Thank you, Rebecca, and thank you to everyone joining us this afternoon. Our team members are our most important ingredient, they are the heart behind every meal we serve from the people leading our restaurants and serving guests every day to the teams in our support center. Every team member plays a role in bringing our mission of connecting people to real food to life. I want to thank our teams for staying disciplined and focused on the fundamentals during what has been a challenging operating environment. In that spirit, I want to recognize my co-founder and long-time partner at Nathaniel Ru. From our first day at Georgetown to building Sweetgreen together, Nate has been a defining force behind our culture, our creativity and our belief that the smallest details are what make a brand truly special. While Nate has stepped back from his day-to-day role, I'm grateful he'll continue to support us from the Board as we build what's next for Sweetgreen. Nate, Nick and I are all confident that the team we have in place today is set up to navigate Sweetgreen through this moment and lead us into our next phase of growth. Our full year results make it clear there is more work to do as we position the business for the future. For fiscal year 2025, revenue was $679.5 million. We continue to experience traffic pressure. Comparable sales for the year declined 7.9%. We opened 35 net new restaurants, ending the year with 281 locations. Restaurant-level margin was 15.2%, and adjusted EBITDA was a loss of $11 million. I'll start with an update on our Sweet Growth Transformation plan, and Jamie will walk through the financials in more detail. We are executing with urgency across the business and are 1 quarter into our transformation plan, which is focused on five strategic priorities: one, operational excellence; two, food quality and menu innovation; three, personalized experience; four, brand relevance; and five, disciplined profitable investments. While the financial impact will take time to materialize, we are strengthening the foundation of the company. We are improving operations, elevating food quality, accelerating menu innovation and strengthening our value proposition. All guided by clear return thresholds. We are staying relentlessly focused on our guests and acting on what matters most to them. As I walk through our strategic priorities, I'll share a few encouraging signs where the foundational work is beginning to show up in the business. Starting with operational excellence, which remains the foundation of our ability to win with guests. We are building the systems and discipline required to deliver consistent high-quality execution across every restaurant every day. Let me share where we are. Over the summer, we implemented Project One Best Way, our system-wide effort to elevate operational excellence through clear standards, performance-based leadership and measured execution. Today, approximately 2/3 of our restaurants are hitting our great bar based on our internal operational audit. What's most encouraging is the shift in the distribution this quarter with more restaurants exceeding standard and fewer falling below, reflecting improved consistency across the fleet. Importantly, great is not a static benchmark. As performance improves, we continue to raise the bar by increasing both the standard score and our expectations for what constitutes great. Throughput is where operational discipline translates into results. In any great kitchen, mise en place means having everything in its place before the rush. That same principle drives our Rush Ready Before Peak Initiative. Ensuring the right team members are in position, up is complete and stations are set before peak volume hits. We've just started to introduce real-time throughput visibility to our field teams giving them the ability to see performance and adjust in the moment. We know that speed and accuracy during peak periods are what drive both guest satisfaction and team confidence, and we're building the muscle memory across the system to deliver consistently. We've also strengthened how we measure and drive performance. The restaurant scorecard we introduced last quarter gives teams clear visibility into a focused set of metrics, sales, throughput, customer satisfaction, labor, food quality and people. So they know exactly where we're winning and where we need to improve. During my restaurant visits, I review scorecards with our teams and walked the Sweet Path, a framework that breaks each restaurant into clear zones with simple, consistent standards for how we show up every day. We're encouraged by the progress we're seeing, but we know there's more work to do. We're still seeing inconsistencies in areas like ingredient availability and ordering as well as team scheduling, and we're addressing them directly improving our tools, retraining teams, system-wide and realigning quarterly bonus incentives around the financial and operational metrics that matter most. Our goal is to equip restaurant leaders with clear data and streamlined systems so they can think and act like owners accountable for