 What advice do you have for early career professionals who want to get into publishing? Oh, okay. Great question. So I think if you're in your early career, I think one thing that's great to do is to get involved with professional associations like the International Society of Managing Technical Editors or the Council of Science Editors, Society for Scholarly Publishing, even Cope, you know, at ten meetings if you can. Sometimes these groups have webinars online. And then as part of the involvement, maybe join a committee. That way you really start to meet people in the field. You do a little networking and build relationships. And so that's one thing. Starting at the bottom some places where it really needs to be. And so you can survey the publishing landscape. If you're interested in books, you might move to New York City. If you're more association publishing, maybe D.C., Philadelphia areas. But then there's freelancing opportunities. And then education could be a component of it. If that's a field you're interested in, you could do something like a master's program like GW has just to get that much more experience and to get a real well-rounded view of publishing. But so yeah, I think it's just reaching out to people and getting involved in organizations. You know, finding people at meetings and talking to them. People who are a little more senior and, you know, talking to them about it. And then just starting someplace even at the bottom and just working your way up and see how it goes from there. So it can be intimidating that networking thing is always very intimidating and it's hard to do, especially when you're young and you're just starting out. But if you can find someone who is a mentor, that's a big help. And one last question. What do you think about this initiative of connecting scholarly publishing experts and researchers? I guess I would say I'm very interested in education and I like the publishing field a lot. I think it's very valuable. So anytime you have a chance to communicate that value, but also to shed a light on what you do because I think it is sort of a black box for people. It's intimidating and just to share with people that it doesn't have to be intimidating, that we're people like you. We're interested in this whole academic endeavor. We're interested in science and medicine and making life better for people in general. So having that opportunity to talk to you and to be involved in education is important because you're sort of ambassador for your field in a way and reaching out to people, making those connections. And then for authors, hopefully it's presented in a medium that's accessible and interesting to them and maybe you spark some ideas for them or gives them just that little bit of education that they need to make their paper better or to work better with their team of authors, to act ethically, all of that. So it really benefits both of us because then we know that we're getting good content from our authors because they're invested in it as well as we are. So I guess it's sort of conveying the fact that it is sort of a team endeavor, even though we're not at different areas, different places, coming from different places, we're both hoping for the same end products.