 Many many of our students do go on to do a masters and it's something I always recommend a young person do. In our careers now more and more a bachelor's is insufficient if you want to get into middle management, professional senior management. You need a master's degree and it's always good to do it straight away. Now the key difference between the bachelor's and master's is again it's a step up in level in terms of how we look at concepts and ideas. Now many of them if you've been studying business or management before will seem familiar but how we look at them is going to be a lot more in-depth. We're going to be looking at using tools in a more sophisticated manner. The way that we try and take ideas or concepts and theories and apply them to everyday situations is not simply a let's say a shallow application but an in-depth application to solve issues or find resolutions. We're going to be looking at ideas to find balance between the potential contributions that you have, the limitations that they have and create more rounded and more nuanced responses to problems and issues that we may face in management and business today. So in a sense it's the step up in depth of learning that we have to do in depth of thinking and application of ideas from the bachelor level is the key difference really. Maybe if I may jump in there as well. You can perhaps imagine this in this way that yes you could look into theory, you could discuss perhaps the theoretical contribution that this specific model or approach made to the field but it's really about taking that and understanding well what does that actually mean in an organizational setting. So looking for instance into a case study of something that really occurred in a business and trying to think and apply that in terms of how it might help or it might not help and what you then see as a graduate is that when you're faced with such an issue in practice and you will be faced with these that you will think back and you know how to work with theory, you know how to find perhaps relevant approaches, models in theory but also applying them and therefore contributing to the business and I think that's what really is the core of what the education is about. You understand and you are able to critically apply something. It's a way of thinking rather than just earning hard knowledge and I think this is really the the major distinction that that you can see. I mean it's been even from from the other alumni that I've been talking with who've started to work they continue saying this they always think back to the classes and they're continuously reminded of what the lectures back then were perhaps saying what they were already working on and so forth and it's yeah it's really benefited them a lot.