term national security. In the long-term and even in the more medium-term, we believe DSG will be rewarded by being very well-positioned with trusted resources on the ground and in the plants alongside our customers, helping them navigate their needs with our expansive global and domestic vendor base, and the pricing and geography biases that will continue to unfold. We expect the pressures around the reordering of trade and manufacturing to increase our customer engagement and to drive our profitability. We believe the current noisiness in the marketplace will even out as the year progresses, and we all have a better lens around how to best reshape our sourcing efforts. And as a value-added distributor, much of the value we bring is driven by our procurement team's efforts alongside our product technical expertise and the flexibility that allows us to enjoy where the marketplace has flexibility to source from the best partners, the most appropriate substitutable products globally at the most appropriate prices. As we review our sourcing efforts and vendor relationships, a very modest amount of our total procurement comes from those that we can see will be the most disadvantaged trade partners based on the administration's reordering, and it is largely products for all the competitive products almost exclusively come from those same markets. Our sourcing capabilities, teamed with our on-the-ground capabilities alongside our customers with our real value trusted employee partners offers us an excellent position to improve our engagement and ability to earn, notwithstanding any near-term challenges the marketplace is facing as we all try and decipher what a more steady-state environment will look like in the near future. As we inventory how well-positioned DSG is to help our customers navigate sourcing and supply chains, technical and on-site product services in this ambiguous time, many of our organic and inorganic investments over the last few years were made to help us strengthen our efforts for this environment. We invested in ways to better serve our customers with expanded value-added capabilities across North America and even put resources closer to the manufacturers in deliberate parts of Southeast Asia, all as part of a lens that expected the pressures that started before COVID under the First Trump administration around encouraging manufacturing and trade partners to shift for global security, supply chain stability and trade and federal deficit objectives and around a priority to reenergize domestic manufacturing, all priorities that have only accelerated under the current administration's second term. Our analysis has shown that the tariff pressures will impact only about 5% of our total direct purchases and a larger but still modest amount of our indirect purchases in our businesses. In total, less than 6% of our aggregate product spend, direct and indirect, comes from China. And while we plan to work closely with our customers to offset these potential costs through a variety of actions, including sourcing alternatives and product selection, we do expect pricing to flow through our vendors and our pricing model even where our alternative sourcing avoids some of the more onerous tariff impacts that other sources in the marketplace are faced with. At the end of the first quarter, we took our first price actions where necessary to protect or improve our margins where we expect our landed costs will be going up, and to support what we anticipate will be a larger investment longer-term in working capital, but with a commensurate opportunity to sustain or improve returns on that increased investment. Our products are largely a small percentage of the overall cost to our customers, and our pricing adjustments should not be a tipping point issue for our customers, although other key inputs may have more challenging implications as they try and work those out. We are appreciative of our end market and product diversification as we recognize that different markets will be more choppy than others as they digest this policy shift, but we remain cautiously optimistic that both our customer base and our relationships with them will be better positioned in the long run once we get a more complete playbook from where things settle out in Washington. While many marketplace participants retreat from chaos, our around-the-clock work on DSG offers us renewed confidence in our business and its improved longer-term positioning. So, we've been active in the marketplace buying back our stock as we weigh that option with our cash this first quarter versus the M&A opportunities that we foresee in the near-term, while maintaining appropriate leverage on the business. In the first quarter, we repurchased $11.2 million of stock with over $15 million remaining under prior authorizations, and we continue to take advantage of others' anxieties in the marketplace by acquiring more shares in April. Turning to first quarter results. Our first quarter financial results were in line with our expectations, with revenue a slight bit softer than our budget, but EBITDA slightly ahead. We budgeted for the first quarter to be our softest quarter based on how our many internal initiatives layer up throughout the year. While we feel good about our objectives for