Thank you, Barry, and good morning, everyone. Let's first go through the consolidated highlights for the quarter. On a reported basis, revenue declined 1.9% year-over-year, while total comparable adjusted revenue was relatively flat, increasing 0.5% to $545 million. We reported first quarter GAAP net income of $2.8 million or $0.06 per diluted share, down from $9.6 million or $0.22 per share in the first quarter of 2022. Adjusted EBITDA came in at $100 million, up 0.8% and up 2.1% on a comparable adjusted basis from last year. Improvements in promo were partially offset by checks and data, which was impacted by the 2022 business exits. In addition, we had changes to our benefits plan that help smooth some corporate benefits costs out better across the quarters. Comparable adjusted EBITDA margins were 18.4%, up 30 basis points year-over-year. First quarter adjusted diluted EPS came in at $0.80, down from $1.05 in last year's first quarter. This decrease was primarily driven by interest expense and depreciation and amortization. In the first quarter, we also completed a $200 million interest rate swap, which replaced the existing 2019 swap that expired on March 20, 2023. We also modified our existing credit facility and interest rate swaps to utilize SOFR as the term reference rate in these agreements. With this replacement swap, our debt remains approximately 60% fixed rate, which should partially insulate the company from future rate hikes. Our guidance assumes a may rate increase with SOFR reaching a high of roughly 5% and no rate reductions in 2023. Before going through the segments, I'd like to provide some additional details on our ERP implementation. As the system went live, we experienced some challenges that did have an impact on revenue and profit. Notably, backlog is built up mostly in February, but improvements occurred throughout March. We are now operating largely as usual and have satisfied the backlog of orders created by the transition. The Checks segment's profitability was particularly impacted, which I will detail in a moment, but overall company profitability was impacted by roughly 80 basis points. Despite these near-term issues, the long-term benefits of ERP implementation remains. Examples include savings related to legacy IT system costs, third-party supplier spend and improvements in working capital and supply chain. We also expect to have several million dollars of future value to be saved through operating on a more streamlined end-to-end ecosystem. Finally, the reduction of numerous legacy ERP systems will reduce the risk inherent in operating unsupported and nonstandard systems in our acquired businesses and within our legacy Check and Promo businesses. This was a massive undertaking, and we are very pleased that has been materially completed. This will also effectively mark the end of increases in operating expenses to modernize the antiquated infrastructure, and now we continue to focus on driving the benefit. Now turning to our segment details, starting with our growth businesses, Payments and Data. Payments grew first quarter revenue 3.5% year-over-year to $172 million, with Merchant Services growing 7%. As we have previously indicated, we anticipate slower growth for a few quarters as all of Payments was up against tough year-over-year comps. We still expect growth rates to improve as the year progresses. Strength in Merchant Services from government and nonprofit areas was partially offset by modest softness in consumer spending patterns. While the merchant business is subject to overall market conditions, we remain confident that we have many levers across our Payments portfolio to still deliver our guidance for the year. Payments adjusted EBITDA margins were 21.2%, down 70 basis points from the prior year, mostly driven by volume and cost pressures related to our lockbox consolidation efforts. We closed 2 lockbox sites this quarter with a third expected to be completed this month. These changes will further improve operating performance, and we expect between 100 and 200 basis points of margin expansion in subsequent quarters. For 2023, we continue to expect to see mid-single-digit revenue growth and adjusted EBITDA margins in the low to mid-20% range. The data results were down year-over-year and a little softer than we expected due to having to rebuild the pipeline from the strong fourth quarter. On a reported basis, Data's revenue declined 15.7% from the first quarter of 2022 to $59 million. Comparable adjusted revenue decreased 7.7% year-over-year, adjusting for the $6 million of divested revenue related to last year's Australian web hosting divestiture. As Barry mentioned, Data was up against some tough comps and experienced the impact of the campaign shifts into the fourth quarter, and the results still include the web hosting business, which declined 11.8% this quarter. If you combine the performance of the two quarters, DDM increased a strong 6.6%. Taking these factors into account, we expect to see a solid rebound in revenue growth in the second quarter. Data's adjusted EBITDA margin in the quarter increased 120 basis points year-over-year to 26.1%, largely due to product mix and disciplined expense management. On a comparable adjusted basis, EBITDA margins improved 60 basis points. For 2023, we continue to expect to see low single-digit revenue growth on a comparable adjusted basis. We also expect to see comparable adjusted EBITDA margins in the low 20% range. Turning now to our Print businesses, Promo and Checks. Promo's first quarter revenue was $136 million up 2.2% on a reported basis. Comparable adjusted revenue increased 8.1%, driven by new sales wins and pricing actions and adjusting for $7 million of divested revenue from last year's many business exits. Promo's adjusted EBITDA