Thank you, Mollie. Good morning, everyone. Welcome to our first quarter 2025 earnings call. There is certainly a lot to talk about here on the call for the quarter. And before I hand it off to Scotty Roberts, our CFO, who’s going to give us detail on the financial results, I want to do a couple of key things. First, as I want to talk a little bit about the company’s strengths, as we enter a time of uncertainty, I think a company with an experienced management team that knows what they’re building, that build incrementally strong and understands the market environment they’re operating in, and knows how to create value for customers, its customer base during these times, is the kind of company that people should want to invest in. And so I want to talk a little bit about those strengths in our growth trajectory. And then, I also want to acknowledge a couple of items that are kind of hitching our step, some challenges that are, we think, temporary that we’re going to work our way through, that have resulted in us trimming our guidance – our in-year guidance a little bit. And we’re going to talk about both those things in detail. It’s an interesting period of kind of irony, but probably opportunity, and we’re going to talk through that a little bit. I’ve seen a lot of cycles in health care, and I can tell you why HealthStream generates growth and profitability throughout those cycles, been doing this quite a long time. And the experience of our team that knows how to bundle and create value for customers in times of uncertainty, it’s really a good time to rise and shine. The value of our core application suites and learning, credentialing and scheduling as well as our emerging hStream platform, they get demonstrably better every quarter. And that is why we continue to add both wallet share and market share across the board and why our bookings and sales pipelines are strong, but is also while we’re forecasting both revenue and EBITDA growth on a year-over-year basis even amid some of the macroeconomic choppiness and recently addressed issues of technology scale with one of our products, CredentialStream. Let’s talk a little bit about the macroeconomic headwinds. We are seeing them manifest in a couple of areas. In some areas, we have direct correlation where we can say, "Oh, that’s a challenge" In others, they’re less direct, maybe indirect, but maybe anticipated, is more intelligent way to talk about the macroeconomic conditions that concerns that we may have, we need to factor into how we think about the next 3 or 4 quarters. Funding cuts, for example, particularly the Federally Qualified Health Centers, FQHCs and Academic Medical Institutions seem to be impacting renewal decisions on a nice to have content – on the nice to have content. And the good news is a lot of our content is mandatory, but we do have a program such as our health equity and belonging content, which was a shining growth star last year, which is really not on our growth trajectory this year. And so, as we entered the year with the health equity and belonging curriculum, we have seen a diminishing purchasing patterns of that. And that may also have to do with kind of the political correctness of the environment or trying to be in alignment with that and also the macroeconomic conditions that pressure, because it’s more elective type of content offering in our many content offerings. So we do believe that some customers may be delaying some purchasing decisions as precautionary measures to protect their businesses against potential policy-related impacts as the example I just gave. And supporting this belief we saw a handful of medium-sized deals that are expected to close in Q1 pushed to Q2. And we’re watching those very closely to determine why we think there might be a delay in the closing of those medium-sized deals. We do expect still those particular sales to close. They’re all still in the pipeline. We’re all still in active dialogue with the customers. And they are nice, we would call the medium size kind of the $1 million to $3 million deals or even bigger $2 million to $4 million deals. And we think they’re all viable deals. They’re all going to close here in Q2. But we’re going to have to watch it really closely to see the timing of the close, because timing and delays have an impact about how we think about revenue in the year. And so we do expect them to close, but the fact that they haven’t closed and they didn’t close in Q1 is just something we have to watch. It’s good news that many of those solutions help meet mandatory requirements. I did give the example of the Health Equity and Belonging content libraries, which are a little more optional. But a lot of these are focused on their primary asset, their people, and their primary expense category and developing their people to be more effective, retaining their people so they have lower turnover. And it’s good news that many of these solutions are focused on these mandatory requirements and they help organizations optimize their expense around labor and their labor – their workforce. And so I think being workforce focused in a time of economic uncertainty is a good thing to be. And so I think a management team that understands that environment and tweaks its programs to align with those messages will be in a stronger position. So I think the next thing to talk about is, we do have this ongoing demand for application suites and current sales pipelines for Learning, Credentialing and Scheduling