 Chris, tick or tagging? We were talking about that earlier this week. Tell our audience what that might mean. Well, when you tick or tag either an article or a research report, it allows investors to actually find the information easily or more easily because the actual tickers of the company are tagged to the article or the report. These days with thousands of different ways of getting your news, lots of different mediums from internet to YouTube. Unless you tick or tag their information, investors may not be able to find it as easy as they could. That's what you want to do when you're a company or a public company looking for getting a bigger reach for your information. Well, I think where I was referencing it is many investors out there have broker terminals. A lot of the average investor doesn't have a broker terminal. They can cost anywhere from what? They cost anywhere from two to say $5,000 a month. Right. So if you're a full-time investor, you're wealthy, you want to invest your own money, you want to have your own terminal, you have your own terminal, you then get notified when they have what? News releases and research analyst reports. Yeah, you set up a watch list. These terminals often have both company data as well as market data, but they also have information on research and news alerts when they come on them. So if you're watching a specific company or sector, you would get notified when a new research report or new news release came across the wire as they call it. So it's an important way to keep informed on companies as well as doing a little more in-depth research on companies you might be following or have invested in already. So companies, for instance, they'll call me and I'll say, you need some writing. No one on your team can clearly communicate effectively what your story is and where you're at. Analysts, you're an analyst. Of course, you've worked very hard to get that status, secure that status. Analysts can write research reports and there's a wide variety of research reports that you can get as a public market company. Would you like to give an overview to capital market CEOs that are seeking to get research coverage? Yeah. So I mean, not all research is the same and not all reports are the same. And one of the main points you want to look at is the distribution of where the reports are actually going and who's reading it. And so unless you have the research that's being uploaded onto things like platforms like CapIQ and FACSET and Refinitiv, ZAX, etc., where your investors and your investment professionals are looking for these types of reports, they will be able to find them. And so it's kind of worthless. And that's why making sure you're working with a firm that uploads the research reports to these platforms as well as distributes them across a variety of other media, including the internet newsletters as well as YouTube and places like Investor Intel, which has a good source of financial information. Well, so being more specific, you know, I personally love when public companies employ a research analyst, because then we're given really clear text on your stance. We do really great interviews. But let's go back to the terminals. The individuals that have terminals, my first gig in this industry was in 2001 with Adventure Capitalists. They all had Bloomberg terminals, and that's what they were called at the time. And I think they were 2,500 US at the time. And, you know, they would get a little ping when a research analyst provided coverage. It was kind of a different notification. Is that still the case? I'm not sure if they're still getting pings because that might make the office a lot of melodies ringing. But definitely, usually you get some sort of alert. And mostly now it's visual. You'll get a little R beside the company for research. Or if you set up a watch list, you might get an alert sent to you by email or by text. That's how most of it is popular right now. Like I have a watch list on my terminal that sends me anytime any of the covered companies that I am following has a research report it gets sent to me or a news release. And so that's how typically you're getting the information now. But yeah, it is definitely it's some sort of notification to allow you to follow the company more closely and to be able to know that the research has been published. And if I'm correct, not every analyst, you know, people call you all the time and say, hey, write a report, tell you a report on, you know, some of the companies that you're covering, they're not all approved for distribution in these terminals. Is that correct? Yeah, you have to get approval through the actual even each individual software application that has a terminal product will review your research to make sure it's as high qualities because they don't want to just have anything or anyone on the actual platform. E-research has been around for 20 years. So we have longstanding relationships with the terminal providers to upload our research into their platforms. And, you know, they've reviewed the work itself and know that it's a high quality. It's not like a marketing piece. It's actually, you know, an equity research report with valuation, you know, comps to other companies, industry sections, you know, things that actually provide value for the investor. And also, I received recently, one of the companies that we were doing an interview with, I asked if they had any research coverage, they sent me a report. And it was page 10, before they even mentioned the company. They were representing it as research about them, but it wasn't really research about them. It was about the sector. So it doesn't really get pinged, you know, except without the noise or the melody on the terminal. It then it's not really research reports. Well, it's a research report. But the question is, you know, if a tree falls in the forest, does it make a sound? And that's the whole thing about, you know, getting the research out there. And a lot of companies, especially on the buy side, will do internal reports. So they'll do or what they call maybe a desk report. And a desk report means it's done for the company and sent to the company's representatives and company's clients. It doesn't go outside the walls. Even some of the sell side analysts out there who are covering companies, they often just keep the distribution amongst their clients. And so it doesn't even get uploaded into some of these broker terminals, which I find is very surprising because, you know, you want to be part of the consensus, part of the community, you know, when you upload this information, why is it important is because, you know, it then gets into things like estimates and forecast and target prices. So when people are looking at a company's stock, they can actually see, oh, there's a forecast, a revenue forecast for that company. You can see a target price for that company. And the more analysts that upload, the more sort of a consensus you can gather about that stock, right? And that's why I think it's important that you upload and your reports into these platforms to get as wide as distribution as possible. Well, thank you so much for updating us today and for everybody out there who wants to know more. Here is Chris Thompson's email. Thank you, Chris. Thanks, Tracy.