sales, margins and the guest experience. Food quality and menu innovation are at the heart of who we are. Our menu sets us apart, built on real culinary credibility and made from scratch with ingredients from farmers and partners we know and trust. Delivering delicious food executed consistently is nonnegotiable. It's how we compete, and it's how we win. A recent example is our internal Miso My Salmon campaign launched in December to sharpen execution and elevate salmon quality across the system. We extended marinade times to deepen the flavor and refined cooking and presentation, serving the fat side up for better caramelization and a more vibrant appearance. We took the same disciplined approach with chicken, updating our recipe for a juicy results alongside upgrades to our golden quinoa, white rice and napa cabbage slaw that you can try in our restaurants today. This is our culture of culinary technique and practice, constantly refining how we prep, cook and present our food. Menu innovation when supported by strong operational execution can be a key driver of comp growth. Our stage gate process implemented in 2025 guides this innovation by ensuring we test and learn while maintaining operational excellence in our restaurants. Today, we have the most robust innovation pipeline in Sweetgreen's history designed to diversify menu occasions, expand categories, attract new customers and drive frequency with existing ones. We kicked off 2026 with two limited-time-only menus. The first was a collaboration with Function Health and their Co-Founder and Chief Medical Officer, Dr. Mark Hyman. Built entirely from existing ingredients, the menu was operationally simple to execute while reinforcing the quality and integrity of our offerings. And demonstrated how we can deliver credible wellness forward innovation without adding complexity in our restaurants. Our second limited time menu launched February 3 with the Winter Harvest Bowl, a seasonal take on our best-selling bowl featuring Maple-Glazed Squash and the vegetable of the Year, Charred Balsamic Cabbage. At the same time, we brought back feta cheese to our core lineup, a frequently requested ingredient by loyal customers and brand fans. Taken together with our innovation pipeline, the menu calendar reflects our focus on creating newness on the menu and bringing customers fresh, seasonal ingredients and with compelling sourcing stories throughout the year. Our biggest menu expansion planned for 2026 is the launch of Wraps, which began innovation testing in eight restaurants in the Los Angeles market in January. As part of our stage gate process, we're learning how to execute Wraps at scale while protecting throughput. Operational details like tortilla-pressed placement have been key focus areas in our eight restaurant tests and we're actively iterating based on those insights. Building on those learnings, we expanded Wraps to a broader market pilot last week across select locations in Manhattan, the Midwest and Los Angeles. The lineup, Classic Chicken Caesar, Chicken Salad Baking Club and Chicken Jalapeño Ranch starts at $10.95 at select locations in New York City, and the full lineup is priced below $15 across all markets for in-store and pickup orders. The early feedback is encouraging, and if performance meets our stage-gate criteria for customer acquisition and retention, we expect to expand the platform in mid-2026. Improving value perception remains one of our highest priorities. With guests increasingly focused on value and quality while pulling back on overall restaurant spending, we know Sweetgreen must deliver on both dimensions without compromising the experience that defines our brand. In 2025, we took important steps forward, including increasing protein portions, reintroducing lower-priced seasonal offerings launching 12 daily greens and leaning into the $10 'Tis the Season Harvest Bowl to meet guests where they are. While these actions strengthen our value positioning, we recognize there is more work to do. Following the comprehensive review of our menu and pricing architecture, we have identified a focused set of initiatives to simplify and strengthen the overall experience. Testing is underway, beginning with wrap's pricing and loyalty entry price drops. We will also test a re-architected Create Your Own platform designed to deliver greater price clarity and a more intuitive ordering experience alongside clearly defined entry price entrees across our core menu categories later this year as we pace and sequence these moves over the next several quarters. Together, these initiatives are designed to create a more transparent value ladder, giving guests confidence in what they are paying while supporting incremental traffic and transactions across a broader range of price points. At Sweetgreen, value has never been just about price. It's rooted in the farmers we source from, the quality of their ingredients, scratch cooking, generous portions and a consistent experience. Our 2026 initiatives are focused on making that value clearer and easier to access at every touch point. Our personalized digital experience