Thanks, Dan. Good afternoon, everyone. Our discussion today will include non-GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation between our GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures is available, as Matt mentioned, in our earnings release and in the IR section of our website. Differences between our GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures include adjustments related to acquisitions and divestitures, including fair value revenue adjustments, amortization of acquisition-related intangibles, certain other acquisition and divestiture-related expenses, stock-based compensation expenses, accelerated lease costs, IT facilities and infrastructure realignment, as well as certain other items that can vary significantly in amount and frequency from period to period. Let me start today with subscription ARR. As Dan mentioned earlier, Verint's CX automation platform delivers AI business outcomes faster and stronger than any other vendor in the market, and we are seeing growing adoption of our AI solutions from our base as well as from new customers. This growing AI adoption is translating into faster growth. I am pleased to report that our subscription ARR year-over-year growth rate accelerated every quarter last year, and we finished the year strong. In Q4, ARR came in at $712 million, up 5% year over year, ahead of our 4% guidance adjusted for the divestiture. Looking forward, we expect our ARR growth to continue to accelerate. And for the year, we are raising our outlook to $768 million of ARR, representing 8% growth. Behind our ARR growth is strong bookings. In Q4, SaaS ACV bookings from new deals increased 30% year over year to $32 million. I would like to highlight that $32 million was a quarterly record and follows three quarters of strong year-over-year bookings growth from new deals, with 34% growth in Q1, 29% growth in Q2, and 37% growth in Q3. For the full year, SaaS ACV bookings from new deals increased 33%. As a reminder, customer conversions from on-premise applications to the Verint cloud were minimal in fiscal 2025. We also expect minimal conversion bookings in fiscal 2026 as customers continue to take advantage of our hybrid model to add AI without disruptive rip-and-replace programs. Looking ahead, we expect another year of strong new deal bookings growth, driven by customers adding new Verint AI bots and increased usage. As Dan mentioned earlier, in fiscal 2025, we seeded many customers with initial AI deployments, which we expect will increase usage in fiscal 2026. Turning to bundled SaaS revenue, we are pleased with our acceleration from 9% growth in Q1 to 23% growth in Q4, which was also ahead of our guidance. For the year, bundled SaaS revenue grew 17% year over year. Bundled SaaS ARR showed similar trends throughout the year, also with 17% growth at year-end. As a reminder, Verint's AI solutions are only offered in the Verint cloud, and therefore bundled SaaS ARR is a good proxy for our AI growth. Dan shared earlier several examples of customers increasing AI consumption and growing ARR. We are pleased with this AI consumption growth trend, which represents more customers evolving from initial AI experiments to deploying AI at scale. At our Investor Day, we discussed our plan to begin reporting cash generation and cash contribution to help investors understand Verint's growth on a ratable basis. I am pleased to report fiscal 2025 cash generation came in $8 million ahead of guidance, and our cash contribution came in $16 million ahead of guidance. Cash contribution for fiscal 2025 came in at $228 million, an increase of 2% year over year, and drove a 4% increase in free cash flow year over year. To bridge from cash contribution to free cash flow, we subtract CapEx, cash taxes, interest expense, as well as adjust for the timing of collections and payables and other changes in working capital. Turning to revenue. As Dan discussed earlier, customers are embracing our hybrid cloud approach to adopt AI without disruption, which means they continue to purchase our software in both unbundled and bundled SaaS models. From a revenue perspective, revenue accounting for our bundled SaaS model is ratable, and revenue accounting for unbundled SaaS model is not ratable. Therefore, the timing and term length of unbundled deals can make year-over-year and sequential trends not meaningful and difficult to predict. In contrast to revenue, ARR presents a ratable view of both unbundled and bundled models, providing consistent and meaningful trends period over period. Looking back in fiscal 2025, ARR growth accelerated each quarter, reflecting the true growth and trajectory of the business, while revenue trends fluctuated due to the timing of unbundled SaaS revenue. In Q4, revenue came in at $254 million versus our guidance of $277 million. All revenue streams came in as expected except for unbundled SaaS. As you know, our unbundled SaaS stream includes revenue from both renewals of multiyear contracts and bookings of new deals. Looking back on Q4, revenue from unbundled SaaS renewals came in as expected. The entire revenue shortfall was due to bookings of a few new deals in the unbundled SaaS model that did not materialize in the quarter. These deals were from existing customers, not competitive, and we expect these customers to continue to expand over time. Even with a few unbundled deals not materializing within the quarter, Q4 was still a record bookings quarter. Even with a record quarter, though, our bookings mix drove unbundled SaaS revenue below our expectations. As a reminder, the mix of unbundled and bundled SaaS bookings does not change the ARR, which is ratable for all deals. In fiscal 2026, the unbundled booking mix will also be difficult to predict, and we will therefore take a different approach to revenue guidance this year. Also, similar to fiscal 2025, we do not expect quarterly revenue trends to be meaningful due to the timing of unbundled SaaS revenue. Now turning to guidance. We are providing guidance in two ways. First, guidance for a ratable view of the business is measured by subscription ARR, cash generation, and cash contribution. Our ratable guidance will be provided with a narrow range of plus or minus 1%. Second, we will continue to provide guidance for revenue and non-GAAP diluted EPS as we always have, but revenue will be provided with a wider range of plus or minus 3%. For our ratable metrics, our guidance is as follows. We are increasing our outlook for ARR in Q4 2026 from $760 million to $768 million, plus or minus 1%, reflecting approximately 8% growth year over year. And we are targeting $960 million for cash generation, with a range of plus or minus 1%. At the midpoint of our cash generation guidance, we expect around $245 million of cash contribution. For revenue and non-GAAP diluted EPS, our guidance is as follows: We are targeting $960 million of revenue with a range of plus or minus 3% and driving non-GAAP diluted EPS of $2.93 at the midpoint. Also, at the midpoint of our revenue guidance, we expect a gross margin of around 73% with another year of operating margin expansion. Regarding below-the-line assumptions, for the full year, we expect interest and other expense net of approximately $7 million, net income from non-controlling interest of around $1 million, a cash tax rate of around 11%, and approximately 72.2 million fully diluted shares reflecting our buybacks to date. Now let me give you a bit more color on our outlook for Q1 of fiscal 2026. For modeling purposes, for ARR, year-over-year growth will accelerate to 6% in Q1. For the sequential trend, keep in mind that seasonality typically drives higher usage of our software in Q4 compared to Q1. For revenue, we expect a range of between $190 million to $200 million. Our range reflects another quarter of strong year-over-year bundled SaaS revenue growth of more than 17% and lower unbundled SaaS revenue year over year. As we have discussed in the past, unbundled SaaS multiyear renewals vary by quarter, and we expect unbundled SaaS revenue in Q1 to be lower compared to Q1 last year. At the midpoint of our revenue range, we expect driving non-GAAP diluted EPS to $0.13 in Q1. Turning to our balance sheet. We continue to be in a very good financial position. Our net debt remains well under one times last twelve-month EBITDA and is further supported by our strong cash flow. With regard to capital allocation, we expect the largest use of our free cash flow to be buybacks. As a reminder, we started a new $200 million stock buyback program in September. I would also like to mention that we recently increased the size of our revolver to $500 million and extended the term to 2030. This new revolver can be used to pay down our existing convertible notes upon maturity as we are not currently planning to issue a new convertible. We can also use the revolver for other purposes, including to potentially accelerate our stock buyback program. In summary, we are pleased with our strong AI momentum. Throughout fiscal 2025, ARR growth accelerated, and we overachieved our Q4 ARR guidance. We expect this momentum to continue, and we are raising our ARR outlook for the current year. In fiscal 2026, to help investors better understand the trends of our business, in addition to providing guidance for revenue and non-GAAP diluted EPS with a wide range, we will provide guidance on a ratable basis for ARR, cash generation, and cash contribution with a narrow range. We believe a ratable view is a better way to understand the underlying growth trends in our business. With that, operator, we will now open for questions.