the year, we appreciate at this moment that it is hard to anticipate how the economy will digest the current trade policy initiatives. We delivered sales of $478 million, up 14.9% compared to the year-ago quarter. Total sales included $51 million of incremental revenue from our five 2024 acquisitions and our organic average daily sales growth of 4.3%. We are pleased with these top-line results, especially given the backdrop of trade policy noise during the quarter. While there have been questions around orders pulling forward, we did not see that as much as we believed in some categories; there was slightly more reticence by customers to release POs as the quarter progressed. Currency exchange impacts on our Canadian operations were a headwind in the first quarter. So, our constant currency organic average daily sales was 4.7%. Also noteworthy, since each of our verticals measure selling days differently, we compute a consolidated average daily sales metric to add comparability against others reporting total sales day or selling days in the quarter. Adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter grew to nearly $43 million, an increase of 18.6% over the prior year. EBITDA margin measured as a percentage of sales rose to 9%, up 30 basis points from the year-ago period and dragged down by our addition of Source Atlantic, where we have a significant renovation of structural profitability project well underway. Notwithstanding our early heavy lift on integrating and building out our Canadian unit with the Source Atlantic acquisition, we are pleased with the first quarter's year-over-year net margin expansion in each of our three core verticals. Based on disciplined execution of planned initiatives, Lawson Products generated an adjusted EBITDA or a net margin of 11.9%, which was higher sequentially from the fourth quarter of 9.8% and higher than the year ago quarter and with the leverage we expect in the future from a larger and maturing field sales team with much better tools, we will expect more and more from Lawson. Gexpro Services generated a net margin of 12.6%, an improvement over the 11% in the previous quarter and while we see a path for this to improve over time with more revenue leverage and in-sourcing, more value-added capabilities, we believe the net margin is within striking distance of our EBITDA margin objectives presented 2 years ago. Finally, TestEquity reported a net margin of 6.8% in the first quarter, 60 basis points ahead of the year ago quarter, but still a significant level below where we expect to drive margins in the near-term off of the integration and commercial discipline efforts largely now in place after the combination of TestEquity and Hisco. Marketplace revenue leverage will be important to getting margins over the next year above the 10% threshold that we expected to reach by the end of last year, but where end market demand has persisted as a headwind. Starting on Slide 4, I'll review our continued solid progress on strategic initiatives and specifically how we've done in the first quarter. But first, I will summarize DSG's trailing 12-month highlights. Total revenues, including pre-acquisition revenues for periods in 2024 totaled nearly $2 billion. Our adjusted EBITDA margin over the same period was 9.7%, up from the prior quarter's trailing 12-month computation. While we are still in the early innings with initiatives in each of our five acquisitions closed in fiscal 2024, our progress on integration and building leverage out of our prior year's acquisitions is largely where we want it, and they are yielding real benefits for DSG even if some of their end markets are not yet the more stable and healthy conditions for customers that we expect to prevail. We remain confident in continuing to unlock value through planned actions to improve DSG's structural margins, and we have continued confidence to reach our stated goal to more than double EBITDA again over the coming three years, while materially lifting current EBITDA margins. We are pleased to report that Lawson Products, Gexpro Services and TestEquity delivered EBITDA margin expansion over the prior year. Ron will walk through the segment's financial results shortly, but first, at Lawson Products, revenues expanded sequentially every month in the quarter for most end markets. The growth was driven by unit volume, an important signal of core strength and we had minimal benefit from pricing actions in the quarter. Our single most significant initiative for Lawson continues to be the sales force transformation. We ended March with about 910 sales reps compared to 860 sales reps a year ago and a low point of 830 at the end of the second quarter of 2024. So, in nine months, we've increased our net rep count by approximately 80 individuals. We are pleased to report that about 60% of our fully-on-boarded sales reps were signed in new territories in the quarter versus backfilling existing territories. This is a shift from 2024, where most of our reps covered existing open or replacement territories. We saw an increase of 6% of ship-to locations during the first quarter over the fourth quarter as new sellers get established in their territories. This year's commitment to assign sales reps to over 100 new territories is well underway and our