are all strong. And there’s some irony that have such a strong pipeline that see a little delay that may affect in-year revenue recognition. But it’s interesting that’s almost an irony built into the quarter, because during Q1, we did land, sign and are beginning to execute on one of the largest deals that we’ve done in our history. It’s a $14 million deal, where we bundled a tremendous value proposition for a large, one of the country’s larger health systems, and it included some of our key products like our new Competency suite, which we’ve talked about in prior calls, and so it just does demonstrate that when you meet the need with this concept here of helping develop the confidence, cross-training people for other roles, you help retain the workforce with these development programs, that you can close deals. And so again, a little bit of irony in the fact that we had a handful, I’d say, about four deals that we would call these medium-sized deals push, and then yet one of the largest deals in our history closed during the first quarter, a $14 million deal to a large health system, including our newer product bundles around Competency development. So we’re really excited about that. So amid this market turbulence, it is our diverse product offering and the nature of that offering meaning it meets mandatory needs. And the fact that this major sale did close gives us that confidence to deliver growth on the year, despite some of these early indicators like some of the elected content purchasing may be dropping off. And so overall, we still feel really well positioned, but some revenue may be pushed into the next year. It’s just this quarter, as we reflect on it, there is a lot of these kind of mixed blessings and we’ve experienced a couple of those in other areas of operations, and we’re going to talk about those too. So impacting our in-year outlook, these mixed blessings they stem from recent success in closing larger deals with larger and longer contract terms than our 3-year average. And so the result of that is that we secure a greater contract order value, but we spread it over more time. And so as you heard in the story I just told that these four deals that were kind of medium size and shorter run recognition pushed, they haven’t closed yet, but we think they will, yet, we land this really big deal. It’s a 5-year deal. It spreads the revenue a little longer. And so it’s a great reason for optimism. Of course, we’d rather close large deals that are over a longer period of time. And we just have to work that middle market and get those medium-sized deals, that are shorter run revenue recognition closed in this quarter, but that would represent a delay from our expectations. So the overall size of that deal put us well over our Q1 bookings expectations. So if you ask our internal team how we did, we would say that our contract order value and sales for the quarter exceeded our total expectation, but the average time to revenue and the time over which that value is spread is stretched. And so again, it’s kind of this weird thing of a long-term positive look at the sales pipeline, but some trepidation and some hesitancy to close. We’ll just have to follow those four or five medium-sized deals and see if we bring them all in, in Q2 as we now expect. So we do want to acknowledge that some of this hesitancy and some other operational issues, which we think are temporary, which we are addressing, particularly some technology scaling issues with CredentialStream, which we do feel we’ve quickly addressed, but those kind of scaling issues, if you have some blips on the radar with customers, create some uncertain impact where you have to kind of wait and recover confidence of your customers, and we were – but we were able to put really good teams of people on the scale issues with the result of really great sales and building up a big implementation backlog. And then you have a little service quality delivery issues that persisted for 4 or 5 weeks, but put our teams on it. We feel like the issues have been addressed on this CredentialStream application, and as you’ll hear in a minute, we still delivered the revenue growth on CredentialStream in the quarter. But again, in recognizing our experience, we’ve been doing this a long time. We know that sometimes those kind of service problems can have a lag effect on your expectations. And so we factored a little of that into our revised guidance. But once again, I would say that we feel we’ve addressed the scaling issues that were the result of bringing on so many customers, and we had to kind of reconfigure our – some of our tech stack to expand. In this case, very technically, we took our server groups from a few to almost a dozen, and so we’re able to scale to handle volume and redistribute load and get back to a place where we think we have the stability we need to cover the growth that we were delivering. So when we shifted our full attention to optimization of product performance, it did slow our CredentialStream implementation efforts. As you can imagine, if you’re in the middle of an implementation and you have some service timing issues then it delays that pipeline a little bit. So again, and with the wisdom of experience, we think it’s wise to expect those delays to play out in your revenue recognition a little bit. And so again, you can see that in our revised downward guidance. But the nature of the problem, we think, was temporary. And we feel we’ve resolved it and we’re on