 I'm Amanda Sterling. I'm 30 years old, and I'm the Vulcan Program Operations Lead. And I started working at ULA in about, I think, 2013. My first job was as a structural analyst, so I was working on the Atlas launch system, helping to design different components that go on the Centaur upper stage. And then when we started the Vulcan program, I got transferred over to that program and have really got to be there from the ground up. One of the key things is that we always make sure that we have enough extra performance in our launch systems to be able to dispose of the upper stage after it's spent, after we're done using it. So we do that on our Atlas and Delta rockets, and that's a part of the design and the baseline for the Vulcan rocket as well. So we'll be able to send those upper stages either to a beyond Earth trajectory to maintain a non-useful orbit around the Earth or to completely deorbit it so it's not up there at all. Ensuring that that's still a part of what we're doing. We're not leaving things up there that don't need to be up there and contributing to the orbital debris problem in space. Be really involved. It's really important to be good at your job and what you do, but also to better yourself. It's really important to explore other areas of your company to really understand why you're doing what you're doing and what your mission is and connecting to that because it's more than just for me, it's more than just an engineering job where you're just designing a component. It's about mission success. It's about providing assured access to space and launching satellites that are important to the government, to NASA, national security, all those types of things. And that's really what drives me. And so I think if you really can connect to that mission and get involved in your company outside of just what the paper says your job is supposed to be, that would be my biggest piece of advice.