Thanks Whitney, and thanks to everyone for joining us today to discuss our third quarter results. Today I'd like to highlight the meaningful progress we're making against our top priorities, and then Karsten will take you through the Q3 results. We've been working to rebuild momentum in the business, both financially and operationally, with an eye towards compounding growth in 2024 and beyond. On our Q2 call, we said our first financial milestone was returning to year-over-year revenue growth. I'm happy to report that in the third quarter we achieved this important milestone on an adjusted revenue basis. We expect year-over-year adjusted revenue growth to continue with modest acceleration into Q4 and expect our full year 2023 adjusted revenue to be $752 to $758 million. Adjusted revenue for Q3 and fiscal year 2023 is $10 million higher than GAAP revenue because GAAP includes a $10 million reduction related to a one-time nonrecurring contract termination payment that we elected to make to a VitaCare customer to end the relationship as part of our pharma manufacturer solutions restructuring that we announced last quarter, which will yield substantial ongoing savings. The adjusted revenue guidance is within the prior fiscal year 2023 GAAP revenue guidance range we provided of $750 million to $760 million. We anticipate our Q4 adjusted EBITDA margin to be in the mid to high 20% range, which implies a raise in our full year margin guidance. Karsten will go through our outlook in more detail. I'd like to highlight our progress in three areas of the business, which will be particularly valuable as we turn our sights to 2024 and beyond. First, we continue to execute our hybrid retail pharmacy strategy, specifically structuring PBM and retail agreements that we believe are positive to both parties. Transitioning to this model allows us to help members of our retail network drive increased volume and margins. GoodRx was originally built in partnership with PBMs, who enabled broad distribution across 70,000 pharmacies, and GoodRx brought to band with double-digit millions of annual consumers seeking savings on prescription medication. We're now complementing these PBM relationships with several significant retailer partnerships that can help retailers with their traffic and margin priorities while continuing to deliver great affordability to consumers. For example, in September, we launched a direct program with Walgreens on nearly 200 medications that drove significant incremental claim volume for Walgreens and helped a huge number of consumers save money on their medication. We've also created drug-specific pricing programs at several other large retail pharmacies in the quarter. As a marketplace, we're not just creating pricing transparency and value for consumers, but also marketing and merchandising opportunities for our retail partners. We plan to continue strengthening and expanding our relationships, retailer by retailer, over the coming quarters. We believe the continued progress here will help us ensure network stability, provide more value to retailers and PBM partners alike, and allow us to drive consumer demand and proactively help retailers with price and margin optimization. Our second priority has been to extend the GoodRx benefit to commercial insurance programs called funded plans in industry lingo. As we all know, commercial insurance plans continue to get more complex with an increasingly wide range of co-pay, deductible, and benefit coverage options, even within the same company. Companies are constantly trading off what they can afford in terms of healthcare expenses with providing benefits and coverage for their employees. The result is often an increasing proportion of healthcare costs falling on individuals. The vast majority of GoodRx's consumer base and transaction volume has come from people who already have third-party payer coverage. We believe there's a huge opportunity to seamlessly bring on- and off-plan benefits together for both patients and their employers. In tandem with several of our PBM partners, we've created a product called Integrated Savings Program, ISP for short, that helps align these corporate funded programs more closely with GoodRx. It's simple and elegant. The employee presents their employer-provided benefit card and pays the lower of their funded benefit price for a prescription or the GoodRx price, as is often the case. During the third quarter, we announced two more PBM partners, MedImpact and Navitas, to add to our existing programs with CVS Caremark and Express Scripts. These programs further strengthen our relationships with each of the four PBMs, who combined, cover over 60% of U.S. lives. Now, there are two questions investors have frequently asked us about these Integrated Savings Programs. The first is whether the programs are cannibalizing or creating pricing risks somehow. The second is how big they can get and how fast. To the first question on cannibalization, we've noted that the top 10 medications in our direct-to-consumer prescription