Thank you, Patrick, and hello, everyone. As Patrick observed, we finished the year characterized by 3 things: first, softening consumer demand in our categories as we work through economic transitions following the pandemic. Second, important improvements in our product lineup that will serve us for years to come. And third, a tight focus on costs to match the softer demand environment. Turning to the numbers. Fiscal 2023 revenues were $1.66 billion, a year-over-year decline of 3.3% constant currency and 5.5% reported. Foreign exchange was a $39 million headwind to revenue and a very significant portion of that headwind flowed through to reduce gross profit and adjusted EBITDA. Product registrations, which reflect consumer demand, grew 5% year-over-year, whereas products sold, which reflects sales to our retailers and installers and our DTC channel declined 9% year-over-year. The variance between these 2 figures represents the reduction in channel inventory levels that we saw across both the retailer and installer channels. This reduction puts us in a healthy channel inventory position across our channels and geographies as we enter the holiday season. Products sold declined by more than revenue on a percentage basis due to a 4% increase in revenue per product sold. This increase resulted from some price increases and favorable product mix, partially offset by increased promotional activity and FX headwinds. Performance varies significantly on a regional basis. Revenue in the Americas was up slightly year-over-year which continued our unbroken streak of increasing revenue every year in the Americas since we went public in 2018. By contrast, revenue in EMEA declined 10% and in APAC 32% year-over-year. The softer performance in EMEA and APAC relative to the Americas reflects the particularly difficult macroeconomic environment affecting those regions, which impacted both retailer sell-in and run rate registration trend. On a channel basis, retail and other, which includes IKEA and other business initiatives, declined 7% and was cumulatively 55% of sales. As previously noted, EMEA and APAC were particularly challenged in the year, whereas the Americas were more resilient. DTC was roughly flat year-over-year and was 24% of sales. Installer Solutions came in at 21% of sales, declining 7% year-over-year as our dealers worked down channel inventory. As we called out on previous calls, we entered FY '23 with too much stock in the installer channel, and thanks to registration significantly outpacing sell-in, we are entering FY '24 in a much cleaner channel inventory position. GAAP gross margin was 43.3%, down 220 basis points year-over-year. Gross margin was impacted by a return to normal level of promotional activity versus FY '22, higher component costs, a 120 basis point FX headwind and over 100 basis points of excess component provisions, partially offset by fewer spot component purchases, price increases and lower air freight expense. While this year's gross margin is below our annual target of 45% to 47%, I am confident that we can get gross margin back into this range in fiscal 2024. Adjusted EBITDA was $154 million, representing a margin of 9.3%. The year-over-year decline was driven by lower revenue, gross margin contraction and ongoing investments in our product road map. Non-GAAP adjusted operating expenses were $612 million in fiscal 2023. There were a number of moving pieces impacting our expense base in the year, including lower bonus payout for our employees, deferred program spend to protect profitability and the 7% RIF we announced in mid-June. Taking these factors into account, we estimate that our normalized expense base was approximately $665 million or 40% of revenue. I will discuss this further while providing guidance, but I would note that the midpoint of our guidance for FY '24 assumes operating expenses stay roughly flat to this normalized FY '23 level. We ended the year with $220 million of cash and no debt. Free cash flow was $50 million, an increase of $125 million year-over-year. This result was primarily driven by working capital improvements, resulting from a focus on better managing our inventory. Our total inventory balance ended the year at $347 million, down 24% year-over-year. I'm proud of our team's efforts to work down our finished goods balance sheet. We are entering the holidays carrying $108 million less inventory on our balance sheet than we did in Q4 of fiscal 2022. Finished goods were $282 million, up 17% sequentially as we build inventory into the holidays. Our component balance of $65 million was up 12% sequentially. As previously discussed, we expect our component balance to continue to increase in the near term before reaching a peak sometime in this fiscal year. Further managing our owned inventory and improving cash conversion remains a top priority, and we expect to exit the first quarter in an even better inventory position. We completed our $100 million share repurchase authorization by repurchasing 4 million shares for $55 million at an average price of $13.71 per share, representing 3.1% of common shares outstanding as of Q3. For the full year, we repurchased 6.6 million shares at an average price of $15.25 per share which more than offset our equity grants for the year, taking our basic share count down by 1.7 million shares, a net reduction of 1.3%. As Patrick mentioned, our Board announced a new $200 million share repurchase authorization. Returning capital to shareholders and managing dilution remains a high priority within our balanced capital allocation framework. And finally, before turning to guidance, I'll now quickly recap our Q4 results. We reported revenues of $305.1 million towards the higher end of our guidance range of $290 million to $310 million. Revenue in the Americas increased 2% year-over-year, which was relatively in line with our expectations for the quarter. Revenue in EMEA and APAC declined by 9% and 28%, respectively, year-over-year due to softening demand. As we noted last quarter, we see the challenging macroeconomic climates in both regions weighing on our results. Q4 gross margin came in below our expectations at 42%, up 270 basis points year-over-year, but down 400 basis points sequentially from Q3. This decline is due to timing of recognition