Thank you, Chris. We had a strong start to '24 achieving 25% growth in ARR, while closing one M&A transaction, [ we're ] announcing a second. Our subscription services business is [ clicking ] and we feel confident we'll be able to continue to drive growth while turning EBITDA positive in Q3. Crucially, our products continue to be validated as standalone best-in-class, while working better together, helping prove the value of our unified solution and demonstrating to our customers that buying more from PAR does not sacrifice functionality, but rather generates better outcomes. This a point that I really wish to underscore again. Each of our products generates better experiences on other PAR products, thereby enhancing total stickiness and expanding sales opportunities beyond what a single product sale could generate. The flywheel at PAR is real. For the first quarter, subscription services ARR organically grew by 25% when compared to Q1 '23. When we add Stuzo's contribution, ARR now stands at $185.7 million, a 60% increase from the first quarter last year. Additionally, once TASK closes, our current ARR would be over $225 million on a proforma basis. In Q1 '24, all of our products grew and PAR achieved 25% organic [ year-over-year ] expansion without material contribution from large logos we've signed the past few months, notably Burger King and Wendy's. As I mentioned in last call, we're going to be reporting in 2 segments: Operator Cloud, which includes Brink, Data Central and Payments; and Engagement Cloud, which includes MENU, Punchh and Stuzo. Simply put, we are reporting in the same manner as we are organized internally. Our operator cloud solutions predominantly work with IT and operations teams, while our engagement cloud solutions work with marketing and digital teams. Operator Cloud ARR grew 39% to $78.5 million in Q1 when compared to the same period last year. Operator cloud growth is being driven by increased win rates at Brink and continued ARPU improvement. Operator Cloud ARPU increased by 22% from the same period last year due to higher value deals, API monetization, price increases and PAR payment services go live. We expect the growth in ARPU to continue given current white space and existing high value accounts as well as a robust pipeline. Brink is our most strategic product, and when selected by an enterprise, it presents an opportunity to cross-sell additional PAR products. POS remains the heartbeat of the restaurant where scalability, stability and extensibility are central tenants of successful operations. This is demonstrated by the fact that Brink received almost 1 billion API [ pings ] per month across the relatively small number of stores. The mission critical nature of POS for in-store, above the store and kitchen is where we feel the true mission criticality of our solution lies. We've ramped up our teams for the BK project where we expect rapid [ installed ] velocity to start as of Q2. Payments continues to accelerate its growth and more than doubled year-over-year. While Q1 is a seasonally slow period with lower processing volume, PAR payments managed to achieve its highest annualized gross processing volume run rate of $2.4 billion. We achieved this via the full rollout of 1,100 store chain and 4 additional restaurant concepts. Each of these enterprise benefits from operational efficiencies, cost savings and increased customer engagement by leveraging PARPay across multiple PAR products. Looking forward, PARPay is becoming a native infrastructure across all of our products, which has led to very high growth and the strongest pipeline we have ever had. With the recently announced acquisition of Stuzo and TASK, the team is fully engaged in expanding PARPay into new verticals, which will continue to drive deal volume, customer adoption and materially higher margins. Data Central delivered a strong Q1. The quarter include the Go Live at Love's Travel Center. We continue to build out a robust pipeline of business opportunities for Data Central for the attachment to Brink and PAR Payment deals with multiple Tier 1 concepts in the funnel. We feel very bullish about our ability to drive cross-sell, especially as Brink works through its very large pipeline of deals this year. Our operator cloud offerings provide less complexity, lower total cost of ownership, enhanced security and reliable payment processing. Operator cloud products remain highly sticky, which we expect only to be strengthened in difficult macroeconomic times. Our engagement cloud, which includes Punchh, Menu and now Stuzo, continued its momentum with a stronger than expected quarter. Deals closed in the second half of last year are starting to go live and our year-over-year ARR growth excluding Stuzo was 11%. Meanwhile, our platform and tech [ debt ] investments are helping lower customer terms, improve customer satisfaction and expand hosting margin. We also continued solid sales momentum in Q1 with some strong brand wins, including Wendy's and the leading national chicken chain. Looking ahead, we expect Punchh to be a strong profit contributor to PAR and the engagement cloud solution to drive stable growth. At the same time, we're announcing a launch of exciting new functionality in our Punchh wallet. This solution will help enable seamless payment and redemption flows and drive material cross-sell opportunities, further increasing the value and implied stickiness of the PAR product suite. MENU, our digital ordering application, also delivered in improved Q1 by going live in more than 1,200 sites across 5 new logos, including major chains like Beef 'O' Brady's, Burger King and a 700-store coffee chain. The newest part of engagement cloud is our recent acquisition of Stuzo. Just as a refresher, Stuzo is a leading digital engagement software provider to the convenience and [ fuel ] retailer industry, including its open commerce platform, which empowers C-Stores to gain more share of customer wallet and drive customer lifetime