internal goal is to reach 1,000 sales reps in the second half of 2025. While the productivity of our new reps is not yet where we want it, we're confident that investments made over the past 12 to 18 months will benefit our new reps and our longer tenured sales representatives also. The significant investments we have made over the last 18 months in Lawson's customer-centric sales platform, now includes our expanding outside sales team teamed with the highly skilled inside team we put in place a year ago, along with the expanded group of technical sales specialists and the account servicing field sales support we launched in late 2024 with individuals actively engaging our customers every day. We are also continuing to enhance our Customer Relationship Management System or CRM tool we implemented midway through 2024, where it supports our sales teams by connecting them with customers seamlessly, while providing leadership visibility into territory activities and progress. With the CRM and with more ambitious commercial leadership objectives, our DSMs and RSMs, district sales managers and regional sales managers have a different level of insight and a very different level of accountability on how they are expected to support our expanded investment in our field service reps. On the product side, our Lawson sourcing initiatives that we've been diligently investing in and coordinating across DSG's total procurement spend and broader sourcing capabilities have presented recent opportunities to negotiate with our vendors, while reducing our cost per unit, which we recognize with our shorter-cycle value-added distribution business model offers us the flexibility to pivot and negotiate on sourcing an even more valuable capability during this period of tariff disruption. Lawson also went live recently in the first quarter with our completely reimagined, enhanced, and expanded e-commerce website. We've received excellent customer feedback on the site so far. As I mentioned in my opening comments, Lawson's EBITDA margins moved from 9.8% in the fourth quarter of 2024 to 11.9% in the first quarter, reflecting a commitment that while the investments we are making and expenses that they are, will not always drive the improvements linearly, the strategy and solid execution by our team on our initiatives will continue to drive structurally higher margins while increasing profits and returns on invested capital. First quarter revenues in our Canadian division, which combines Bolt Supply and Source Atlantic, were soft during the quarter. This was the result of some seasonality, but also the market disruptions from customers reacting to tariff changes, currency exchange headwinds and an overall soft project and manufacturing market. It was also disrupted in my estimation by Source Atlantic being a recently acquired business from a long-time family owner and our Canadian leadership team's objective to both reinvest while synergizing the two businesses into -- that we have in Canada into a coordinated best-in-class Canadian distributor. Jared Jahnke was recruited to lead the Canadian business as its President. His successful track record of leading large distribution businesses in Canada, makes him the right leader for the job. Jared hired a seasoned and experienced Canadian CFO to help align people, culture and initiatives in 2025. Through this leadership investment and ownership transition, our genuine commitment to having capable Canadians build an exceptional business in Canada has been well-received. Jared and the team are accelerating the realization of planned synergies by combining Source Atlantic and Bolt Supply. This includes consolidating four facilities in Western Canada into one, improving gross margins through value-accretive initiatives, and implementing planned synergies. We expect to realize the synergies between the two Canadian businesses, while most importantly, organizing and investing in our Canadian company to be a best-in-class specialty distribution partner for Canadian companies, which includes driving its own profitability levels consistent with what we enjoyed with our Western-only Canadian business, Bolt Supply. While the marketplace in Canada is more murky currently as the tariff pressures work through the system, we strongly believe having an exceptional presence and commitment to a Canadian business added to DSG's solid commercial flexibility in North America to serve our customers and was particularly attractive as an opportunity given that we paid largely for the working capital real estate delivered by Source Atlantic. Using our Bolt Supply House purchase in 2017 as a framework for success in driving margins and offering an opportunity for Source Atlantic to team up, we reflect that Bolt generated high single-digit net margins when we purchased it and today, net margins consistently run in the 13% to 14% range on a constant currency basis. Although the Canadian division sales in the first quarter were below our internal plan, we have confidence in our team and plan and expect the value for shareholders of how we bought Source Atlantic and are bringing it into the DSG Canadian fold will result in strong shareholder value creation. Source's Atlantic's market presence, strong customer relationships and highly strategic