Thank you, moderator and thanks to everyone for joining us today for our Q2 2022 financial results and business update conference call. I’d like to use our time together today to talk a bit about MARKET, our livestream social shopping platform and provide some initial reactions and data points around Shopfest, which was the 3-day livestream shopping festival we hosted a little over 2 weeks ago now that marked the hard launch of MARKET.live. And of course I will provide insights and perhaps some more color on the information contained in our second quarter 10-Q we filed today which reflects for the most part the results of our SaaS business for the direct sales industry. As to MARKET, let me start by saying that we are planning a major – at least in my opinion – a major announcement regarding MARKET within the next 6 weeks that will include a comprehensive update. Accordingly, my comments here today won’t include some of the bigger going forward initiatives, though I will provide a lot of data points on attendance, engagement, vendor experiences, and insights into how the platform performed. We have been advised that Shopfest was the largest livestream shopping event ever attempted in the U.S. Shopfest consisted of 63 livestream shows over 3 days, featuring over 55 retailers on multiple channels from multiple locations across the country and around the world. We had livestreams from Brazil and Australia and perhaps other countries. Of the 63 shows, our MARKET team produced only 18 of them from studios in New York City and studio in Los Angeles. The 45 other livestreams were produced and hosted by the vendors themselves from their own remote locations using little more than their laptops and mobile devices. So when you think about scalability, this is an important statistic. I am aware of at least one vendor that heard about MARKET on the day before Shopfest started and went from awareness to onboarding and participation in Shopfest, hosting one of the more popular livestreams all in less than 24 hours. So, let me start with the KPIs we focused our team on going into Shopfest, what our objectives were, and how we measured up against those. So, first and foremost, we wanted to demonstrate the platform itself under true commercial deployment. Specifically, we wanted to demonstrate the quality, stability, reliability, scalability, feature set, ease of use by both vendors and shoppers and the overall experience we wanted to create, in fact, to curate for all MARKET participants, an experience that would be the unique hallmark of anyone coming to MARKET.live. As to the build and architecture of the platform, I believe it was apparent to all participants that MARKET is an extremely well-conceived and executed livestream shopping platform on par with any of the world class social media, e-commerce, video and content delivery platforms in the world, and in some cases – even better. Any doubts about our ability to deliver an extraordinary and very valuable piece of technology for our shareholders should now be summarily erased. Everything that we have done up through the date of Shopfest and everything we learned from our trials and tribulations over the past several years, was necessary in order to produce MARKET. We could have the best and biggest vendors and most impressive go-to-market growth strategies, which I believe we do, but without a world class platform, we have very low. By no means do I suggest that we have accomplished our goals that we are done and walking around high-fiving each other in the office are quite the contrary. Now it begins. While our success in delivering the platform has definitely injected a new, contagious passion, energy and enthusiasm among everyone on our team as well as among our partners, we recognize the opportunity for value creation that MARKET represents and unlocking that value is our number one objective, one on which we are laser-focused individually and collectively every single day. What we had not shared until now was how much we had riding on the successful performance of the platform during Shopfest and the reasons we took our time in the planning, testing, and execution of Shopfest. And while I know that was a source of frustration and ridicule from those who wanted to see it launched commercially the day the development was completed, which I completely understand we knew we had to execute our plan the best way we knew how. When I talk about what we had riding on the successful performance of Shopfest, I am referring to potential partnerships and business opportunities for meaningful growth and scale that were all contingent on the successful performance of the platform during Shopfest. And I am going to share more on this in the MARKET update that I will be providing in the coming weeks. As to the overall experience, we wanted to curate for MARKET participants, it’s best described as making it feel personal, certainly interactive and social, but yet an atmosphere where each shopper became part of a group of friends, immersed in a conversation not only with the host, but also with each other. An environment where no one feels like they are being sold, one where they want to buy what their trusted host and friend has available for purchase. Among the many things we learned was that people want to watch and buy from a person, not a brand. They will mark their calendars to join the group of digital friends they form relationships with to chat and shop every week. Those hosts that attract and encourage that environment in their presentations outsell those that don’t by a long shot. We saw the beginnings of these relationship forming activities during Shopfest