Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, everyone, and thanks for being with us. We delivered solid performance during Q1 despite the continued uncertainty in the macro environment and despite Q1 traditionally being our most seasonally impacted quarter given summer holidays and consultant vacations. On both revenue and SG&A expense, we performed in the stronger half of our guidance range while also continuing to deliver strong free cash flow. During Q1, Countsy delivered solid growth over prior year quarter. The Northern Californian market grew sequentially, showing movement in the tech sector after 12 months of a quiet buying environment. Regional performance in the rest of North America reflected the overall choppy operating environment with clients remaining cautious about new spend while extending current engagements. Our pricing initiative is progressing as planned with over a 2% increase in bill rate in the U.S. quarter-over-quarter and 4% in Europe, constant currency. Turning to our operational metrics. Pipeline remains resilient. Engagement extension showed an uptick from the prior sequential quarter, continuing to demonstrate the stickiness of our consultants within the client environment. In recent weeks, we are seeing numerous new opportunities being added to the growth pipeline in certain pockets of North America. In Europe, we're growing the pipeline again as 2024 client budgets are being finalized and pent-up demand around technology transformation and transaction support are moving to the forefront. The Asia Pacific region, particularly in India and the Philippines, continues to show demand strength from our large global clients as they optimize their offshore service centers. In Q2, we're highly focused on revenue capture across all markets. And following the summer holidays, we have seen healthy meeting activity with in-person client connectivity on the rise globally. Based on many discussions with clients, we believe patterns are starting to break for the better. One of our largest clients reports that 10 months of uncertainty is coming to an end. Budget discussions have been renewed with recognition that there's too much pain in the system that needs to be addressed. Business resiliency is critical. Many organizations are now reaching out for support to unlock the value of prior technology implementations. For example, we have clients large and middle market in need of support implementing additional modules of S/4HANA, SAP's modular cloud-based ERP. We're also assisting and optimizing performance of previous S/4HANA implementations with business process redesign, project and change management, all capabilities in RGP's sweet spot. For such work, clients do not want to hire full time, but rather in-source talent to deliver the expertise with flexibility and agility. In addition, we see increasing demand for our expert solution offerings, including expansion of global shared services workflows, IT, audit and compliance as well as operational accounting and finance. In our financial services practice, we see increasing needs in regulatory remediation. With these client conversations as the foundation, we're cautiously optimistic that the buying environment will approve late this calendar year and into 2024. In the near term, we will continue to expand our capabilities and engagement models, Agile consulting and managed services. This strategy will improve our ability to weather market cycles and dynamics to react more quickly to varying pockets of need. For example, tax and treasury services are nondiscretionary even in a challenged macro cycle, while PMO services related to a client's market expansion are green lit with improving market cycles. In addition to our core Agile Expert business, we're also extending our total addressable market on both ends of the human capital and consulting continuum. HUGO is an engagement channel for an adjacent segment of the F&A market requiring more role-based support and lesser scope than team delivery. Digital transformation consulting expands the right side of the continuum with strategy to execution, UX to digital product development. Looking further ahead, our business model is well aligned to the future of work. We support clients in more agile and flexible ways in the areas of finance transformation, operational excellence and digital transformation. We have the exceptional talent that clients want and need to execute critical project initiatives. We also know how to attract and retain that talent who is migrating toward our model. As the Wall Street Journal reported two weeks ago, the labor crisis is here to stay. Retirement trends, lower birth rates and restrictive immigration policies around skilled talent suggests no improvement anytime soon. Thus, demand for agile talent, experts who can work on project teams and plug critical skill set gaps will increase opportunity for RGP over the long term. Increasingly, talent itself is looking to lend its expertise to platforms like RGP who offer a different compelling career experience. RGP's attractive proposition to this talent is especially apparent in the finance and accounting field, where the profession faces an existential crisis. There are two few CPAs for market demand with many of them exiting the profession because they do not want the partnership model. RGP provides a career that values their skill set in a more dynamic model built on choice, flexibility and control. Especially given current market conditions, RGP is proud of the strong cash flow that so well reflects the underlying strength of our business model. As a result, we have a clean balance sheet and no debt. We have consistently paid a quarterly dividend for over 10 years with six annual increases during that period. And as much as ever, we're staying disciplined on cost structure to ensure we continue to deliver value to shareholders. Before I hand it over to Jenn, I want to leave you with my thoughts on how the new fiscal year will likely progress. We expect the current year's annual revenue trends to reflect the opposite of fiscal '23. Meaning last year, the first and second quarters were the strongest, reflecting the continued post-pandemic bounce back. This year, we believe the second half of the fiscal year will be stronger, given the nature of our solid pipeline and as the economy and buyer sentiment improve. As noted in the CFO's survey conducted by Duke University's Fuqua School of Business and the Federal Reserve Banks of Richmond and Atlanta, which was released last week. CFO optimism around revenue, hiring outlook, and the economy in general has increased for 2024 which adds to our cautious optimism for this current fiscal year. In closing, I'm pleased to share that Harvard Business Review published an article last week, co-authored by me and business strategist, Antonio Nieto Rodriguez, titled creating a cohesive team for corporate transformation projects. This piece, based on our recent research reinforces the benefits of building a blended team to deliver transformation work the highest impact and most successful outcomes. Please visit our website for a link to the article and the insights shared. I'll now turn the call over to Jenn.