Thank you, Mike and welcome to our investors, analysts and employees joining our first quarter 2023 earnings conference call. Our performance in the first quarter of 2023 was largely in line with the guidance we provided in early March with revenue slightly above the low end of the range and adjusted EBITDA near the higher end of the range. I’ll briefly discuss our results and outlook for each of the U.S., Canada and international markets. Starting with the U.S., our revenue of $11.3 million in the first quarter fell below the low end of our guidance of $12 million to $13 million, reflecting reductions in activity by certain customers that are focused on natural gas production and lower-than-expected perforating gun sales. Despite the reduction in industry drilling and completion activity targeting natural gas, we expect to return to modest sequential revenue growth in the U.S. in the second quarter. The operational performance of our perforating guns in the field was very strong in the quarter. We also made good progress in introducing these products to additional customers that has taken time to migrate customers from trials to steadier ongoing work, which is what led to the lower-than-expected sales volumes for the quarter. Offsetting the lower perforating gun sales, we saw increased momentum throughout the first quarter in PurpleSeal composite plug sales for Repeat Precision, which has continued into the second quarter. Our Canadian revenue of $30.7 million in the first quarter was near the midpoint of our guidance range of $30 million to $32 million. We had strong increases in revenue as compared to both the first and fourth quarters of 2022 with the fourth quarter having been impacted by customer budget exhaustion. We continue to grow product sales volumes across sliding sleeves and well construction products and the impact of the pricing increases we achieved in the second half of 2022 are reflected in our product margins, which I’ll touch on a bit later. I’d like to highlight how one of our customers in Canada is leveraging our technology to drive asset performance and operational efficiency. The customer recently completed two 4-well pads, eight wells in total in a project with over 220 sliding sleeves per well on average. During the completions, they utilized the simul-frac technique, optimizing the surface footprint and horsepower and orchestrated the activity across the wells with several coiled tubing units. Operationally, the customer utilized our Shift-Frac-Close process, which provides operational flexibility and helps to ensure that proppant placed in the formation stays in the formation, minimizing the need for post job cleanouts. The Shift-Frac-Close operations in these high-intensity completions also highlight some of the key features that differentiate NCS from our competition, including the quality of the seals and our sliding sleeves and the repeatably robust performance of our frac initiation assemblies, which benefit from features protected by our intellectual property and which leverage our extensive track record. We have also continued to execute on opportunities to grow our market share in composite frac plugs in Canada. We’ve committed additional field support to the product line and are benefiting from some of the customer consolidation that’s been taking place in the Montney and Duvernay. We continue to monitor the wildfire situation in Western Alberta to ensure that our people are safe. We expect that our Canadian business will exhibit typical seasonality in the second quarter with a period of lower activity through May before recovering in June, which could be exacerbated by the impact of the wildfires on operations for certain customers. We are encouraged by the discussions we’ve had with customers about both the timing and scope of their expected activity after spring breakup. Peak activity in the third quarter of 2023 in Canada could be as robust as the first quarter. Our international operations were seasonally slow in Q1, with revenue of $1.6 million coming in just above the midpoint of our guided range of $1 million to $2 million. We have mentioned in the past the attractive opportunity for our tracer diagnostics product line in international markets and we will highlight one recent project. NCS ran tracers on a Middle East miscible gas flood project, injecting tracers in 7 wells and collecting samples from 17 producing wells. The analysis of the recovered tracer from the producing wells provided valuable insights for our customer. This diagnostic technology and evaluation provided critical information regarding reservoir connectivity, gas breakthrough patterns and optimization opportunities for gas injection and condensate production. Further tracing is planned in this area to help refine reservoir simulation models as our customer updates their field development plan. The continuous monitoring of tracer results will be crucial for the ongoing success of this project. Our international activity has begun to improve in the second quarter, and we believe that will continue to increase as we move to the second half of the year as installation and service activity increases in the North Sea, as tracer projects pick up in Argentina and as we grow our revenue base in the Middle East and in Saudi Arabia, in particular. A bright spot for the quarter for us was our gross margin, which at 43% exceeded our guided range of 38% to 41% and was higher than any quarter during 2022. We previously discussed the cost increases that we incurred in 2022 before we were able to achieve pricing increases with our customers, which were primarily realized during the second half of 2022. The benefit of these pricing gains shows up most clearly while looking at the gross margin on our product sales, which was 40% during the first quarter of 2023 as compared to 32% in the first quarter of 2022, and also drove an overall gross margin improvement of approximately 450 basis points between the two quarters. We continue to pursue additional though more modest pricing improvements with our customers which are necessary to offset the impact of costs incurred across our supply chain, especially the cost of oilfield tubulars, which despite some recent moderation remain more than 100% higher than they were in early 2021. We maintain our strong balance sheet with approximately $5.2 million in net cash and an undrawn revolver as of March 30, 2023. In addition, our net working capital, excluding cash and short-term debt, at March 31 of over $61 million exceeds our current market capitalization by nearly $15 million. Our net capital expenditures for the quarter were $0.5 million, highlighting both the capital-light nature of our business and our continued financial discipline. Before I ask Mike to discuss our financial results in more detail, I’ll address the litigation provision that we booked during the first quarter. On May 2, 2023, a jury issued a verdict against us, awarding approximately $17.5 million in damages, resulting in us accruing a contingent liability. The matter related to well damages for four wells in 2018, resulting from an alleged product effect related to components provided by a third-party supplier of ours. We expect a large portion up to all of the awarded damages to be covered by insurance which would offset this liability. And we would, therefore, expect that the matter once resolved, do not have a significant impact on our financial position or on our operations. In addition, we intend to appeal the judgment and believe that we have strong arguments that could lead to the reversal of some or all of the awarded damages. Over to you, Mike.