strategy is built to increase customer frequency and spend through one-to-one messages and incentives. The $10 'Tis the Season Harvest Bowl promotion in December was a strong proof point for our loyalty-first approach to value and guest engagement. By making the offer exclusive to loyalty members via the Sweetgreen app, we brought both new and reactivated guests directly into our ecosystem. It was our highest performing reactivation promotion to date. We are listening to customers and follow this up with a $10 Chicken Avocado Ranch offer on February 9. This continued to build momentum with the playbook we call Craving of The Month, a loyalty exclusive limited time offer featuring a craveable menu items available only through the Sweetgreen app, designed to give members a compelling reason to engage with the brand every month. Scan-to-pay now represents approximately 20% of frontline transactions bringing in-store guests into our loyalty ecosystem and giving us full visibility into their Sweetgreen behavior and preferences. The impact is tangible, loyalty members who transact both digitally and in-store visit is at nearly 2x more frequently than digital-only customers. We believe this is a key lever to drive higher frequency omnichannel behavior and ultimately, the flywheel that builds lasting lifetime value among our most valuable guests. At our best, our brand creates culture and makes the spaces we occupy more real, vibrant and connected. In the fourth quarter, our protein-focused campaign resonated with guests seeking more filling, satisfying meals. Built on the insight that protein stopped being about food, we cut through the noise with the launch of the Power Max Protein Plate, delivering over 100 grams of protein from real ingredients like quinoa and chicken with no fillers and generated strong social buzz and brand relevance. In February, we launched our expanded catering platform, including the Build Your Own Sweetgreen Bar and are seeing strong early traction. Anchored by our Here For The Bowl campaign and a big game activation at San Francisco's Ferry Building Farmers Market, the platform extends Sweetgreen into group occasions and serves as a meaningful new customer acquisition channel. Shifting to our last pillar, which is a disciplined profitable investment. In the fourth quarter, we opened 15 net new restaurants, including eight Infinity Kitchens. We also entered three new markets during the fourth quarter. Cincinnati, Sacramento with two Infinite Kitchen restaurants and Arkansas. We opened our Bentonville restaurant in Q4 and our Fayetteville restaurant in Q1 2026. We also expanded our presence in Arizona with the second location during the fourth quarter. On the Infinite Kitchen front, the technology continues to deliver on its promise, faster throughput, improved order accuracy and elevated food quality, all while creating a better experience for both guests and team members. In the quarter, established Infinity Kitchens delivered higher AUVs and labor savings of more than 700 basis points compared to their classic counterparts of similar age. In November, we opened our first Infinity Kitchen Sweetgreen location in Costa Mesa, California, expanding this technology into a new format designed to serve suburban markets and capture drive-through occasions. The location is performing well, and we are excited to grow this format further. We ended the year with 30 Infinity Kitchen locations. With Spyce team now part of Wonder, we remain confident in the continuity and trajectory of the platform. The partnership is working. Since the transition, we have successfully opened two new Infinity Kitchen locations in the first quarter, Long Beach and are first in the DMV market at Pike 7. We continue to roll out software improvements, including new capabilities around green portioning precision, demonstrating that development and deployment momentum remains firmly intact. Over the past year, we strengthened the foundation of Sweetgreen by putting the guests at the center of every decision. We've rebuilt discipline around the fundamentals that matter most: great food, speed, genuine hospitality and clear restaurant-level ownership and accountability. Maintaining that standard consistently across the system remains a top priority because delivering on these basics is what earns trust and keeps guests coming back. At the same time, we are leaning into what makes Sweetgreen different. We are strengthening our core menu, delivering innovation in a disciplined way building a more connected digital ecosystem and investing in a brand rooted in the Sweetgreen lifestyle our guests choose to live every day. Looking ahead, the work we need to do is clear, execute with discipline to improve performance quarter-by-quarter and build a stronger, more durable business. While there is still work to do, we're seeing encouraging signs that our efforts are taking hold. I want to thank our team for navigating a challenging year and positioning Sweetgreen for more consistent performance ahead. Now I'll turn over the call to Jamie to review our financial results in detail.