of contra revenue related to select channel fill ahead of the holiday season and higher excess component provisions. Gross profit dollars increased 3.2% year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA was $6.3 million, slightly above our expectations, primarily due to lower operating expenses. Total non-GAAP adjusted operating expense of $135.6 million declined by $14 million or 9% from Q3 due to lower bonus accrual and a full quarter's impact of our mid-June RIF. Now for our fiscal 2024 guidance. We expect revenue in the range of $1.6 billion to $1.7 billion, representing a year-over-year decline of 3% at the low end and growth of 3% at the high end and roughly flat year-over-year at the midpoint. Embedded in this guidance is the key assumption that we will generate more than $100 million of revenue from new product introductions in FY '24, the lion's share of which will come from the new multibillion-dollar category that we will be entering in the second half of fiscal 2024. Because of the timing of our new product launches and their associated revenue contributions, we expect the shape of this year to differ from past years, with the first half representing somewhere between 51% to 53% of our full year's revenue. Our guidance assumes that the weak consumer demand we saw in Q4 of fiscal '23 persists throughout fiscal '24, with the low end assuming trends soften somewhat further. Any recovery in run rate trends of our categories broadly would drive upside to our guidance. We expect GAAP gross margins in the range of 45% to 46%, which would bring us back into our annual target range with a midpoint of 45.5%. This implies GAAP gross profit dollars flat to up 9% year-over-year, with the midpoint being 5% growth. We foresee improvements in component costs, favorable product mix, fewer spot component purchases and lower excess component provisions, all contributing to a recovery from the 43.3% we reported in fiscal 2023. As a reminder, fiscal 2023's GAAP gross margin was impacted by approximately 120 basis points of FX headwind and over 100 basis points of excess component provisions. We will continue to guide GAAP gross margins as we have done in the past. But to make it easier to model our business, we have begun providing GAAP to non-GAAP gross profit and gross margin reconciliations. As such, non-GAAP gross margin is expected to be 45.4% to 46.4% due to approximately $7 million of stock-based comp and amortization of intangibles allocated to GAAP cost of revenue. Adjusted EBITDA is expected to be in the range of $150 million to $180 million, representing a margin of 9.4% to 10.6%. At the midpoint, adjusted EBITDA is $165 million, representing a 10% margin, up from 9.3% in fiscal 2023. Non-GAAP operating expenses are expected to be between 39% and 40% of revenue. At the midpoint, this is approximately $649 million, a decrease of 2% year-over-year from our normalized non-GAAP operating expense base in fiscal 2023. We have other expense reduction initiatives underway as well as we relentlessly seek out cost savings. As Patrick mentioned earlier, we are entering a period of harvesting the fruits of our past investments, enabling us to strictly limit hiring going forward and future head count growth will be tied to a significant incremental benefit to our growth ambitions. In the event that we see topline performance tracking ahead of our outlined expectations, we will balance investment and allow some of the incremental gross profit dollars to flow through to adjusted EBITDA. We are not providing formal guidance for free cash flow in fiscal 2024 at this time. However, we do expect to significantly improve our conversion ratio from the 33% we saw in fiscal 2023. As for Q1, we expect to see revenue increase sequentially by approximately 90% to 100%, roughly in line with past seasonality. Note that the 113% sequential growth observed in Q1 of fiscal 2023 was driven by nonrecurring factors related to past supply constraints, including a significant amount of Amp backlog that was cleared in the quarter as well as the launch of Sub Mini. We expect GAAP gross margin for Q1 to be a bit below the low end of our annual guidance range of 45% to 46%, and non-GAAP operating expenses to increase by $45 million to $50 million sequentially, resulting in adjusted EBITDA margin in the mid-teens. Last but not least, to touch briefly on our Google litigation. We suffered a setback in our litigation against Google in the Northern District of California, when the district court overturned the jury verdict awarding us $32.5 million for Google's infringement of one of our zone scene patents. We disagree with this ruling and others that the court made and we have already appealed. On a positive note, an administrative law judge comprehensively rejected Google's second case against us at the International Trade Commission, with a different judge having already indicated that she would be ruling against Google in the first of the cases they had filed. And finally, last week, the Federal Circuit held oral argument on the appeal and cross-appeal from the case we brought against Google at the ITC where the commission ruled that Google infringed 5 valid Sonos patents covering the setup, synchronization, equalization and volume control of smart speakers. Once the appeals process ends, we will be free to pursue our damages case based on these patents that is pending but stayed in the Federal District Court in Los Angeles. While the road has been long and the journey has a ways to go, we remain confident that we will ultimately prevail in our efforts to hold Google accountable for infringing on our patents and that we will obtain a handsome return on our investment in defending our innovations. To wrap up, I'd just like to commend our team for all their work through a challenging year. It speaks volumes about the strength of both our brand and our product portfolio that we were able to continue our strong market share performance despite everyone else in the industry deeply discounting their products. We will continue to drive innovation and quality as that sets us apart in good times and bad, and we can't wait to show you one of the things that we've been working on in the second half of the year. With that, I'll turn it over to questions.