 The network of others generates opportunities for yourself. By developing yourself next to your studies, you can find out who you are, what gives you energy and what you find important in the job. At university, obviously you learn a lot of theoretical things and that's great. It gives you a really solid basis, but you also need practical skills. I did an internship that is really perhaps the most important side activity that I've done and it really helped me enormously because it teaching me skills that I otherwise could not have gotten in the university. I actually found my first job through my internship. I applied for an internship at the ministry. After six months, I had the luck that they needed someone to stay over there in their team and I could stay there for my first job. Well, I found my first job at Aald through the economic business weeks. So I met them during a lunch there and I was directly convinced that it could be my future employer. If there is an event in your faculty, just go there, network with people, but also dare to speak up to people, dare to interact with people so that people will remember you. Try to find something that sets you apart from the crowd. Find something that really helps you get ahead. Try to explore and take risks at this moment in life because this is the right moment to take those risks. In the days of today, it's very difficult to actually stick to a specific plan because the world is changing at a constantly faster pace. You don't have to have a five-year future career plan or so. Just do what seems fun or interesting to you and perhaps at some point, did that feel connected?