Thank you, Amit, and good afternoon everyone. Q3 was another solid financial quarter across the board with key growth and profitability metrics exceeding our expectations. As I did last quarter, I'll begin the review of our Q3 results by reminding everyone how to best understand Informatica's ARR and GAAP revenue. Our ARR and revenue fall into three basic categories: Cloud subscriptions which we have guided to ARR growth of 35% for the full year, self-managed subscriptions which we are no longer actively selling and which we have guided to decline year-over-year in FY 2023 and maintenance from perpetual licenses sold in the past which we also expect to decline going forward. We also earn a relatively small amount of revenue from implementation and education services which we expect to decline slightly this year as our professional services partners perform more of that work for our customers. This service revenue is not counted as ARR. With that in mind, I'll start with our total ARR for the quarter which was $1.58 billion an increase of 7% over the prior year. This was driven by new cloud workloads and steady renewal rates. We had $108 million in net new total ARR versus the prior year. Foreign exchange negatively impacted total ARR by approximately $1.4 million, in line with expectations when we set our guidance in August. Turning now to the three components of Informatica's ARR. Cloud subscription ARR was $550 million, a 37% increase year-over-year, which was $10 million above the midpoint of our August guidance. Cloud subscription ARR represents 35% of our total ARR, up from 27% a year ago. New workloads and strong renewal rates drove cloud subscription net new ARR of $149 million year-over-year and $37 million quarter-over-quarter. Approximately, 85% of the quarter's cloud new bookings came from new cloud workloads and expansion of existing cloud engagements, with the remaining approximately 15% from on-premise customer migrations. Our cloud subscription net retention rate was 118%, up 3 percentage points year-over-year and up 2 percentage points versus last quarter. Self-managed subscription ARR declined slightly in the quarter, as expected to $528 million. This was flat sequentially and down 2% year-over-year in line with expectations. We expect self-managed subscription ARR to continue declining next year, yielding a negative year-over-year growth rate. This decline is the direct and intentional result of our cloud-only consumption-driven strategy. Subscription ARR, which is simply the sum of cloud ARR and self-managed ARR grew by 15% year-over-year to approximately $1.08 billion, which was more than $22 million above the midpoint of our August guidance. Subscription ARR now represents over 68% of total ARR, up from 64% a year ago. Foreign exchange negatively impacted subscription ARR by approximately $1.5 million again, in line with expectations when we set our guidance in August. The third component of total ARR is maintenance on perpetual licenses, which represents 32% of total ARR. Maintenance ARR was down 6% year-over-year to $499 million in line with expectations. As a reminder, we no longer sell a meaningful amount of perpetual licenses. As a result, we expect maintenance to continue declining gradually at a fairly constant rate. Through the third quarter of this year, we have migrated 5% of our legacy maintenance base to cloud subscription, up from 4.5% last quarter with an average 2:1 ARR uplift ratio. In total, these three components summed to 7% total ARR growth for the quarter. Cloud subscription growth of 37% drove this increase, offset by intentional and expected gradual declines of self-managed subscription and maintenance. This financial trajectory of high cloud growth combined with the gradual decline of self-managed and maintenance is the direct result of our cloud-only consumption-driven strategy. We expect these trends to continue in the fourth quarter and beyond. We saw good growth in our average subscription ARR per customer in the third quarter, growing to over $283,000, a 13% increase year-over-year. We have 3,799 active subscription customers, an increase of 78 subscription ARR customers year-over-year. Now I'd like to review our revenue results for the third quarter. GAAP total revenues were $409 million, an increase of 10% year-over-year. This exceeded the midpoint of our August guidance range by $9 million, due to a slower-than-expected decline in maintenance revenue and strong renewals. Revenue from our Privitar acquisition was not material in the quarter. Foreign exchange positively impacted total revenues by approximately $5 million on a year-over-year basis. The accounting impact of Informatica shift to cloud subscription sales and away from self-managed on-prem sales was a headwind to revenue again this quarter. If our cloud versus self-managed new bookings mix was the same this quarter as it was in Q3 last year, total revenues would have been approximately $19 million higher than we reported increasing our year-over-year revenue growth rate to approximately 15%. Subscription revenue increased 22% year-over-year to $262 million, representing 64% of total revenue compared to 58%, a year ago. Our quarterly subscription renewal rate was approximately 94%, flat year-over-year. Maintenance and professional services revenues were $147 million, representing 36% of total revenue in Q3 in line with expectations. Stand-alone maintenance revenue represented 30% of total revenue for the quarter. Our maintenance renewal rate in the quarter was 95%, also in line with prior periods. Implementation consulting and education revenues comprised the remainder of this category, down $7 million year-over-year representing 5% of total revenue. The decline in services revenue is due primarily to the lower attach rate of Informatica implementation services to new IDMC sales. Our implementation partners are taking on more and more of that work, free us to focus on high-value software and consulting sales. Turning to the geographic distribution of our business. US revenues grew 8% year-over-year to $263 million, representing 64% of total revenue while international revenue grew 14% year-over-year to $145 million. Using exchange rates from Q3 last year, international revenue would have been approximately $5 million lower in the quarter, representing international revenue growth of 10% year-over-year. Consumption-based IDUs are a frictionless way to access the IDMC platform and are a core part of our strategy. Approximately, 60% of third quarter cloud new bookings were IP-based deals IP does now represent 45% of total cloud subscription ARR, up two percentage points sequentially. The remainder of our Q3 cloud bookings were also sold under