savings offering only make up a small, low single-digit percentage of the medications we see consumers accessing through integrated savings. And, with respect to pricing risk, we don't believe there are any material issues. In terms of sizing the opportunity, we're optimistic about ISP's potential. With over 60% of U.S. lives covered by the PBMs who've adopted the program, the opportunity could be significant. At this stage, though, our programs are nascent and only available to a subset of eligible members through these PBMs. Given changes in plan designs employers and other sponsors may make around year-end, we're going to want to track our trajectory into the coming quarter in Q1 before we quantify how big we think the program will be in 2024, let alone beyond. These are programs that we think every PBM should be doing with us. We believe these partnerships are a win-win-win for GoodRx, our PBM partners, and for consumers and the companies that employ them. First, GoodRx becomes more deeply integrated into the healthcare ecosystem and can reach an incremental segment of the prescription savings TAM. Second, PBMs access incremental volume while helping their plan sponsors save money. Third, and most importantly, consumers get access to better prices on their medications, which can improve adherence and health outcomes. These programs also create a more seamless experience for healthcare providers at the point of prescription, as well as pharmacists at the pharmacy counter, helping both of them save time and relieve administrative burden. Some of these integrated savings programs are already live and are expected to scale going forward. And the CVS Caremark and MedImpact programs will benefit eligible members once the expected rollout takes place in January 2024. Our third priority has been to accelerate our affordability and access solutions for branded medications, which show up as pharma manufacturer solutions in our P&L. Our unique ability to increase affordability for brand drugs drives direct claims impact, and we're seeing this play out across a large number of brand drugs and conditions. For example, we're working with Sanofi, a global leader in diabetes care, to offer a new way for people living with diabetes to access their most prescribed insulin, Lantus, for only $35. For context, even with government initiatives to lower the cost of insulin earlier this year, the implementation has been slow and a significant number of consumers have actually not been able to access the low price point due to structural issues within the healthcare system. When pharma companies like Sanofi collaborate with GoodRx, they're able to leverage our reach and scale and their direct-to-consumer relationships in an effort to broaden access and affordability for their medications. Now, any consumer with a prescription, regardless of insurance status, can access Lantus for $35 using GoodRx across 70,000 retail pharmacies in the U.S. Affordability is becoming one of the key issues for brand pharma marketers due to its impact on adherence. The Sanofi partnership is a clear demonstration of the unique role that GoodRx plays in the healthcare value chain to enable affordability and access to tens of millions of Americans, regardless of their insurance status or prescription drug coverage. GoodRx's consumer reach and brand strength, both for patients and healthcare professionals, as well as our direct connection to the prescription transaction itself, are what set GoodRx apart from others in the healthcare marketing ecosystem. The bottom line is that GoodRx is able to connect brand marketers to patients and prescribers right at the point of prescription. This can translate into a highly effective return for brands. We're finding several brands achieving 5 to 10x increases in volume on GoodRx via our access and buy-down programs, and others are achieving best-in-class rates on industry metrics like cost per new patient start. In terms of go-forward financial performance, we expect pharma manufacturer solutions revenue to grow quarter-over-quarter in Q4. We're continuing to focus on our access and awareness solutions that we believe will accelerate 2024 growth. These are distinctive programs at the intersection of high ROI for our clients and attractive margin for us that build on GoodRx's core value proposition of providing savings on prescription medication. As we've mentioned, this year we've been prioritizing deal quality for going one-off deals and instead creating standardized go-to-market programs that we expect to scale rapidly. A restructuring announced last quarter, which includes VitaCare, is ahead of schedule and we're on track to deliver our expected savings in 2024. Karsten will speak to this in more detail. There's great work underway by teams across the organization and we have exciting things in flight which should lead to year-over-year adjusted revenue growth in 2024. I like where we're headed and look forward to providing updates to everyone next quarter. With that, I'll hand it over to Karsten.