 The question here is about a difficult to spell name. What's my opinion about that? And I always like to use the example of, oh, you have a difficult to spell name. Have you ever heard of Arnold Schwarzenegger? Was he able to get famous and does he care? What's Arnold Schwarzenegger's company name or brand? Is it, did he pick an easier name? Like Arnold the muscle man or Conan, I guess. But no, everyone knows Arnold, you know, Terminator, maybe, you know, Governator, I don't know. But like everyone knows Arnold by, oh, you know, aren't, they don't go Arnold the actor on Google. No, they Arnold Schwarzenegger. They misspell it on Google and Google knows. It's, you know, ever since spell check was became popular and Googles, did you mean, right? I mean, I'm going to go ahead and go ahead and Google this right now so that you can take a look. All right, here we go. Google Arnold. I don't even have to, right? Okay. But if I typed in Schwarzenegger, I'm just going to type it out, right? Like, it doesn't matter. Google, did you mean showing results for, you know, and people also ask, right? But I would say George, George, say someone Simmons a George cow. I'm actually really curious. I'm probably not going to pop up. Lots of other George cows. But you know what? If someone put George cow marketing, well, that's me. But yeah, there you go. So, but you actually, I invite all of you to try this out, George COW marketing and see if I pop up. And if I pop up, maybe it's on the first or second page of results, please click on my website, because that'll train Google to know, oh, cow. When people say George COW, they mean, they mean this guy. But see, that's what happens is if your name is hard to spell, I think, yes, you can, you can, you can go, you can go into the strategy of coming up with some clever, easy to remember brand. You know, I could have been like, you know, George, well, I mean, you know, essentially, I have several brands, I have Georgia productivity, right? I have authentic marketing, I have, it's like each one of your offers, if it gets big enough, is its own brand. So you can certainly, but my overall, overall brand, I think the safest, most longest lasting future-proofed overall brand is your name. So I really, because I've seen people say, well, my name is hard to spell, George COW, and so I'm going to say, I'm going to call myself George San Francisco life coach, which is terrible, because I'm about to move out of San Francisco, right? It's totally not future-proof, or George, the life coach for retirees or something like that, like that maybe that, and then, guess what, three years later, I decide, you know, I actually really want to work with teenagers. Darn, I already have this brand that's, so like forever, I will be, I probably won't change my last name or first name. So please, I would say, my recommendations, your overall brand, stick with your name, no matter how hard it is to spell, because people, so let me give you some more, some more insight on this. If your name is hard to spell, guess what, you have the opportunity in every podcast interview, in every video to speak to say, all right, my name is George COW, I've done this all my life. That's why I know what I'm talking about. My name is George COW, that's spelled K-A-O. I say that as often as I can, and guess what, then the audience go, wow, this guy was great, K-A-O, remember that, remember that. The irony is that if you're, if you're hard to spell name, if you help them spell it whenever possible, they will keep practicing it. And by practicing it, they literally remember you better than someone whose name is, if my name was George Smith, don't forget me, because they don't have to practice smelling Smith. They know how to say, I was like, who's that guy's name? But if they practice going K-A-O, K-A-O, they practice twice, now they're much more like their brains, much more like they remember my name than something else. So yes, help your audience, whenever possible, practice spelling your name. Okay, so that's, and then I have one other thing to say about, right, so some social media profiles allow you to have like a maiden name or an alternate spelling of your name. I think Facebook does, maybe Instagram does, or so you could use those fields to put a common misspelling of your name. I think that's a good idea too. And also, but if you don't have that field in a particular profile, in the description of the profile, you could put the common misspelling of your name, and that way it's easier to find you. But ultimately, the people who are meant for you, the people who somehow match with your energy signature, they get drawn to you for some reason, maybe the topic you talk about, the combination of the topics you talk about plus the way you talk about it, and you're just your overall vibe and your values, they're going to practice spelling your name, they're going to be like, God, this person's name is really unique. Oh, it's not, oh, it's not Simon, it's Simeon. Okay, they're going to notice those things. And they're going to, by, by note, by squinting their eyes and noticing the misspelling, it imprints on the brain more powerfully than if your name was the regular spelling of Simon Smith or something like that, that's going to just wash over them. But oh, yeah. Oh, it's Simeon, not Simon, got it. Oh, it's, it's Smythe, not Smith. Oh, it's interesting, right? The impression in the brain. So, and like, help them practice, use those alternate fields when you can, and just keep growing your brand and audience. And people, I promise you one day you will be like Arnold Schwarzenegger. So I hope this is helpful. And I have an actual example right now. I'm I'm happy to show you someone who was live on the call with me right now and gave me permission to do this. So their name is Tamsin Young. And I'm going to misspell it. Okay, Tasmin Young. Okay, I'm going to press enter. This is a misspelling. Google already knows. Oh, did you mean Tamsin Young? And is this the person? Yes, this is the person that I'm talking about. So, you know, and I bet if I said, I don't know, Tasmin Young, I don't know, I'm just going to do a really okay, Yasmin, that makes more sense, right? That makes more sense because Tamsin sounds more like Yasmin. So that makes more sense. So yeah, but like I said, a typical misspelling of the name, Tamsin Young, I'm going to try that too. There you go. See, Google's smart enough. Come on, don't give Google a little bit more credit for this stuff. But yes, so I hope that helps us as a real example right now.