Thanks, Whitney, and thanks to everyone joining us today to discuss our fourth quarter results. Today, I'd like to highlight the meaningful progress we're making on our key priorities, and then Karsten will take you through our Q4 '23 financials and expectations for Q1 and full year 2024. I'd like to start by framing the fundamentals of what we do. The critical and growing consumer needs we serve and the importance of the GoodRx value proposition, which is saving people money on prescriptions. Over the history of the company, GoodRx has saved consumers approximately $70 billion. And just last year, we saved consumers approximately $15 billion. There's big fundamental value here. And while healthcare is highly complex, the role GoodRx plays is pretty simple. Consumers today are facing rising healthcare costs with plans continuing to increase patient out-of-pocket costs, like deductibles and co-pays and increasing gaps of drug coverage with narrower formularies. We believe these market coverage trends are stronger than they've ever been, and we don't expect them to change. Think about how Medicaid redetermination alone has limited access to funded benefit plans. We believe this reality makes GoodRx, an essential part of the American healthcare system is a trusted solution for consumers to access affordable medications in the U.S. Healthcare providers recognize this which is why we've become a fundamental resource for them and why more than 80% of healthcare professionals refer their patients to us. In 2023 alone, over 25 million consumers use GoodRx to achieve approximately $15 billion in prescription savings, making GoodRx, one of the leading consumer-driven digital healthcare experiences. For those who have been following both GoodRx and the industry in recent years, short-term movements in the industry value chain have created some confusion about our prospects. We believe the market tailwinds are increasing, patient out-of-pocket costs are growing. GoodRx is scaled. Our users, our HCP advocacy are growing too, making us confident in the strength of the GoodRx value proposition and our ability to grow our business. Our financial results continue to improve as we focus on helping our industry partners in the value chain, benefit proportionally from the value that GoodRx creates for our 25 million-plus consumers annually. In Q4, we continue to see positive momentum in the business, both financially and operationally. Consistent with the preliminary Q4 results we announced in January, our Q4 year-over-year adjusted revenue growth accelerated to 7% up significantly compared to our Q3 growth rate, and our Q4 adjusted EBITDA margin was 29.1%, up 220 basis points year-over-year, with adjusted EBITDA growing 15% year-over-year. This financial performance is the direct result of our efforts throughout 2023, specifically in three areas: first, leading into our relationships with retail partners; second, bringing the fundamental benefit of GoodRx to commercial plans through our integrated savings program for ISP; and third, bringing GoodRx savings to brand drugs through our pharma manufacturer solutions offering. These all reinforce our value proposition and are showing up in the results. We expect adjusted revenue to continue to grow into Q1 and for the full year 2024 as well. We anticipate adjusted revenue to be about $800 million for 2024 with adjusted EBITDA of approximately $250 million. Karsten will go through our outlook in more detail in a bit. I will say I'm confident our priorities are the right ones to deliver the growth we're expecting in 2024 and to drive shareholder value over the long term. There are three areas of the business I'll highlight today. First, we've been focused on strengthening our retail pharmacy relationships and accelerating the continued success of our hybrid model, which includes retailer direct and PBM contracting. As a reminder, our retail direct approach is where leading pharmacies like CVS and Walgreens as well as smaller grocers and pharmacies work closely with us to create consumer value while executing against joint revenue and margin targets. In the fourth quarter, our contracting efforts with retailers were a driver of top line performance as we continue to sign direct contracts with new pharmacies and expand the drugs covered by direct contracts within pharmacies. Today, we have retailer direct contracts with most of our largest retail pharmacy partners and our directly contracted medication volume makes up a growing minority of our overall prescription transaction volume. It's important to remember that GoodRx drives volume and traffic for pharmacies. We do this in two ways. First, we estimate that between 20% and 30% of all prescriptions in the U.S. go unfilled each year due to price. By offering lower price points, pharmacies can fill scripts that patients would otherwise walk away from. Second, in 2023 alone, we've invested over $200 million in advertising and promotion related marketing, almost all of which is focused on increasing the number of GoodRx users, and