 We're trying to redefine the oldest, largest, and most technologically dated space, namely government. We're bringing a cloud-hosted, software-as-a-service solution that's comparative, collaborative to government to redefine how they do their business, starting with finance, so that those who are running governments can create reports, share them across their enterprises, see where the money goes across very complicated organizations, and then share that information with their elected official citizens the whole world. Innovative companies need to move fast and be creative. Here at OpenGov, we're trying to build an environment that's premised on trust, where if you ask me to do something, and I say I'm going to do it, I'm going to do it. What that trust does is allow you to move fast, it allows you to work well together with people and create a safe space where you can go make mistakes, where you can try things out, where you can say stupid things, because for every stupid thing, you can say 10 stupid things and the 11th thing could be 10, 20, 30x, and that could be more valuable than all the mistakes you make combined, and we want an environment where people can do that. We're a mission-driven company. We're interested in building a giant business, but this is the kind of company that I hope and expect everyone in it can go home in five years, 10 years, and tell their parents, tell their kids, look what I was a part of. Look what we were doing for our communities. OpenGov has the chance to help our democracy, to help our nation's communities, to help the fabric of our society, because we're opening up the financial data so those who are running our governments can use that financial data, can share it, and can make better decisions with it, and that impacts our roads, our streets, our lights, our sewers, and everything in between.