 We are of course from the hub, great session, just a quick harvest update. I don't know if we still have Lisa with us. We do. Thank you. So we're going to give Lisa the word first just to tell us a little bit about the session you hosted. Hi everyone. Okay, first thanks to Socap because it really sort of gave a platform and an opportunity to keep the dialogue going. And I have this idea because I sort of saw on the agenda, there was one thing that was missing a little bit. And it was a little bit more an inclusion and diversity. And where were the investors on inclusion and diversity? So I thought, okay, let's have a little dialogue about it. So under the title, How to Attract Funding for Inclusion Projects and Scale Them, we entered a wonderful dialogue. And first, thanks to those that entered in that dialogue with me, one was Veronica, another one was Amir, who I like to call our little skeptical investor, who helped us along tremendously in our dialogue. We also had two other social entrepreneurs and somebody from the British Council who also funds project. And I think that the first thing that we discovered was that we social entrepreneurs, especially in the inclusion and diversity field, need to understand how investors talk. We need to understand the lingo. We also need to figure out what is it we really want? Is it a fund? Is it a grant? Or is it a loan? But we also need to start thinking from the start, when we make our projects, how to make them commercial. Because that's what's going to attract an impact investor. It's got to be something that's replicable, scalable, and sellable. Most importantly, I think we also realize that we also have to sort of quantify what we're doing. When we're talking inclusion and diversity, for me it's a reality. There's one fact in the future. That is that the world in the Nordics will be tremendously multicultural. In fact, they're saying in 2040, 56% of the population in Oslo will not be Norwegian. But then as we're doing all these projects, we need to think, if I have a great project that is including immigrants, what is the benefit? What does that mean? What is the social system saving from that? And that will talk to investors. Some other thing. Yes, and now they want me to wrap it up and be concrete because not only that, I've got to catch a plane. We decided we've got to have new solutions. We've got to start doing projects, but we also decided we need to have a conference of our own. So we decided in November, not October, but in November, we will have a conference that will be focused on, now everyone's looking at me, suddenly I can't remember the title, Impact Investing for Diversity and Inclusion in the Nordics. Well, we will use the opportunity to educate you impact investors on how important it is not only to invest in Africa, but also to invest in your own countries. Because if we're not including, we're excluding. So thank you. And thank you so much for having the chance to attend SoCAP. Thank you for sharing with us, Lisa. Have a good flight. Yeah, that was a great session, wasn't it? Yeah, and one of the images that we talked about, which is nice when you work with this, is that the intensity of the discussion where the dialogue was here, which is good when we try to break out the... After an hour, we couldn't break out from this session. People wanted to start talking, finding new solutions, go into action. So this is just an example of what happens. 12 to 14 really, really great topics and sessions. And well, I think it was a success. I really enjoyed being there just sort of hearing in from the different discussions that was going on. And when everyone, like Lisa said, stepping in from different perspectives and sharing around these topics and also creating new solutions. So it was really good energy. And also it's interesting to see, because there were some sessions, there were a few participants. Mostly, they were full before we even got started at. Ring the bell and say you're invited to do what you already do. But also with just a few participants, they came out with a long list of action points. So it's true that whoever is supposed to come is the right people. And I want to say it again, we're continuing the conversation on SoCAP Connect. So everything that's been ongoing on the discussion is going to be on SoCAP Connect. So I don't know if you have, I want to show you some more. This is also images on what happened. And we are transforming these into words and we're also publishing them on SoCAP Connect. So all of you can take part of it. So we end this with a short, short, well, you can see how it goes. For everyone that hasn't been on the hub create session, this is how it looked like. I'll go back, okay. Back, way back. We have Björn who's the go-to guy at this conference. I'm going to the San Francisco Meetup so that we can talk about methods for cities to encourage sustainability through frameworks, projects, that sort of thing. And I think the most important part of that is establishing information systems so information can be distributed and gathered very simply and you don't have to look for a place to define. I'm going to join one of the tables of decisions that are going to happen right now. We have very interesting topics, five of them. So I'm still not knowing which one I'm going to be, but I'm interested in the one about how to make, how to make environmental sustainability a religion. This is a follow-up of last yesterday's session. It's going to be awesome, we will see. And this session we're going to be talking about basically creating a whole movement or call it a religion around environment sustainability to see what it takes for people to actually change their behavior and nudge them over into a sustainable lifestyle which isn't happening right now. There's a lot of well-intentioned people but for whatever reason they're not transitioning. What interests me about this topic is what's beyond sustainability. So maybe there's some spark in there that can actually draw people in. No, I just came out of this fantastic session. We had the open space session here at the Pop-Up Hub. First of all we had a full table there which could have been just the two of us sitting there but it was a full table, it was high energy. People really contributed a lot of content but also excitement. So I don't see that usually in kind of workshop settings where people can sit back and just relax and here really everybody jumped into it and was kind of endorsed to also jump into it. So this was our session, it was great fun. It was actually for me the best session so far at the conference and I look forward to have more open spaces and other workshops like this. I mean we had quite low kind of expectation in a sense no idea if it's going to work and it just went over the top so great stuff. So again thank you very much Soka for letting us be here and creating this hub great session. And thank you for all the hub founders that came from all over the world to join in and being part of recording and hosting this. See you in San Francisco maybe.