 The question that the CRP, Lifetalk and Fish, has faced is how can research accelerate development of Lifetalk and aquaculture. And many approaches have been used in the past where we could be looking at production in one country, consumption in another, and processing issues in country C. Pissing this together to have a coherent story has always been a problem. So, the evaluation approach that now brings together all these stakeholders for particular commodities and looks right through the chains from the input dealers right to the disposal of the product after consumption is one of the things that we are experimenting on now as a new approach. Programmed policies, institutes and markets really poses two questions. One is, can we make markets work any better? And the other one is, can we connect people to markets better? And we have in CRP 3.7, that is livestock and fish, we have the opportunity to have a sort of a little experimental laboratory on the peak value chain in Uganda. So it made sense to us to stay close to home around livestock and fish because that is where Ilry is putting a lot of effort in and to look at how those two questions are being answered for pigs in Uganda. And we brought in a lot of practitioners who are working on the actual development interventions as well as researchers that are working with us to answer those questions and use the tools that we are developing. The driver of this workshop was feedback. We wanted to know what the practitioners, what the researchers, what any stakeholders were trying to do with tools that we have developed on one hand and other tools on the other. So things like storytelling, which was part of this conference, was to get the real experience of people and to get them to tell it as it was. We had no PowerPoints, we had very few pictures, we just had people telling a story and we invited them to include the elements of the value chain that they were using and the kinds of problems or opportunities they were trying to address.