Thanks, Tim. We ended the quarter above our revenue guidance range, delivering Q4 revenue of $184 million, up 37% year-over-year. We also delivered full year revenue of $688 million, a 15% increase versus prior year. Our revenue growth was primarily driven by another quarter of significant strength in our Insurance vertical, as well as a return to growth in banking, though, we continue to face a cyclically depressed lending environment. Let’s take a deeper look at the revenue performance during the quarter within each category. Credit Cards delivered Q4 revenue of $35 million, declining 19% year-over-year. As we mentioned last quarter, we have seen recovery in organic search traffic in most areas of our business with the exception of Credit Cards and personal loans, and we expect to see this trend continue. We are projecting continued downward pressure during the first part of the year. For the full year, Credit Cards delivered $176 million of revenue, declining 16% versus the prior year. Loans generated Q4 revenue of $18 million, declining 26% year-over-year. Our personal loans vertical declined 51% year-over-year, as we had yet to see a material recovery in our revenue despite a rapidly improving macro environment. As Tim mentioned, the renewed focus on this vertical as we enter 2025 has resulted in early improvements suggesting a return to year-over-year growth in Q1. Partially offsetting the declines in personal loans was growth in mortgages. Q4 saw mortgage revenue growth primarily driven by the inclusion of our acquisition of Next Door Lending, which contributed over 1 point of growth to overall company revenue this quarter. As we look forward, with the recent rise in mortgage rates, as well as the vast majority of household mortgages reported at under 5% rates, we have muted expectations in the near-term. The growth in mortgages outside of the benefit of the acquisition is still primarily driven by strength in home equity products. For the full year, loans delivered $84 million of revenue, declining 17% year-over-year. SMB products delivered Q4 revenue of $26 million, declining 7% year-over-year. We continue to see pressure in SMB loan originations with rates remaining elevated and underwriting remaining tight, while also seeing increased pressure in our renewals portfolio as the 10-year rates reversed course and began to climb. Despite interest rate headwinds and loans, we continue delivering growth with our other product offerings. In the current 10-year rate environment, we do not expect to see growth acceleration, but we believe there is a large opportunity to grow both the loans and other products sub-verticals over the long-term. For the full year, SMB products delivered $110 million of revenue, growing 9% year-over-year. Beginning this quarter, we have changed our revenue product category presentation and are now providing insurance revenue as a separate disclosure. Insurance products consist of auto, life, pet, and other insurance intended for consumers. Previously, Insurance was a component of our emerging verticals revenue disclosure, but given the relative size and long-term opportunity, you will see us break out this revenue contribution separately. Insurance delivered $72 million in revenue, growing 821% year-over-year in Q4. We saw an atypical increase versus the third quarter as improving demand from both consumers and partners remained consistent. Growth also continued to be aided by our ability to improve the product experience by collecting a bit more information upfront to better route customers to relevant products for them. Looking forward, we expect to see strong growth during the first half of the year, but we’ll face tougher comps during the second half, leading to more muted growth expectations. For the full year, Insurance delivered $192 million of revenue, growing 326% year-over-year. Finally, our emerging verticals finished Q4 with revenue of $34 million, growing 7% year-over-year. As a reminder, after the regrouping of both SMB products and Insurance revenue, emerging verticals consist of areas such as banking, investing, and international. Banking increased 5% year-over-year, as we saw partner appetite remain robust and demand rebound from prior quarter levels as we believe consumers are re-shopping while depository rates begin to slowly decline. We expect a return to declining year-over-year results during 2025 as we are still cautious that a declining depository rate environment may reduce consumer demand, but landing at a higher watermark than in zero interest rate environment. For the full year, emerging verticals delivered $125 million of revenue, declining 12% year-over-year. Moving on to investments and profitability. During Q4, we delivered $16.8 million of non-GAAP operating income above our Q4 guidance range. Non-GAAP OI margin was roughly similar to Q4 of the prior year, despite increasing our investment in Brand. As we look over the second half of 2024, we delivered over $17 million more non-GAAP operating income dollars’ year-over-year and roughly 3 points of margin accretion, as we efficiently invested in Brand across both quarters as well as saw the majority of the second half benefit from the cost saving measures that we took in July. We also earned $31 million of Q4 adjusted EBITDA. In the fourth quarter, we earned GAAP operating income of $8.7 million and net income of $38.6 million, which includes a $37.9 million income tax benefit. Our Q4 income tax benefit was mostly driven by a $27.2 million one-time release of a valuation allowance on certain deferred tax assets after positive indicators, including profitability, improved in recent years. With the release of the valuation allowance, we recognized corresponding deferred tax assets primarily comprised of capitalized research and development costs on our balance sheet. Similar to what we’ve