as we saw people in the chat recognizing one another from previous Shopfest streams and engaging with one another on a more personal level. Think of it like the massive growth and popularity of Facebook Groups, but with shoppable video. That’s why we designed and built MARKET as a destination social shopping platform and not just one-off livestream event plug-in for your website. This is what makes it unique and why we believe it will succeed where others will fail. Our second, but equally important KPI was using Shopfest as a vehicle to create awareness for the platform. Look, the reason for this is obvious, the success of the platform is tied directly to the number of livestream events going on at any given time where these relationships can be formed and fostered. It’s a numbers game. The more people we have with stores on the platform, bringing their own friends, fans and followers, the greater the number of livestreams there will be. Revenue of course will follow. Our focus at least initially is not on the revenue itself, but on the environment and circumstances from which the revenue will flow. To do this, we demonstrated how the platform could accommodate multiple channels of livestreams simultaneously allowing viewers to choose the event and associated groups they wanted to be part of in that moment. As there are more and more simultaneous livestreams happening on the platform, this will become a much more compelling and powerful draw for the platform. We also built the platform so that it could broadcast livestreams simultaneously in real-time over multiple popular social media platforms exposing MARKET to those audiences and drawing them into the MARKET experience. Here is some of the data we have compiled so far about attendance on the MARKET.live feed during the 3 days of Shopfest. I want to note that some of this data is still being scrubbed and cross-referenced so it remains subject to adjustment. Total views on MARKET.live feed were 45,161. Total unique views on MARKET.live were 15,444. These numbers include those who viewed and shopped storefronts but did not watch a livestream. Total attendance for livestream on MARKET.live during Shopfest was 8,511. This number does not include attendees who viewed from Facebook and other social platforms. Total Shopfest video on demand views from the storefronts on MARKET.live as of almost, I am going to say, a week ago, last Tuesday, August 9, was 3,408 and I imagine there is probably quite a bit more since then. So, here is some of the data we have compiled so far from the Facebook feed during the 3 days of Shopfest. Again, this is just the Facebook feed not any of the social media channels, 70,194 views from Facebook during the festival. Now, I want to point out that this is Facebook only and Facebook’s metrics that they use for their algorithms. They count a view as anything over 3 seconds. Notably, if we include the views after Shopfest, up to last week, again, I think Tuesday, 9th, we see those numbers jump to 1,219,672. Again, I assume those numbers are much greater now. All of the numbers I just provided to you from the Facebook-only feed are only for the 18 shows that we produced. This does not include the data from the other 45 livestream shows. We also had 28,014 RSVPs for Shopfest, almost half of whom opted in for text and e-mail updates for all MARKET livestream events. I don’t yet have confirmed engagement data during each stream, but those who watched every stream and the attendee counters for each stated that the vast majority of viewers remained engaged for more than 70% of the shows’ duration and a significant number stayed on till the end of the livestream. This is like really – if you take a look at what kind of data exists for engagement on the platform, just this is very, very impressive number. So, while this data is still being tested and confirmed, it looks like gross merchandise value generated during the event will come in somewhere between $20,000 and $30,000 and the average order size appears to be just over $80. And of course sales in the stores are still continuing. There is a ton of data that has been and continues to be generated and collected and we will be working through the best ways to mine and analyze that data in order to calculate and report the ratios and identify trends. Without exception, every vendor reported that they truly enjoyed their experience with the platform and pledged to continue their presence and participation on MARKET and most have already committed to weekly shows, which you should soon be seeing. Just 3 days ago, on Friday, we implemented a new streamlined onboarding process that will help get vendors through the process much more rapidly and reduce the backlog. As you will learn in the coming weeks in my comprehensive MARKET update that I have referred to, this is an important very well-timed improvement to the platform. We currently have more than 300 vendors committed to MARKET, approximately half of which have open and active stores and appear in the MARKET.live sellers list. Of the balance that have yet to complete the onboarding process as they get close to completing the process we place their names in the sellers list with the notation coming soon. And as the rest get closer, we will add them too. The onboarding process is really – it’s not difficult in any way or time consuming. However, some of the larger vendors have multiple departments responsible for providing certain of the information needed to complete the process. So, like, for example, the people responsible for providing logos and designs are different than the people responsible for uploading inventory SKUs, who