 So you're going to wake up in the morning. You're going to check your email for any high priority things. Let's say your name is Steve here, and you wake up, and you have a couple of high priority things because shopping cart is dead on your website. Pretty important to focus on that first instead of what the next new feature is or so forth. So that's kind of what you would do right off the bat. You are going to check Slack. You're going to check for your direct messages. Make sure that nobody has an immediate need directly from you. That's also very important in this role. You're serving the people in that regard. You're going to check news blogs, news releases. You want to stay current with the trends, understand what new technologies are coming out in consumer technology. If you work in a shopping or a retail application, you want to look at Amazon. You want to look at how Google Shopping is now working on the search engine. All of these things to stay relevant so that when you're building a product, you're not building a Me Too. You're building the Me Next or the thing that comes after where we're at today. And that's a critical skill as a product manager. You can build things that work for today or you can build things that work for tomorrow. And usually it's a mix of both. So understanding that is an important part.