which ultimately drives incremental prescription volume to pharmacy. Pharmacy's proprietary affordability solutions, by definition, only impact their customers, while in contrast, GoodRx has the ability to drive incremental retail prescriptions and people into their stores. This is one of the reasons pharmacies have been so receptive to locking in multiyear contracts with us. I also want to emphasize that as part of these retail direct contracts, GoodRx offers discount card pricing agreements that provide retailers define margins and are informed by acquisition cost-based pricing in a number of key retail pharmacy partners, including CVS Pharmacy. We've seen other large pharmacies work with us to use a combination of pricing models, and that's worked out very well for both of us. We welcome the broader movement to cost-plus reimbursement models in both funded benefit plans and off benefit as it's a great way to align economics between pharmacies, payers and consumers. Critically, we believe that our retail direct contracting strategy, which takes a cost aligned approach positions us well for sustainable growth in a market with evolving pharmacy reimbursement models. We estimate that over 3/4 of GoodRx users have some form of insurance coverage. That means consumers are comparing prices against co-pays, not exclusively comparing prices between pharmacies. For uninsured users, the opportunity for greater patient affordability is relative to usual and customary cash pricing, which is generally substantially higher than GoodRx pricing. If there were a scenario where a more cost-focused pharmacy reimbursement model reduces drug price disparity across retail pharmacies, which we don't believe will ultimately be the case since each pharmacy uses pricing strategically to attract different kinds of consumers. We see this trend overall as neutral to GoodRx given we will still be able to deliver significant savings benefit to consumers. Our second priority has been to hone our growth plans for our core prescription transactions offering, which includes extending the GoodRx benefit to commercial insurance programs or funded plans. We've done this through our integrated savings program, or ISP, with PBM partners like CVS Caremark, Express Scripts, MedImpact and Navitus who aggregate demand for our prescription discounts. The early traction we're seeing for ISP so far in 2024 is encouraging and its contribution to Q1 revenue is reflected in our growth expectations. ISP is generating incremental year-over-year revenue which is manifesting in line with our expectations. As we mentioned in the past, we believe there will be some level of ramp to the volume that comes through ISP and we're still in the very early days as we work with PBMs to add more types of prescription transactions to the program and to ensure acceptance at retail. Also, while our PBM partners market these programs to be over 60% of eligible lives in the U.S. that they cover, we're working in parallel with them to educate and inform employers about these programs and accelerate the number of lives we can onboard. Along with increasing lives, we believe we can inflect conversion as well, given we've historically been able to increase GoodRx discounts and lower pricing over time in our non-ISP, direct-to-consumer offerings. As we do so in the context of ISP, we believe we can beat patients' co-pays more often. Given that ISP is incremental to our direct-to-consumer offering and any evidence of cannibalization has been minimal, we remain focused on accelerating its growth. Based on our learnings from last year, we expect our ISP relationships to create some incremental seasonality with higher revenue during the first half of the year and contributing less revenue in the latter part, since more claims are likely to be routed through GoodRx while consumers are in the deductible phase of their health plans. That said, our growth expectations are predicated on how ISP has performed for the first few weeks of this year. And if we're successful in driving more types of transactions, and more lives to the program as we help drive more employer sales, we may achieve incremental lift in the coming months and during 2025's patient deductible reset period. We'll update everyone if we see this manifesting. Third, we're focused on scaling our pharma manufacturer solution bills. In Q4, we continue doing the work to build our pipeline and believe we've set ourselves up for year-over-year growth in the first quarter and FY '24. We've been leaning into our access and awareness solutions that we believe will accelerate 2024 growth. And as we mentioned in the past, in 2023, we prioritized deal quality with a focus on foregoing one off deals and instead creating standardized go-to-market programs that we expect to scale sustainably. Our restructuring in this offer, including rationalizing vitaCare is essentially complete, and we're on track to deliver our expected margin accretion in 2024, which Karsten will speak to in more detail. With that, I'll hand it over to Karsten.