in turn are different than the people who have access to and are responsible for providing banking and other financial information. So, just getting those people together and getting them to get it done does take a bit longer. But look, we have a team of people who are dedicated to helping vendors through the onboarding process and in many instances completing it for them. I get a daily report of the status of vendors who are lagging through the process and rest assured we stay on top of all of them to move them through the process as rapidly as we can. As I said before, this is a numbers game and we appreciate how important it is to get more vendors through the process up and running hosting livestreams on the platform. Okay. So that’s MARKET. Let me turn to our SaaS business report. We are and remain the undisputed leading provider of sales enablement applications for the direct sales industry, displacing previous market leaders and would-be competitors, just as I said we would when we entered the space in 2019. Beginning at the end of the second quarter of this year, we expanded our suite of sales enablement tools with the release of the new, innovative sales applications I told you we had in development in prior conference calls. These products, including verbLIVE 2.0 and Pulse, will not only enhance our leadership position in the direct sales space, but put us that much further ahead of the handful of would-be Verb competitors. I am also very happy to announce that we have begun onboarding one of our direct sales clients to our MARKET platform. Now in no way does this replace any of the sales tools to which this client currently subscribes. Their use of MARKET represents an entirely unique and complimentary enhancement to their direct sales business and is perfectly suited to the direct sales industry generally. Post-launch of this client, I fully expect more of our direct sales clients will seek to adopt to MARKET as an enhancement to their business. Consistent with the guidance we provided previously, we expect to see the increased recurring SaaS revenue from the new products in the third and fourth quarter of this year and beyond. I stated in our previous conference calls, our focus has been on building the very high margin SaaS recurring revenue component of our business and reducing the non-digital, non-recurring very low margin legacy component of our business. As we began the exit from the legacy business, which represented a large portion of our total revenue, investors that focused solely on the company’s top line revenue misinterpreted and misread the growth the company was actually experiencing in our SaaS business. I once again urge you to focus on the SaaS revenue component of our business and not on the revenue from a business line we have repeatedly stated we are exiting. For example, just last year, in Q2 of 2021, the legacy non-digital revenue represented 24% of our total revenue. In Q1 of this year it represented only 20% of our total revenue and in Q2 of this year it represents just 10% of our total revenue. As our digital revenue continues to grow, the legacy business low margin revenue becomes a smaller and smaller component of our overall revenue and it continued to grow and as we continue exit out of it, you will see that the top line will continue to grow much more rapidly since that SaaS revenue is no longer just offsetting the reduction of the legacy business revenue. The release of these products also marked the beginning of the next phase of major operational cost reductions we have implemented as first reported in Q4 2021 and that continued up through Q2 of this year. You might recall that R&D expense, which had been the biggest component of our operating expense, was down 22% in Q4 over Q3 2021. We then reported a substantially greater and additional reduction in R&D expense of 42% in Q1 2022 over Q4 2021. And for the second quarter of this year we are reporting an additional reduction of 13% from Q1. Specifically, R&D expenses for Q2 are now just $1.4 million, down from the $3.2 million in the same period last year, representing a 57% reduction. The additional revenue from the newly introduced sales enablement applications and the revenue we expect to generate from our new verticals, including MARKET, together with a new pricing model we are about to introduce to our direct sales clients that will better align our interests with theirs creating a true win-win, coupled with these continuing cost reductions, give us confidence in our ability to achieve positive EBITDA and reduce our reliance on the capital markets. I am going to leave further discussion of our SaaS business results to our CFO, Salman Khan so as not to take additional time on this call. But let me briefly touch on our new professional sports unit vertical. As I discussed in our previous earnings calls, in Q4 2021, we launched our professional sports unit built on our verbTEAMS sales enablement platform. We started with the announcement of the Pittsburgh Penguins in Q4 2021 and since then, we have added many new professional sports teams to the platform and built a really impressive sales pipeline of professional sports teams both in the U.S. and even in other countries. In addition to the Pittsburgh Penguins, we announced the Florida Panthers, the Phoenix Suns, and the Detroit Pistons, and we expect many more announcements. And it’s my continuing expectations that some of these teams will adopt MARKET as part of their fan engagement strategies, among other things. Alright. So I am going to turn it over to our CFO, Salman Khan for more detail around our reported financial performance. Salman?