 Kiyot has a question about organizing content. Now this is actually something that I teach in my content flow course, but I'm just going to show you on screen a little bit what I do and if you're interested, you could take the full course on or just borrow some of my ideas here. Basically, and you don't have to use every column just like you could see what I do. I don't really use every column, but I put it in a spreadsheet, including some cussing and the title of the blog post. In terms of the topics, let me show you what I do. This is all stats, stats and things like that, but in terms of the organizing by topics, here's what I do for that. So I basically put each topic as a separate column and I name that column and then I do fancy color coding so that conditional formatting, if the cell is not empty, then it shows up as that color. If the cell is not empty, it shows up as a different color. So anyway, so I do conditional formatting so it kind of looks pretty, but if I... And one and two simply means, one means, oh, it's definitely about that topic and two means that, yeah, it's related but not direct. So think about how you might organize your columns, your topics and then do it that way. And the nice thing about doing in the spreadsheet is that if I say, oh, I'm gonna write a book about joyful productivity, I can simply sort the whole column by A to Z and now I can see, yay, here are all of my direct posts about joyful productivity and I can basically put the book together but just now I have my book, right? I just put all those blog posts into a single document and I organize them and now I have a book or a course to say, hey, I'm gonna teach a joyful productivity course, no problem. Let me organize this this way and then let me see which topics I'm gonna teach in the course. So I hope this is helpful and if you're for the full spreadsheet and template and how to use it while you can just go to my content flow course georgecow.com slash content or again, you could just basically do something like this yourself using columns and topics. So hope this helps. All right, so Kiarra says, should I connect the topics to the deliverables? Well, Kiarra, you're asking that because I love talking about organizing by deliverables, organizing our content, our information by deliverables. In this case, I am because each of these topics is either a book of mine, I have a book on content marketing, I have a book on joyful productivity, I don't have a book on optimizing offerings but I have a course about it. I have a book on authentic selling, I have a course on healthy money, I have a book on authentic business. So yes, all of these you can see up here are actually deliverables, yeah. So does that make sense? Any other follow-up question? And if you wanna do it even more simply and I talk about this in the course too, I mean, you could literally put together a document. You know, if you don't wanna use a spreadsheet, you could just put together a document and just start saying your major topics. You know, topic A, whatever you name your topics are, topic B, topic C, you start a document and make it headings. I'm using keyboard shortcuts to make headings here. And then you could just over time, you could say simple content tracking, right? And over time, as you write a blog post or make a video, make it a habit to come back to this document of yours and say, oh yes, that topic was under, that blog post was under topic A or no, that blog post was under topic B or something. So that's a simple way of tracking it.