 No labs only came off. You're SAP certified? Wow. I want to do the WP warehousing module. Would you recommend it? Yeah. Would I recommend it? I don't know what the job market is for SAP right now. When I got certified it was back in 2000. Like 20 years ago I got SAP certified. I took the course in Montreal. It was fun. It was amazing. I got a video out there I think I pulled out a segment. I told a story about it and I have a video out there. If you do I think Chicho SAP should pop up. I'll give you a low down of what it is. It really depends on the job opportunities if it's worth it or not. It costs a fair chunk of money to get certified unless you're being sent by a company to get certified. You want to be involved in rollouts, implementations, because that gives you the most experience and that kicks you up in the pay grade. If you've ever done a rollout that's when your pay grade goes up. You don't want to just be the the data entry person because that means you don't see the larger picture and you're not involved in the implementation, the hard work and sometimes those projects take a long time. Is it worth it? It's really up to you. If you enjoy that type of work, if you think investing the money to get that certificate and the job opportunities are there, sure, why not? For me, was it worth it? I worked in the field a little bit but pretty quickly I found out I didn't want to be in it so I moved on from it. I spent a fair bit of money getting that certificate. I probably made the same amount of money back if not more and on the experience front, for sure it was worth it. I learned a lot. I taught myself accounting and I got the certificate at the same time and I realized what ERP, enterprise resource, planning, companies do, data management does, how they operate. It gave me a really good perspective of what we're capable to do with big data, not just on a corporate level but on a societal level. It was worth it for me. Would I do it again? Yeah, I would do it again but maybe I would try to find a job in the implementation aspect of it. At the time, the job market had collapsed a little bit. It was after the dot-com bubble. If I hung around long enough, I would have got offers to do implementation and stuff like the salary would have gone through the roof and whatnot but I moved on from there and started teaching mathematics, which I think is an amazing decision from my part. It just worked out really well.