Thanks, S.J., and good morning, everyone. I would like to welcome all of you to our first quarter earnings call. Before beginning, I would like to introduce Nick East, our Chief Product Officer. As you saw in our press release, Nick will oversee product innovation and marketing across the company's platform architecture. In his new role, Nick will direct our investments in platform solutions to meet the growing demands of our customers and the market. Further, we now have two executives based outside the United States, which will provide a broader perspective of international trends and bring us closer to our global customer base. Turning to our recent performance. This quarter, we signed new mid-market and enterprise customers in both our restaurant and retail segments, expanded key existing relationships and signed customers to the platform. We also progressed on implementing our hardware ODM and our new card acquiring capabilities. While our results were in line with expectations, work remains as we accelerate deployments, transition hardware and exit one-time revenue streams in favor of recurring subscription billing. As we will outline in today's remarks, we are making progress on our cloud-native platform and payment initiatives, which we'll launch during the second half of this year and drive revenue growth leading into 2026. While early days, I am encouraged by the traction we are beginning to see on our growth initiatives to improve future performance. Since our last call, I have met with more than 40 of our largest customers across the US, Latin America and Europe to gain constructive feedback and reinforce our commitment to excellence in software and services. Our market-leading position in restaurant and retail is backed by our unmatched global presence of marquee customers, and these relationships are key to both our current positioning and go-forward strategy. These customers are eager to learn about the platform strategy embedded in our next-generation solutions. Nick, Benny and Darren will discuss our product execution later on the call. I will now provide an update on our hardware business, both as it relates to the recent tariff announcements and our ODM transition. In 2024, the US market represented approximately 60% of our annual hardware sales as it pertains to self-checkout and point-of-sale hardware finished in Mexico. During the later part of the quarter, we began receiving tariff surcharges for certain service parts from a limited number of our China-based suppliers. This trend has continued, but not accelerated into the second quarter. The current run rate of tariff-related cost is between $8 million and $12 million for the balance of year or up to $20 million if all suppliers implemented surcharges. In parallel, we have initiated actions to mitigate some of the impact by sourcing suppliers in markets where tariffs are lower or do not apply. As we said on the last call, the implementation of our ODM agreement with Ennoconn is on track for pilot this summer and is expected to be operational by year-end. Our partners area of focus since December has than the installation of a third-party application to manage the Nashville warehouse, which supports all markets outside of Europe. We will begin piloting across our markets later this summer and anticipate a full transition by year-end. Turning to payments. We're in the process of integrating WorldPay's front-end processing capabilities into our customer offering anticipated to be operational by the end of the summer. As such, we have recently launched payments training for our sales teams to enable initial dialogue with existing customers not currently utilizing our payment solutions. Given the positive feedback that I've received from my customer meetings, I'm optimistic about our ability to both convert the base and attract new customers to our payment acceptance solution. As an example, while early days, we have recently renewed enterprise restaurant customer who will leverage our new end-to-end payment offering once available. We will continue to work to operationalize our international markets over the next six to 24 months. Turning to our capital allocation priorities. In March and April, we completed an additional $25 million of share repurchases amounting to 2.6 million shares under our existing program. Since the beginning of the repurchases in November, we have repurchased approximately 10 million shares for a total of $125 million. Our Board recently adopted an amended share program which increased the total aggregate purchase authority under the company's share repurchase program to $200 million. The company will consider the timing of buybacks together with other uses of cash, such as investments in products and infrastructure. Lastly, before I turn the call over to Nick, I would like to provide context for our Voyix commerce platform strategy. For more than 20 years, the company has acquired over 40 on-premise software applications, most of which are still in use today, serving our restaurant and retail customers. In 2019, the company shifted its product strategy from acquiring third-party applications to developing in-house cloud architecture and edge micro services to deliver platform benefits to our customers. This was the genesis of the Voyix Commerce Platform or VCP, initially developed with capabilities to connect legacy applications to the cloud. Later this year, we will begin launching VCP's cloud-native and edge applications to existing and new customers as we sunset the sale of our legacy on-prem applications. The VCP will enable our customers to transform their physical locations into digital experience channels for shoppers and diners. We are excited about the potential of a platform powered business to mutually accelerate growth for our customers and for NCR Voyix. To ensure this remains central to the company's transformation, we have appointed Nick is to lead our product strategy under VCP. Nick?