margins increased 100 basis points year-over-year to 13.8% as we benefited from continued pricing actions and improvements in operations and cost structure. On a comparable adjusted basis, EBITDA margins improved 50 basis points from the first quarter of 2022. For 2023, we continue to expect to see low single-digit comparable adjusted revenue growth and adjusted EBITDA margins in the mid-teens. Check's first quarter revenue decreased 4.5% from last year to $179 million as the business continues to return to expected secular declines. Demand remains predictable, and we continue to take responsible price actions and maintain high retention rates. First quarter adjusted EBITDA margins were 42.8%, down 150 basis points year-over-year due to the ERP-related challenges I mentioned, mostly occurring in February, we did not see a significant decline in volumes, but we did see an impact on some higher profit specialty and expedited orders. Over the past six weeks, the system has been operating as expected and bookings remain on trend. For 2023, we continue to expect mid-single-digit revenue declines and adjusted EBITDA margins in the mid-40% range. Turning now to our balance sheet and cash flow. We ended the quarter with a net debt level of $1.66 billion, flat compared to the first quarter of 2022. Our net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio was 4x at the end of the quarter, unchanged from a year ago. Clearly, our rate of debt paydown and reduction in leverage ratio will not be a perfectly linear line. The impact of the first quarter do not change any of our projections, and we remain on track for our goals for the year. Our long-term strategic target remains approximately 3x. Free cash flow, defined as cash provided by operating activities less capital expenditures was expected to be negative in the first quarter, just as we outlined on the last call. However, free cash flow of negative $32 million was somewhat less than anticipated impacted by temporary changes in working capital related to the ERP implementation. This compares to a positive $13.5 million in the first quarter of 2022, and the decrease was primarily driven by the expected increases in CapEx, taxes and interest. Once again, the negative free cash flow was anticipated, and we've already seen a recovery early in the second quarter, which gives us confidence free cash flow can remain on track for the year. Our Board approved a regular quarterly dividend of $0.30 per share on all outstanding shares. The dividend will be payable on June 5, 2023, to all shareholders of record as of market closing on May 22, 2023. To build on Barry's comments around capital allocation, we are responsibly investing the significant free cash flow generated by our core Checks business into Payments and Data businesses that we believe can generate more robust growth over time. Our current process is disciplined and our priorities for capital allocation are clear: reducing our debt and net leverage, delivering high-return internal investments and paying our dividend. We facilitate a rigorous annual planning process, ensuring all investments have a compelling business case and target returns above a 15% hurdle rate. We returned value to shareholders through our dividend, which is currently $0.30 per share per quarter and equates to a very attractive roughly 8% yield. We continue to review the Data with our Board, and our current focus is to grow out of that high yield through improving business performance. Finally, we remain focused on accelerating our rate of debt paydown through even more improved EBITDA and free cash flow growth that we can get back below 3x levered. We plan to share more details on upcoming calls. Turning now to guidance. Today, we are affirming our expectations for 2023, keeping in mind all figures are approximate and reflect the expected impact of the web hosting and logo divestiture, which are now expected to close this month. We continue to expect revenue of $2.145 billion to $2.21 billion, adjusted EBITDA of $390 million to $405 million, adjusted EPS of $2.90 to $3.25 and free cash flow of $80 million to $100 million. As we mentioned on our previous call, on a comparable adjusted basis, 2023 revenue represents a range of negative 1% to positive 2% growth. The comparable adjusted EBITDA range represents negative 2% to positive 2% growth. Adjusted EPS is expected to decline year-over-year due to the full year impact of rising interest rates incremental depreciation amortization and an estimated now $0.20 impact from the announced divestiture. However, after factoring the impact of the divestiture, the free cash flow guide remains an increase year-over-year on a comparable adjusted basis. Also, in order to assist with your modeling, our guidance continues to assume the following: interest expense of $120 million to $125 million and adjusted tax rate of 26% and depreciation and amortization of $170 million, of which acquisition amortization is approximately $75 million, an average outstanding share count of 43.7 million shares and capital expenditures of approximately $100 million. Among other things, this guidance is subject to prevailing macroeconomic conditions, including interest rates, labor supply issues, inflation and the impact of other divestitures. To summarize, while we have additional work to do, we are encouraged with our first quarter results and believe we are off to a solid start to 2023. Our ERP implementation is now live, and we expect to see significant benefits going forward. As we move through 2023, in addition to continued revenue growth, we are also expecting increased operational efficiencies, which should help us grow EBITDA, improve free cash flow, pay down debt and lower our leverage ratio. Operator, we are now ready to take questions.