 The best thing about CISD for me, with the skills that you could learn, the tangible skills that I've talked to many people, they've used in their internships or their outside jobs, like learning how to write a speech or how to do a radio interview, how to negotiate, how to represent themselves and be confident. CISD is, I think it's very honest and handed and we realize that we're very lucky, but there is a world outside the classroom and I think the point of us going through this rigorous year is to be prepared for that. Because it's targeted at graduate students only, there is a sort of closer link to the real world. It's not just kind of come and do a master's and see there is a bit more geared towards helping people connect to organizations that they might want to work with. I'm working as a project manager for a company called DAI, which does contract work for DFID, the World Bank and the European Union and USAID. It's a fantastic job. There's really interesting projects that I work on and it's been able to really take the skills that I learnt at university and bring them into my job, so there's not that many people who get to do that sometimes. As a banker, it's allowed me to actually learn a lot more about the politics behind finance and that was very useful during the Euro crisis. It was also very useful in my job, which is emerging markets. We deal with that all the time. Today I work as a program officer with the UN Joint Programme on HIV and AIDS in Zimbabwe. It's also known as UN AIDS. I love my position and I think I can safely say that I wouldn't have applied for the UN had I not been confident enough in my knowledge base and the skill sets and the practical skills that I gained during my time at CISD. So as a unique university within London, it's fun, it's diverse, it's colourful, it's radical and there's lots of things there. And CISD within that, as I said, it's a bit more geared towards a professional sector. So you kind of get both the slightly more corporate development side but then also all the brilliant, wonderful things about SOAS that make it a really progressive and thoughtful university where anything kind of goes. So I like that combination because I don't think you want too much of one or the other.