Thank you, Jeff. I'm also happy to see the progress we have achieved in the transformation of growth so far. Similar to previous calls, I will provide quarter-over-quarter comparisons in addition to the year-over-year changes as we continue to believe the sequential comparisons reflect the trends in the business and provide a measure of effectiveness of the steps we have taken to help position ourselves for long-term sustainable and profitable revenue growth. Starting with the top line, net revenue was $48.3 million in the third quarter, down 7.3% from the second quarter of 2024 and down 21.8% year-over-year, mainly due to fewer repeat orders and lower advertising spend throughout 2024 compared to prior years. This decline was also impacted by a $0.8 million markdown to brick-and-mortar retail revenue. However, as we look toward the fourth quarter, we are encouraged by the gradual stabilization of revenue from repeat customers, which is a significant factor in our continued confidence that we will see sequential revenue growth. Total orders were $0.7 million in Q3, down 3.3% quarter-over-quarter and 22.8% year-over-year, while active customers were also 0.7 million, down 4.8% quarter-over-quarter and 30.4% year-over-year, both of which were influenced by reduced advertising spend relative to prior periods. However, the sequential decline has slowed as our customer base stabilizes in the aggregate and advertising spend has increased to support our initiatives. As a reminder, we define active customers as those customers who have placed an order in the last 12 months. DTC net revenue per order was $67.02 in Q3, down 1% from Q2, but up 2.7% year-over-year. This sequential decline was driven by a higher percentage of first orders, which have lower average net revenue per order. The year-over-year improvements reflect an increase in the average number of units per order, particularly of third-party products as well as favorable product mix and strategic price increases. Gross margin was 53%, down 80 basis points from the second quarter of 2024, mainly due to the retail markdowns mentioned earlier. Year-over-year, gross margin decreased by 80 basis points as well due to the elimination of customer fees and lower product margins as a higher proportion of revenue shifted towards third-party products. Growth brand products as a percentage of net revenue decreased to 38.5%, down 260 basis points quarter-over-quarter and 630 basis points year-over-year, mainly due to the expansion of third-party product offerings, which is a key part of our growth strategy. As we increase our emphasis on expanding third-party assortment, we plan to stop sharing this metric after the fourth quarter of 2024 as it is no longer a critical input to our growth and strategy moving forward. Advertising expenses increased 15.6% in the third quarter compared to the second quarter, but decreased 30.6% compared to the third quarter of 2023 to $2.8 million. The sequential increase is mainly due to an increase in DTC specific advertising as we invest more in the channel due to improving first order conversion rates, offset by a decline in brick-and-mortar retail advertising. Although advertising is still lower year-over-year as we remain disciplined and scale spend efficiently. Product development expense decreased 11.7% quarter-over-quarter, but increased 34.2% year-over-year to $4.8 million. The sequential decline is due to severance costs recorded in the second quarter. The year-over-year increase is due to accelerated depreciation costs. Both were driven by our decision to transition our homegrown e-commerce platform to Shopify technology. SG&A expense decreased 8.8% quarter-over-quarter and 16.7% year-over-year to $24.7 million. The quarter-over-quarter decline is mainly due to the $2.2 million restructuring charge incurred in the prior quarter, lower fulfillment costs from fewer orders and lower stock-based compensation expense. The year-over-year decline is driven by lower fulfillment costs, also from fewer orders and savings, mainly from reductions to personnel, facility, professional fees and technology costs. The sequential and year-over-year decline were partially offset by $1.2 million of costs associated with the moving of the Company's Reno fulfillment center in the current quarter to a lower cost facility. Adjusted EBITDA was breakeven this quarter compared to $1.1 million in the second quarter of 2024 and $0.2 million in Q3 2023. In spite of the revenue headwinds, we maintained strict expense discipline across the organization. Lastly, operating cash flow was $0.8 million, marking our fourth quarter of positive operating cash flow in the last six quarters. In addition to expense discipline, we continue to make progress improving our working capital, particularly reducing our inventory, which has been a source of cash for the last several quarters. Turning now to the balance sheet. We ended the quarter with $55.6 million in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash, down from $82.6 million in Q2. The $27 million decrease reflects our recent $42 million voluntary prepayment of term debt, partially offset by a $15 million investment from Volition Capital, which enabled us to pay off the remaining term debt. We also ended the quarter with an inventory balance of $24.5 million, down $3.3 million quarter-over-quarter, mainly driven by a reduction in Grove branded inventory as we continue to improve our inventory ownership position. Now turning to our outlook. For the fiscal year ending December 31, 2024, we are maintaining our adjusted EBITDA margin guidance at 0.5% to 1.5%, but we are revising our net revenue guidance and now expect 2024 net revenue to be in the range of $200 million to $205 million, a change from $205 million to $215 million guidance we gave previously. We continue to prioritize strict margin and expense discipline, underscoring our commitment to a sustainable and profitable growth model. We are excited by the stabilization in our aggregated customer base, and we look forward to driving sequential revenue growth in the fourth quarter of this year as we continue our transformation into 2025 and beyond. I would now like to turn the call back over to Jeff for some closing remarks.