Thank you, Sara, and good morning, everyone. My comments today will start with the highlights related to our fourth quarter results, balance sheet and cash flow, and then I'll cover the outlook for the first quarter and our targets for fiscal 2026. Our fourth quarter revenue of $788 million was in the upper end of the estimated range we provided in December, benefiting from stronger-than-expected order growth in the Americas. Our adjusted earnings of $0.26 per share finished above our range and included $0.11 related to favorable tax items net of related variable compensation expense. Setting these items aside, adjusted earnings fell below our estimated range driven by shortfalls in both the Americas and International segments. For the Americas, we had a higher mix of business from large corporate and government customers which tend to have lower gross margins. Our project spending at the end of the year was higher than anticipated and we recorded some yearend inventory related adjustments. For International, we also experienced some unfavorable business mix and we had higher manufacturing costs and higher operating expenses including a bad debt provision and some severance costs. Compared to the prior year, we posted an organic revenue decline of 5% including a 3% decline in the Americas and a 10% decline in International. The organic decline adjusts for the additional week in the fourth quarter of this year which provided marginal earnings benefit. The Americas fourth quarter revenue decline was impacted by a lower beginning backlog of orders scheduled to ship in the quarter. The International decline was driven by Germany, France and India which posted a current quarter decline compared to 40% growth in the prior year. Our adjusted EPS increased $0.03 and our adjusted operating income declined $20 million. Our prior year adjusted EPS benefited by approximately $0.02 from net favorable adjustments which were related to our unconsolidated affiliates and were reflected in other income. Our adjusted operating income in the current year was impacted by $11 million of variable compensation expense related to the tax benefits. The remainder of the year-over-year decrease was primarily driven by lower revenue in the International segment and higher operating expenses adjusted for the additional week. As it relates to cash flow in the balance sheet, cash and short-term investments decreased $18 million from Q3 as Q4 adjusted EBITDA of $40 million was largely consumed by capital expenditures and capitalization of cloud computing costs related to our new ERP, our annual, our semi-annual interest payment and dividends. Our trailing four quarter adjusted EBITDA of $262 million was 8.3% of revenue. Our total liquidity which includes the cash surrender value of COLI aggregated to $558 million at the end of the quarter which exceeded our total debt of $447 million. Shifting to orders, our Q4 orders grew 9% compared to the prior year driven by 12% growth in the Americas and 1% growth in International. In the Americas, Q4 marks the sixth consecutive quarter of year-over-year order growth and the 12% growth rate in the current quarter was on top of 8% growth in Q4 of the prior year. The order growth was driven by large corporate, government, small and midsize business and healthcare customers. We drove strong growth in both our project and continuing business and we continue to believe the growth in our project business is reflective of how we are leading the transformation of the workplace as evidenced by our strong win rates and estimated market share gains over the last year in the Americas. For International, the 1% growth in orders was driven by continued strong growth in India and Spain and was largely offset by weakness in Germany and the UK. Turning to our outlook for the first quarter, our overall backlog at the end of the fourth quarter was up 11% compared to the prior year. Average weekly order levels through the first three weeks in March are 7% higher than the Q4 weekly average and seem to be following typical seasonal patterns of order levels building from January through March. On a year-over-year basis, they declined 1% compared to the same period in fiscal 2025 which reflected 10% growth compared to the same three week period in fiscal 2024. Accordingly, we expect to report revenue within a range of $760 million to $785 million, which represents organic growth of between 5% to 9% compared to the prior year. As it relates to earnings, we expect to report adjusted earnings of between $0.13 and $0.17 per share, which compares to $0.16 in the prior year. In addition to the projected range of revenue, the adjusted earnings estimate includes gross margin of approximately 33%, which includes an assumption of $9 million of higher tariff costs as compared to the prior year and operating expenses of between $230 million to $235 million, which includes $4.3 million of amortization related to purchased intangible assets. Lastly, we expect interest expense and other non-operating items to net to approximately $2 million of expense and we're projecting an effective tax rate of approximately 27%. For fiscal 2026, we are targeting additional progress toward our mid-term financial targets, including mid-single-digit organic revenue growth and a modest improvement in our adjusted operating margin. Our revenue target reflects our strong beginning backlog and assumes the macro environment remains stable, return to office sentiment continues to strengthen and the overall positive sentiment we're hearing from our large corporate customers, dealers and sales organization in the Americas is not significantly disrupted by the shifts in US trade policy and related uncertainty about tariffs. Regarding adjusted operating income in fiscal 2026, we are targeting to offset higher tariff and related inflationary costs with appropriate pricing actions and we expect additional benefits from our gross margin improvement initiatives. In March, we announced a June list price increase in the Americas for the first time in three years in response to inflationary costs over that horizon. And we also announced the tariff recovery charge in the Americas that takes effect on orders received after today. Our ability to offset tariff costs with pricing actions could be impacted by a number of factors such as the speed and pace of changes in the tariffs and available exemptions such as USMCA as well as the macroeconomic environment and competitive factors. Additionally, for your fiscal 2026 modeling, in our International segment we're targeting breakeven adjusted operating income for the full fiscal year with losses likely in the first half of the year offset by profitability in the second half. We expect gross margin expansion in fiscal 2026 to be mostly driven by the benefits of projected volume growth. And our operating expense leverage adjusting for the impacts of the land sale in fiscal 2025 is expected to be relatively flat year-over-year in part due to approximately $10 million of higher expense associated with our new ERP. Lastly, we are targeting capital expenditures and capitalized cloud computing costs of between $70 million to $80 million for fiscal 2026. In closing, we're encouraged by the order growth and earnings momentum we achieved in fiscal 2025. Our beginning backlog is up 11% heading into fiscal 2026. Our large corporate customers are beginning to invest more significantly in their workplaces and we're gaining market share in the Americas. And we have a strong balance sheet and we're implementing necessary actions to address the tariff and inflationary environment. And we're targeting additional progress toward our mid-term financial targets in fiscal 2026. From there we'll turn it back to the operator for questions.