 I was fascinated to really understand what business owners learned through the time of COVID and how we can take those lessons and move in forward. Business owners had to embrace their vulnerability. A great example was instructor of toddler music classes. She took her business model online and she had to be open and vulnerable to learning how new technology worked, learning how she was gonna connect with two, three, four-year-olds through a computer screen and now she has opportunities to continue to utilize them. COVID didn't have to be a time just for your business to shrink but it also could be a time of opportunity. One example is a small, local art boutique. They took all of those art supplies, packaged them up and had them available for shipping. Now that studio, not this expanded model, so they expanded their market share as well. One of the coolest things that I saw was the way that some of the business owners started working with their customers as partners. So there were pizza places. Started making pizza dough and selling it directly to their customers because their customer said, listen, I got cheese but I want your dough. And so they get to work together to define what that business looks like. The thing that impacted me the most, the businesses that were willing to try and fail and stand up and try again just gave me such hope for the resiliency of the entrepreneurial spirit.