the building the credibility side again with those customers. So that – but that shift in focus did have the effect of slower time to revenue, and you don’t recognize revenue until the products are fully implemented. And so the way those two things work together had us resulting – we needed to push some of the revenue recognition into the future, maybe into Q1 of next year. And so again, those slight adjustments resulted in this revised downward guidance. As we think through those – and those are factored in, of course, to why we trimmed our guidance expectations a little bit kind of overall. Slower time to revenue was one of the factors. Overall, we see a CredentialStream implementation backlog is representing a strong source of potential revenue acceleration. I mean, again, an ironic situation, while we did see that delayed purchasing in the medium-sized deals, we had a really strong closing quarter in the fourth quarter. And so we’ve got this great implementation backlog that we just need to get to, to get to revenue. And we’re working through that. Of course, we have configured our company in different ways. We’ve assigned new people to try to work into that backlog and so we can deliver revenue off of that really strong backlog of sold deals. It’s one of our more successful products in our history from a growth perspective. So now we just have to do a better job of managing that growth and getting those customers live, which we’ll do. We’ve been doing this a long time and worked through a lot of different temporary challenges, and this is another one that we’re going to tackle. Let’s summarize. I’d like to just kind of take a pause and for people new to HealthStream in these times, just kind of give a quick summary of our business structure and why we think we’re well positioned. First and foremost, HealthStream is a healthcare technology company dedicated to developing, credentialing and scheduling the healthcare workforce. So we’re focused on people in healthcare. And we do that by delivering SaaS-based solutions each of which are becoming more valuable, because the interoperability they’re achieving through our emerging hStream technology platform, as you know, we’ve been talking about this for a long time, but we’ve declared this is the year of the platform. And what we mean by that is the emergence of strategic and tactical and operational benefits of the platform, as we see every quarter increased interoperability of our core applications, which brings that additional benefit to our customers. The company holds 20 patents for its innovative products. We see our competitors emulating us and trying to catch up with our vision. The company holds these patents. We’ve won over 40 Brandon Hall awards, which recognize excellence in innovation in the industry. And we sell our solutions on a subscription basis under contract that average 3 to 5 years. And actually that very statement reminds me to think about the ironic dynamic that occurred in Q1, where the 3-year deals that were medium-sized are delayed in the pipeline yet the 5-year, one of the biggest deals in history did come in and get signed in the process of being executed. But that nature of 3- to 5-year recurring revenue contracts makes our revenues predictable. In fact, 96% of our revenues are subscription-based. As I just mentioned, we have also started to open our sales channels directly to healthcare professionals and nursing students across the continuum of healthcare training. So we are profitable. We have no interest-bearing debt. We have a strong cash balance of $113 million, and we’re solely focused on healthcare and solely – and we work to work towards the mandatory needs and the workforce needs, which are the trending hot topics is how to be more effective managing, retaining and developing your workforce. And so I think we’re well positioned in this kind of environment where the CEOs of these health systems are worried about their labor. They’re trying to figure out their best ways to retain and develop their people. And we think increasingly HealthStream’s portfolio of solutions is the answer to that question. We have about – our target market is 12.5 million healthcare professionals, which also now includes the nursing students in the United States, and those comprise the core addressable market for our SaaS solutions, is this – where healthcare is delivered is where HealthStream wants to be, and that’s where these 12.5 million people are. And they can be in skilled nursing facilities, long-term care facilities, acute care facilities. Those are the markets that we’re going after with these workforce-oriented solutions. Let’s take a pause now, and turn it over to Scotty, who will hit the highlights. We want to – I wanted to acknowledge that we did revise our guidance downward that we think the causes of that are temporary, that our vision remains strong, and we had some ironic occurrences in the quarter, winning the biggest deal in our history, but seeing a delay in some of the medium-sized deals, and we’re just going to work through all this. We still put out a growth forecast, although revised downward a little bit. And well, of course, we’re going to do everything we can as this quarter unfolds to get it back on track, and there’s – we’ll work hard to see if we can do that, get back on track and maybe get out of this revised downward guidance. But right now, that’s where we sit. Let’s turn it over to Scotty Roberts for his summary of financial results.