value. The combination of Punchh and Stuzo allows us to offer best-in-class loyalty and digital engagement products across 2 food service markets, restaurant and C-Store. Additionally, with Stuzo, PAR is now the leading technology provider for convenience stores with over 25,000 customer sites and substantial opportunities for innovation in the C-Store industry with a TAM of 150,000 stores domestically. Stuzo also provides the opportunity for additional cross-sell opportunities for other PAR products into a new customer base with material stronger unit economics. Engagement cloud's ARR now totals more than $107 million with Stuzo's contribution at the end of Q1. Also, as we previously reported Stuzo's trailing 12 months adjusted EBITDA was $14 million. Although Q1 only had revenue contribution from Stuzo for around 3 weeks, the positive impacts for the full Q2 and full year '24 will certainly be meaningful. We continue to see PAR's uniquely positioned in the food service technology sector with best-in-class software across key operational and engagement pillars. Our ability to guarantee better together experiences across our products while separately enabling a robust integration infrastructure keeps us ahead of single product competitors that only control one part of the better together equation and are dependent on third-party integrations for customer experiences. Moving to hardware, we had a softer than normal Q1 due to increased seasonality issues and a shifting demand environment in our legacy restaurant non-Brink base. Hardware sales are always hard to predict given their sensitivity to the macroenvironment and as such, we'll continue to forecast conservative numbers to protect us from getting ahead of ourselves. We are focusing our efforts to make up this shortfall and believe there are opportunities to drive sales and hardware, namely increase McDonald's sales during their convention year and with the recent favorable industry response to our newly released terminal, the PAR Wave. Additionally, we're focusing on selling hardware to the few concepts who use Brink, who have not historically used our hardware as well as current Brink customers that will benefit from an updated equipment. Additionally, with a near a 100% attachment rate of hardware to upcoming Brink projects, hardware will be able to tap into new large cap customers in the near future. Hardware white space will only continue to grow and this is truly an issue of when, not if. Moving to expenses. Our non-GAAP operating expenses grew 7% when compared to Q1 last year and excluding Stuzo. Almost the entire OpEx increase is associated with the Burger King and Wendy's rollouts that will have significant return on investment and that cost will then rationalize downward. In addition, earlier this year, we right sized our go-to-market teams giving us additional expense tailwinds and we expect to end 2024 at a lower quarterly OpEx than we started, excluding our acquisitions, so similar to last year where we expect ARR to grow meaningfully without adding operating expense. This rigid expense management combined with consistent organic ARR growth will allow our company as we sit today to be EBITDA positive by the third quarter of this year. What I'm most proud about though, as I just mentioned, is that we also expect PAR OpEx excluding Stuzo to actually come down through '24. Said differently, I expect this to grow at the rates we're growing without additional operating expenses, and of course any accretive M&A only accelerates profitability. To provide more detail, I want to walk through the underlying margin for our subscription services business, which will provide clarity on how healthy our unit economics are becoming. These numbers exclude TASK, which if added would only help prove the point. At the very top, our adjusted subscription services gross margin this quarter was 66%, flat quarter-over-quarter. As we get scale, we want to drive this to 70% plus. We feel confident we can get this done and think we'll see improvements this year. We estimate our sales and marketing expense as a percentage of ARR this complete quarter when including the annualized contribution from Stuzo would be around 21%. This number will continue to improve as we get the benefit of the cost cuts I mentioned earlier this year. As I flagged last call, we want this number to get to 15% or lower. We estimate our R&D expense as a percentage of ARR again including the annualized contribution from Stuzo was around 35%. This number continues to get better and we have our sites on our target of 25%. As I hope investors can see, we're focused on driving towards our long-term [ short ] goals and the intense focus on keeping our OpEx flat has led to a strong acceleration in margin. What's more? As we bring TASK into PAR, we'll be adding another $6 million to $8 million EBITDA and a large pipeline of deals and a strong base of customers to cross-sell PAR products, creating the same flywheel internationally. To recap, we're executing a strategy that we established several years ago and we're seeing the benefit of that strategy. We have a business model with strong organic fundamentals that positions us well to drive shareholder value while continuing to acquire new products to cross-sell into our base. We partner with some of the largest and most innovative restaurant companies in the world and have established ourselves as a trusted technology partner at these companies as they undertake their digital journey. We've executed disciplined M&A strategy that is accretive to our journey towards profitability and Rule of 40, while crucially expanding our TAM into markets with greater margin and cross-sell potential. And finally, we have a talented and dedicated employee base across the globe who are committed to helping our customers and our company win the industry. Bryan will review the numbers in more detail and then I'll come back to offer some guidance for the rest of the year. Bryan?