Thanks Ron. Welcome everyone and thanks for joining today. As Ron shared in his opening comments, it was a notable quarter for Skillsoft as we executed across all facets of our transformation plan, which benefited our financial results and allows us to continue allocating resources to drive our future growth. While our transformation journey will span multiple quarters, I am pleased that we delivered revenue ahead of our expectations, improved profitability, and delivered strong free cash flow performance. Turning now to a detailed review of our financial results, starting with revenue. Talent Development Solutions, or TDS, revenue of $103 million was up 2% year-over-year, primarily due to our efforts to capitalize on the market shift from learning and skills to talent development. Our LTM dollar retention rate, or DRR, for Q3 stayed flat sequentially with the second quarter at 98%, compared to approximately 101% in Q3 of last year. The year-over-year decrease was primarily the result of two elements. Softness in our coaching and compliance product offerings. We are addressing the challenges in coaching through a revised product and pricing approach where we are moving to a subscription model and away from a seat licensing model. In our compliance area, as Ron mentioned earlier, we recently released our new integrated compliance platform that we expect to have a near term impact on our retention rates going forward. I am confident we understand the challenges, have identified the proper action plans, and have sufficient resources dedicated to improving the trend line. Our full year outlook is aligned to the current trends and our efforts to improve on this critical metric. And it remains one of our highest strategic priorities moving into Q4. Global Knowledge revenue of $34 million was down approximately $4 million, or 10% year-over-year. As Ron commented earlier, GK made good sequential progress in stemming the rate of revenue declines. Importantly, GK over-delivered with respect to our internal expectations for the third quarter. This is an important first step for the GK business unit on their transformation journey. Total revenue of $137 million was down approximately $2 million or 1% year-over-year. Walking through our expenses, cost of revenue of $34 million or 25% of revenue was favorably down 6% year-over-year, primarily due to the cost savings from resource reallocation actions. Content and software development expenses of $14 million or 10% of revenue were favorably down 4% year-over-year, primarily due to resource reallocation actions. Selling and marketing expenses of $38 million or 28% of revenue were favorably down 9% year-over-year, primarily due to resource reallocation actions. General and administrative expenses of $19 million or 14% of revenue increased by $3 million or 17% year-over-year. While we made continued progress on resource reallocation actions and discipline cost management, one-time costs related to the CEO employment agreement signed in September and targeted retention awards for critical roles offset those actions. Additionally, there was no short-term incentive award accrual in the prior year period. Total operating expenses were $105 million or 77% of revenue and were favorably down $4 million or 4% year-over-year. Similar to last quarter, despite a lower revenue base compared to the prior year period, we delivered higher profitability. Adjusted EBITDA of $32 million or 23% of revenue was up $2 million compared to the $30 million or 22% margin profile one year ago. Continued expense discipline drove 6% growth and 150 basis points of margin improvement in our primary profit metric adjusted EBITDA. GAAP net loss was $24 million compared to GAAP net loss of $28 million in the prior year. GAAP net loss per share of $2.86 compared to GAAP net loss per share of $3.45 in the prior year. Adjusted net loss of $15 million improved from adjusted net loss of $23 million in the prior year. Adjusted net loss per share of $1.82 improved from adjusted net loss per share of $2.82 in the prior year. Moving to cash flow and balance sheet highlights. A critical focus is improving our free cash flow profile and getting the company to generate consistent, positive free cash flow as soon as possible. As a reminder, the second and third quarters have historically consumed cash. However, as Ron already mentioned, we delivered positive free cash flow in the third quarter of $4 million. The improvement was driven primarily by disciplined collections management. Improved performance management systems have led to the introduction of centralized metrics and dashboards. The resulting impact is enhanced end-to-end alignment between our collections and customer facing organizations. I am pleased with the progress we made in the third quarter and confident we will maintain this level of collections efficiency going forward. For the nine months ended in the third quarter, we generated $12.2 million in cash flow from operations and invested $13.8 million in capital expenditures and capitalized internally developed software, resulting in negative free cash flow of $1.6 million, an improvement of $18.9 million from the prior year period. As we introduced to you last quarter, the non-recurring costs associated with our transformation of the business have had a material impact on free cashflow of the company, but we're essential to aligning our cost structures, integrating systems and operations, and creating the capacity to self-fund our growth investment initiatives. Those costs were particularly acute in the third quarter as we implemented our resource reallocation plans. Accordingly, adjusting for the cash impact of restructuring charges in this nine-month period of $17.2 million, we generated positive adjusted free cash flow of $15.6 million, an improvement of $26 million compared to the prior year period. Our adjusted EBITDA to adjusted free cash flow conversion was 20% for the nine-month period. We will continue to aggressively manage this metric. Additionally, we successfully renegotiated the terms and extended the maturity of our $75 million accounts receivable facility, which was due to expire at the end of December this year. We lowered our SOFR spread by 50 basis points, lowered our minimum draw requirements from $10 million to $1 million, and enhanced the administrative flexibility of monthly borrowing and repayment provisions. As we progress to consistent free cash flow generation, we can begin to use the facility more like a revolver to smooth out cash cycles in the business. Finally, the maturity of the facility was extended to FY 2029 to align with the term loan B maturity. As a result of these actions, we closed the quarter maintaining a healthy balance sheet and a strong cash and liquidity position. Cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash was $102 million. Total gross debt, which includes borrowings on our term loan and accounts receivable facility, was $591 million at the end of Q3, down from approximately $622 million at the end of Q2. Year to date in FY 2025, we have lowered our gross debt leverage profile from 6 times to 5.5 times. More specifically, as we saw improved cash flow in the quarter, we lowered borrowings on our accounts receivable facility. Total net debt, which includes borrowings on our term loan and accounts receivable facility, net of cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash, was approximately $489 million, down from approximately $492 million at the end of the fiscal second quarter. Turning to our outlook for the full year, given our strong revenue execution in Q3, primarily from Global Knowledge, and the progress we are making in our transformation journey, we are now raising and tightening our full-year revenue guidance range. We now expect revenue of $520 million to $530 million for the full year fiscal 2025. As you know from Investor Day, Global Knowledge revenue has a slightly lower profit margin profile than the TDS segment. Additionally, our improved revenue performance will drive additional accruals to our short-term incentive plans, a critical element of our overall compensation and retention philosophy. As a result of these two factors, we are reaffirming our adjusted EBITDA outlook of $105 million to $110 million. We have made significant progress in our resource reallocation efforts and the one-time costs associated with those actions, which impact free cash flow, but not our adjusted EBITDA. These costs were well managed and actually came in below initial estimates. Additionally, as a result of the important progress we made in working capital management and collections, we now expect to be at or near breakeven free cash flow for the full fiscal year. With that, operator, please open up the call to questions.