mentioned in previous quarters, we expect to be a cash taxpayer for the foreseeable future. Please refer to today’s earnings press release for a full reconciliation of our GAAP to non-GAAP measures. Consumers continue to turn to the Nerds for their money questions. We provided trustworthy guidance to $19 million average monthly unique users in Q4, down 20% year-over-year. The broad organic traffic challenges that began during Q2 remain the primary driver of the decline, and we are seeing the largest pressure to our year-over-year growth occur in our non-monetizing traffic. As Tim mentioned, we will begin phasing out our MUU metric given we no longer believe it is the best measure to correlate revenue growth opportunity as we continue to scale our Vertical Integration efforts. With that being said, we did want to provide a little context on what we are expecting from a traffic standpoint in the near- and medium-term. We expect to continue to see traffic or MUUs decline year-over-year with a bit more deceleration in Q1, as we await normalization from these new levels. With that being said, trends we have seen so far this year would point to a seasonal Q4 to Q1 increase as we’ve seen in prior years. This gives us confidence that we should reach an eventual level of normalization, and we currently expect to return to year-over-year traffic growth sometime early next year. If we take a bit of a broader view on the long-term growth in our business, despite these near-term challenges, MUUs this quarter had a 5-year compounded annual growth rate of 8%, showcasing the progress we have made over multiple cycles of increasing consumer demand through the NerdWallet brand. On to our financial outlook. As we enter 2025, we expect revenue growth will be maintained throughout the year, despite tough comps during the second half, but the degree of growth will be dependent on the timing and size of a recovery in the lending environment. Though some level of uncertainty remains, we plan to continue providing quarterly revenue and non-GAAP profit guidance, and will also provide annual profit guidance as well as qualitative commentary for full year expectations. We expect to deliver first quarter revenue in the range of $187 million to $193 million, which at the midpoint would increase 17% versus prior year. To give you more color on our Q1 revenue expectations, in prior years, we have seen a meaningful seasonal increase in revenue from Q4 to Q1, which you can see is not necessarily reflected in our outlook. This is primarily driven by the strength that we saw in Insurance at the end of 2024, which is reducing the Q4 to Q1 step-up. Despite this impact to our typical cadence from Q4 to Q1, the primary driver of year-over-year revenue growth in the first quarter will still come from Insurance, and we’re also expecting approximately 1 to 2 points of benefit from the acquisition of Next Door Lending. And while we anticipate continuing to face tight lending conditions across both Credit Cards and loans, we expect a return to growth in personal loans given recent improvements we’ve made. Moving to profitability. We expect Q1 non-GAAP operating results in the range of a $3 million loss to breakeven. Our non-GAAP operating outlook assumes a significant increase in Brand expenses year-over-year as we invest in our first half campaign that is anchored by our Super Bowl placement. We believe continuing these investments will benefit the Brand in the long-term and we will be data driven on the levels at which we spend during shorter time frames. As we look at the rest of the year, we expect to spend less on brand than the prior year for Q2 through Q4 combined, all-in-all netting to a moderate full year increase in our investment. We expect to grow non-GAAP operating income dollars versus the prior year across the remainder of 2025, represented in our expectations for full year 2025 non-GAAP operating income of approximately $50 million to $60 million. From a macroeconomic standpoint, our guidance currently assumes no material changes to long-term rates, no material spike in unemployment or inflation, and as a result, a more moderate recovery in some interest rate sensitive areas of our business across the remainder of the year. We also expect that this revenue recovery will come from both unpaid and paid channels that will help with overall profit dollar growth. As a result, we will have a larger portion of our revenue growth coming from paid marketing this year. Though, as we’ve mentioned in the past, we view paid marketing as a means to an end and will continue to spend in a disciplined manner with the aim to be paid back within the quarter in which we spend. As a result of this traffic mix impact, we are moving from a margin percentage target to a margin dollar target as we continue to leverage our brand strength to take share in paid channels. When looking out past 2025, we are also replacing our previously shared margin percentage target with a margin dollar target, and we now plan to deliver at least $80 million of non-GAAP operating income in 2026, with this continued level of profitability growth depending on the timing of the recovery in our lending portfolio. We enter this year optimistic about the future and the work our Nerds have done to set us up to execute on our vision. We know we have a responsibility to our users to help them navigate their financial questions, all while maintaining our long-term orientation, prioritizing trust, and continuing to improve our vertical experiences across cycles. Before we move to questions, I would also like to take a moment to thank Tim and all our Nerds for allowing me to be part of your journey the past 4 years. I know the team is set up to do amazing things, and I will continue to be a proud Nerd watching your success from afar. With that, we’ll open it up for questions. Operator?