coverage fit well with our existing Bolt and Lawson businesses in Canada. We have seen sequential improvement each month this year, even with the market noisiness and we expect the coming consolidation in four of our locations to help drive some of the operating leverage we expect later in the year coming into the Canadian DSG business model. At Gexpro Services, we continued to drive strong quarter-over-quarter growth in large end markets that include aerospace and defense, renewables, and technology. These industries collectively represent over half of our daily sales volume and continue to show healthy growth, leading to the momentum that Gexpro Services continues to enjoy. If we had to call out areas with softer sales in Q1 for Gexpro Services, it'd be the industrial power and consumer and industrial segments. However, the activity and bookings for industrial power are improving. We're pleased to report an EBITDA margin expansion in the first quarter to 12.6%, an increase over last year's net margin of 11%. The team has done a great job leveraging its fairly fixed cost structure as end markets recover. Acquisitions at Gexpro Services contributed significantly to the business's momentum and to the opportunity for margin improvement. We recently hired a new Chief Commercial Officer for Gexpro Services, Eric Wilk. This investment in talent will continue to fuel our growth initiatives, mainly as we focus on investing in our commercial sales pipeline. As a market leader, we will continue to grow and scale as the leading global supply chain services and C parts provider to OEMs. We also enjoyed a strong lens around additional accretive acquisitions planned for 2025 at Gexpro Services. Moving lastly to TestEquity Group. The core test and measurement revenues grew by mid-single digits over the prior year, while growth rates moderated sequentially. We were pleased to see mid-single-digit increases in electronic production supply revenues compared to last year's first quarter. We're also encouraged by the used and rental equipment business in both the U.S. and European markets. Our core rental business is up, and a number of our customers are increasingly requesting quotes for new and used equipment. We believe we are well-positioned if customers decide to pull back on new equipment due to tariff price increases, but would rather rent or purchase used equipment. The value of our rental fleet recently increased significantly with our ConRes acquisition, and it's worth a lot more now as the reference pricing is shifting higher due to the tariffs and is driving higher profitability contribution out of our test and measurement rental and used franchise. Our proprietary test chambers revenues, which are made in the USA, remained strong in the quarter with strong double-digit revenue and bookings growth and also are one of our strongest profitability contributors. Hisco sales are up sequentially and are now positioned to steer customers to non-tariff products through Hisco's broadly sourced selections. Several new VMI installations were also implemented in the first quarter, delivering recurring revenue in 2025 and beyond. Our aerospace and defense and technology verticals remain strong, consistent with what we've been seeing at Gexpro Services and with new business opportunities for Hisco's offerings in the industrial sectors. Automotive continues to be soft and may continue to be soft given its more sensitive position to the tariff impacts. We believe our increased bookings on the production supply business will translate to higher electronic production supply sales of Hisco products, which are expected to improve business unit margins moving forward, along with visibility around more total revenue. Investments over the last year in our go-to-market and sales strategies to ensure better production supply performance are now positively impacting results. TestEquity's total value proposition provides differentiated products and services by combining the offerings acquired through the TestEquity, TEquipment and Hisco acquisitions with other key tuck-in acquisitions that strengthen our ability to more intimately work with our customers with a host of value-added service offerings. Along with our VP of Integration, my internal team is working relentlessly with the TestEquity leadership to re-baseline all costs, understand and drive pricing. And allocate additional investments identified to optimize the platform and unlock the profitability opportunity available to this business unit. After two years of relentless effort by the team, about every bit of our customer-facing efforts and capabilities has been re-tooled as we brought these three larger businesses together with their smaller tuck-in acquisitions. And we believe profitability is beginning to benefit as many of the investments and initiatives are complete. Our integration cost savings have been largely wrung out at levels greater than our underwriting model. And we are confident that we are seeing early evidence that sales and margins are building as end markets return after a prolonged period of softness and with the building and conversion of new customer revenue from our reinvigorated commercial sales funnel. With that, I'll turn it over to Ron to walk through our financials. Ron?