 Pierre Dubuque, welcome to WPC TV. You are the CEO and co-founder of Open Classrooms. This is what, an e-learning idea. How are you doing it and why are you doing it? Sure. So Open Classrooms is an online learning provider. It's the largest e-learning provider in Europe. In Africa, we train 3 million people every month. It's a startup company based in Paris. We are around 60 people. Our main mission is to make education more accessible. So we train people for free, fully online, until the point where we can deliver degrees, academic degrees, so they can get an actual job with the proper skills needed by the industry and by the employers. So is this a little bit like the Khan Academy in the States, or is it going higher? It's higher. Khan Academy is more focused on K2L education, whereas Open Classrooms is working on higher education and vocational training. So it's really something professional. You'll be taught skills, for instance, new skills like digital skills, in order to get a job at the end. And are you in contact with business organisations? Because they always complain about a skills gap. Do you know what the gap of skills is? Yes. It's our main mission here. The gap is pretty wide right now. So for instance, in the UK alone, this digital skills gap is actually close to the UK economy, 63 billion pounds a year. And in Europe, we estimate that nearly half of the people in Europe don't have basic digital skills that are needed now by the industry. And we are working here at Open Classrooms to close that gap. I mean, how will you monetise this? I mean, to ask a gently commercial question. Sure. So the trainings are for free, courses are for free. And we sell degrees, certifications and mentoring services directly on the website. So it's a B2C project. But we do also have corporations buying us vocational training for their employees or trying to get in touch with war graduates to get the skills that they need and the talents that they need. That's an intriguing idea. Is it in English and French and Spanish or...? Correct. French, English and Spanish. Terrific. Well, I wish you, Pierre, the book, the very best of luck and thank you so much for coming to this conference. I hope you've enjoyed it. Thank you.