Thank you, John, and good morning, everyone. As Steve mentioned, revenue profits on free cash flow declined year-over-year due mainly to a reduction of equipment backlog in the prior year quarter on the intentional reduction of non-strategic revenue. Excluding these factors, revenue would have declined mid-single digits. Revenue on adjusted operating profit were below expectations, due mainly to the effect of organizational change on our sales operations and constrained in a effort device, which affected equipment revenue as well as a more measured implementation of workforce reduction action within the quarter than originally anticipated. Turning to profitability. As part of our offering simplification efforts, we incurred $36 million of inventory charge associated with the exit of certain production print manufacturing operations. All profitability commentary to follow excludes this impact. Adjusted gross margin declined 240 basis points year-over-year due to lower revenue, including the termination of Fuji royalty income on higher product on freight costs partially offset by the benefit of structural cost reduction. Adjusted operating margin of 2.2% declined 470 basis points year-over-year due to lower gross profit on higher bad debt expense reflected in part a reserve release in the prior year period, partially offset by the benefit of structural cost reduction actions. Non-selling G&A, excluding bad debt expense, declined close to 10% in Q1, reflecting the partial quarter of headcount reductions on the benefit of cost action implemented in the prior year. Adjusted other expenses net were $3 million higher year-over-year due to an increase in non-finance interest expense, partially offset by the reversal of previously accrued contingent consideration on favorable business tax settlements. Adjusted tax rate is a 22.2% tax benefit as compared to 15.5% tax expense in the prior year period. The decrease in tax rates reflect additional tax benefit in the current quarter from the redetermination of certain unrecognized tax position on mix of earnings. Adjusted EPS of $0.06 in the first quarter was $0.43 lower than the prior year, driven by lower operating income on higher interest expense partially offset by the benefit of a lower share count on tax rate. GAAP loss per share of $0.94 was $1.37 lower than the prior year, reflecting lower revenue on gross profit, higher interest expense on non-service retirement costs, as well as roughly $100 million after-tax or $0.80 per share of asset impairment on restructuring-related charge associated with the Company reinvention, including activity relating to the exit of manufacturing for certain production equipment on the execution of geographic simplification initiative in Latin America. Let me now review revenue and cash flow in more detail. Starting with revenue. Equipment sales of $290 million in Q1 declined around 26% year-over-year in actual and constant currency. So prior year effect of backlog reduction on geographic simplification contributed around 16 percentage points of the year-over-year decline. Equipment sales were also affected by the organizational changes implemented during this quarter, constrained in A4 devices on accelerated buying of competitive Japanese product in advance of communicated price increases for our competitor. As Steve noted, despite a slower-than-anticipated start to the year, we are seeing the intended benefit of our organizational change on equipment order, with year-over-year growth in order accelerating throughout the quarter. Total equipment revenue outpaced installation activity due to a favorable product mix. Installation declined across all product due mainly to prior year backlog reductions on the effect of Salesforce organization changes which are now complete. Our sales revenue of $1.2 billion declined 8.5% in actual currency year-over-year and 9.3% in constant currency. Including the effect of non-strategic lower margin paper on IT endpoint device placement, which we plan to continue to reduce over time as communicated in January, as well as the effect of geographic simplification, the termination of the Fuji royalty and absence of PARC revenue, post-sales revenue declined modestly. Consistent with last quarter, I will provide additional commentary to help clarify underlying trend in our core businesses, which exclude the effect of certain non-recurring items. For Q1, the prior year reduction in equipment backlog contributed around 400 basis points to the year-over-year decline in total revenue. Lower sales on non-strategic paper on IT endpoint device contributed around 200 basis points to the decline. The effect of no Fuji royalty revenue on strategic action taken to simplify our business, including geographic simplification, contributed another 200 points of the decline. When this combined effect are removed, revenue from our core business declined mid-single digits this quarter, mainly reflected the previously noted effect on equipment revenue and to a lesser extent declining printed page volumes. For the remainder of the year, we expect revenue, excluding the effect of backlog reduction on decline in non-strategic revenue, to be slightly higher on a year-over-year basis. Let's now review cash flow. Free cash flow was the use of $89 million in Q1, lower by $159 million year-over-year. Operating cash flow was a use of $79 million in Q1, a decline of $157 million versus the prior year quarter. The decline was mainly driven by lower operating profit, higher use of working capital, higher payment for incentive compensation accrued in the prior year, restructuring payment associated with reinvention on higher pension contribution partially offset by higher net cash associated with a reduction in finance receivable. Finance assets were a source of cash this quarter of $188 million compared to a source of cash of $120 million in the prior year, reflecting the benefit of our forward flow program with HPS on lower origination. Working capital was the use of cash of $135 million, resulting in a $69 million year-over-year decrease in cash, driven mainly by an increase in inventory related to a change in contractual term with a large OEM vendor. We expect inventory level to normalize throughout the year on working capital seasonality to improve during the next three quarters, in line with improvement in our operating profit trajectory. Investing activities were a use of cash of $17 million, consistent with the prior year quarter. Financing activities were a source of cash of $261 million, reflecting the issuance of $900 million of senior unsecured unconvertible notes, partially offset by around $450 million of cash used to repay outstanding notes, purchase of cap call option and paid for deferred issuance cost along with $132 million of secured debt payment on dividend of $37 million. Turning to segment. Xerox Financial Services or XFS origination volume declined 35% year-over-year, reflecting XFS change in strategy to return its focus toward captive-only financing solutions. XFS finance receivable balance declined 10% sequentially in actual currency due to the runoff of existing finance receivable on HPS funding of XFS origination. As previously highlighted, we expect our finance receivable balance to continue to decline on normalized closer to $1 billion by 2027. In Q1, XFS revenue was down 11% year-over-year due to lower finance income on other fees associated with the decline in XFS finance receivable balance, partially offset by higher commissions from the sales of finance receivable assets. Segment profit for XFS was $18 million lower year-over-year, mainly due to higher bad debt expense reflecting a reserve release in the prior year period, which was partially offset by modestly higher gross profit on lower intercompany commissions. Print and other revenue fell 13% year-over-year in Q1 due to lower equipment on post-sales revenue for the reason previously mentioned. Print and other segment profit declined $67 million versus the prior-year quarter, driven by lower revenue partially offset by structural cost efficiencies. Turning to capital structure. We ended Q1 with $772 million of cash, cash equivalent on restricted cash. Around $2.2 billion of the remaining $3.6 billion of our outstanding debt support our finance asset, with a remaining debt of around $1.4 billion attributable to the non-leasing business. Total debt consists of senior unsecured bonds, finance receivable secured borrowing, term loan debt on our new convertible note. During the quarter, we took advantage of favorable market conditions to refinance our near-term debt maturities, which resulted in an extension of our maturity profile at a slightly higher interest rate. We raised $900 million of unsecured debt, comprised of $500 million in senior unsecured and $400 million in senior convertible notes at an effective interest rate of 6.6%. Proceeds were used to repay $83 million of outstanding 2024 notes on $362 million of outstanding 2025 notes and for issuance costs, including the purchase of a cap call option to raise the effective strike price of -- on the convertible note from $20.84 to $28.34. Unused proceeds from the debt issuance will be used to repay the outstanding 2024 notes in May on selectively repaid debt balance with higher rate of interest throughout the year. As a result of the refinancing transaction, we have no single maturity exceeding $400 million until 2028, greatly enhancing financial flexibility as we execute our reinvention and invest in our digital and IT services businesses. As a result of the cap call purchase on our election of net share settlement treatment for the convertible note, economic or non-GAAP EPS dilution does not begin until our share price exceeds $28.34. Finally, I will address guidance. For revenue, we continue to expect a decline of 3% to 5% in constant currency in 2024. As a reminder, included in this guidance are around 400 basis points of effect from non-recurring headwind associated with backlog reduction in the prior year, the strategic exit or de-emphasis of certain businesses, lower paper sales, and other non-strategic actions. Excluding the cumulative effect of these items, core business revenue is expected to be roughly flat year-over-year, reflecting stable print demand, growth in digital and IT services, and neutral macroeconomic conditions. The effect of geographic on offering simplification action taken to date are not expected to be material to 2024 financial results. As future strategic action involving product or geographic simplification are taken and become more material in the aggregate, we will update guidance accordingly. In terms of quarterly cadence, we expect sequential improvement in year-over-year revenue trajectory throughout the year. We continue to expect 2024 adjusted operating income margins to be at least 7.5%. A significant portion of the expected year-over-year improvement in adjusted operating income is associated with cost reduction already taken, including the reduction in workforce announced in January. Our pipeline of near-term operating efficiency initiative provide visibility to cost savings sufficient to achieve the full-year adjusted operating income target of at least 7.5%. Similar to revenue, we expect quarterly sequential improvement in adjusted operating income margin throughout the year. Free cash flow is expected to be at least $600 million in 2024, aided by the reduction in our finance receivable balance. Free cash flow guidance is inclusive of around $130 million of expected restructuring payment and $50 million of incremental pension payment. In summary, Q1 results were affected by difficult prior year compare on the effect of strategic action taken to drive long-term improvement in our operation. We are encouraged by the momentum we see following the reorganization. An improved debt maturity profile and our capacity to generate substantial free cash flow position us well to fund the repositioning of our business toward opportunities with higher rate of underlying growth. We'll now open the line for Q&A.