multiyear consumption-based pricing such as, customer or supplier records for our MDM products. Now I'd like to move on to our profitability metrics. Please note, that I will discuss non-GAAP results unless otherwise stated. In Q3, our gross margin was 82% up two percentage points year-over-year even as our software sales mix shifts to the cloud. Operating expenses were consistent with expectations. Operating income was approximately $128 million for the quarter, growing 53% year-over-year and exceeding the midpoint of our August guidance range by $13 million. Operating margin was 31.3%, an 8.8 percentage point improvement from 22.5% a year ago. Adjusted EBITDA was $132 million and net income was $81 million. Net income per diluted share was $0.27, based on approximately 297 million outstanding diluted shares the basic share count was approximately 289 million shares. Q3 Adjusted unlevered free cash flow after-tax was $96 million, better than expectations due to higher operating income performance and collections and lower cash taxes. Adjusted unlevered free cash flow after-tax margin was 23.5%. Cash paid for interest in the quarter was $38 million. Keep in mind that our free cash flow from quarter-to-quarter, can be quite volatile based on working capital fluctuations and other nonlinear cash items such as tax payments. We ended the third quarter in a strong cash position with cash plus short-term investments of $869 million. Total debt outstanding was $1.85 billion and net debt was $978 million, our adjusted EBITDA over the 12 months through the end of the third quarter was $431 million, yielding a net leverage ratio of 2.3 times. Stepping back and looking at our year-to-date results, we were very pleased with our execution so far in fiscal 2023 and we feel like we have good momentum going into Q4. As Amit discussed a few minutes ago today, we announced a restructuring plan that will reduce our global workforce by about 10% and shrink our global real estate footprint. As a result, we expect to incur nonrecurring restructuring charges of approximately $35 million to $45 million, with the majority incurred by the end of the first quarter of 2024. These charges will include cash expenditures for employee transitions, notice period and service payments, employee benefits, real estate-related charges and other costs. We estimate the cost savings benefit of these restructuring actions will be approximately $84 million on a GAAP basis or approximately $70 million on a non-GAAP basis in fiscal 2024 with only a small amount of savings this fiscal year. Importantly this restructuring does not negatively impact our full year 2023 guidance. Turning now to guidance. In Q4, we expect the same trends we have been seeing so far this year to continue. Namely, our new sales will be predominantly cloud and we expect our cloud ARR to grow by 35% year-over-year and because we are no longer selling a significant amount of self-managed subscriptions or perpetual licenses, self-managed subscription ARR and maintenance ARR is expected to decline on both a sequential and year-over-year basis. We delivered better than expected results again in Q3 and have good momentum going into Q4. That being said, Q4 is our biggest quarter of the year and still face a considerable amount of uncertainty in the macro environment. Therefore, we believe it is prudent to reaffirm our previously issued full year guidance for revenue and ARR. With respect to our non-GAAP operating income and unlevered free cash flow, however, we are raising our full year guidance. We now expect non-GAAP operating income to be in the range of $430 million to $450 million, representing approximately a 25% year-over-year increase at the midpoint. We now expect adjusted unlevered free cash flow after tax to be in the range of $410 million to $430 million, representing approximately a 46% year-over-year increase at the midpoint. At this point in the year, our fourth quarter guidance is simply a derivative of our full year guidance, so I'll just briefly give you the highlights. We expect GAAP total revenue will be in the range of $420 million to $440 million, representing approximately 8% year-over-year growth at the midpoint of the range. We expect subscription ARR to be in the range of $1.098 billion to $1.118 billion, representing approximately 11% year-over-year growth at the midpoint of the range. We expect cloud subscription ARR to be in the range of $604 million to $614 million, representing approximately 35% year-over-year growth at the midpoint. And we expect non-GAAP operating income to be in the range of $130 million to $150 million, representing approximately 23% year-over-year growth at the midpoint. For modeling purposes, I'd like to provide a few more pieces of additional information. First, we expect adjusted unlevered free cash flow after tax for the fourth quarter to be in the range of $114 million to $134 million. Second, we estimate cash paid for interest will be approximately $40 million in the fourth quarter. And for the full year, we estimate cash paid for interest will be approximately $149 million. Third, with respect to income taxes, our Q3 non-GAAP tax rate was 23% and we expect that rate to continue for the full year of 2023. We estimate full year 2023 cash taxes to be approximately $80 million. On a GAAP basis we expect the significant volatility of our income tax provision and rate to continue. For the full year 2023, we expect a GAAP tax provision in line with our cash taxes. And lastly our share count assumptions for the fourth quarter of 2023, we expect basic weighted average shares outstanding to be approximately 292 million shares and diluted weighted average shares outstanding to be approximately 297 million shares. For the full year 2023, we expect weighted average shares outstanding to be approximately $288 million and diluted weighted average shares outstanding to be approximately $293 million. Yesterday, our Board of Directors approved a new share purchase authorization that enables us to buy up to $200 million of our Class A common stock through privately negotiated transactions with individual holders or in the open market. Our committee of the Board will determine the timing amount and terms of any repurchase. While we do not currently have any specific plans to purchase shares this authorization gives us the opportunity to move quickly if and when opportunities arise. And finally at our upcoming Investor Day on Tuesday December 5, we intend to provide a deeper understanding of Informatica's business strategy, product innovation, growth drivers and financial objectives. Those interested in attending in person, please contact Victoria. Operator, you can now open the line for questions.