 Jessica says, I have a WordPress site and I would like to use Teams webinar for an ongoing Q&A sessions to our customers. How can I have a sign up form directly on my website for each webinar? I tried to use an iframe but it's not loading quickly or consistently enough. One thing I'm wondering is, because I use WordPress site too, it's a link does it have to be embedded on the page or can it be a link that opens in a new window and allows them to register using the Microsoft webinar capability? That would be my biggest question because every single meeting has a link for a registration form and the forms aren't overly customizable, but they're functional. That's changing all our new webinar features are rolling out. So there's a bit more that's customizable now compared to the past with some of those changes flowing through. Personally, I don't use the webinars because I still have certain things that other tools provide that aren't there yet. Again, does Microsoft have to compete feature for feature or can we just use the sharpest tool for the job but if it's an ongoing webinar, the one thing they have to keep in mind is the Q&A sessions, those are persistent as well and anyone else that has participated unless they turn off their chat afterward for the external people, they're going to get pop-ups and notifications on their screen that there's additional questions being asked and answers. That might be something to consider how those settings are. I'm still not a to go to the other comment about using Teams webinar. I'm still like we're not using it at all. I think Microsoft needs to make a decision whether they're going to, they want to actually do webinars or if they're going to half-ass the solution. Having to register for a Teams meeting is not a webinar. It's not the same. Having multiple presenters and being able to have different hosts and that is huge. I know that's getting there but for me, I don't use webinars because A, if I'm going to use that feature or I want people to register, I want to be able to limit how many people can register because I want to use it for classes. That's actually all changing. It's coming down the line right now and that's one of the biggest things. It came out on the 19th of July. It's just been made. You'll have the 10 co-organizers, and those capabilities, you'll be able to showcase your speakers. It's got a bio that's coming in with headshot and you can put LinkedIn profile and social media. You can do branding. You can do the relevant color schemes and customize it and banners, for example, and you'll have your registration page that's all customized plus the invitation and the confirmation email that's customized that's coming through. It'll have a registration capacity. It only supports up to 1,000 attendees though. You can control and manage who actually has access to that webinar, and specify that number and align it to your registration numbers as well. There's all these expanded questions and a dedicated space for things like your terms and conditions coming through to give consent around the registration. There's a whole heap around the attendee and reporting stuff that's coming through, as well as that new Q&A that's coming in as part of a part of webinar. So it is getting there and it is coming through right now. That does, I mean, compared to some of the other webinar type stuff. Look, there are a few things that are still missing, in my opinion. Like video quality. But we're certainly seeing some of those changes actually coming in, which is great. I think the thing to ask about the website though is, is it like a different type of form that's needed? Is it a, are they talking about having like a web part where everything's running directly from their site as part of all that? That's what it sounds like they're asking for. That's what I got, and that's not there. That's not a Microsoft discussion. That's a WordPress or whatever sites you're going to use discussion. All of the announcements, this was in part of the Microsoft Inspire. Announcements, so for July 2022, you go check that out. There's actually sessions on that. I didn't sit through any of those, but there were formal announcements made around the expansion of the team's webinar capability. So if you ever, if you've registered, you could go back in. I think I actually put in like that session in my backpack because I've still not gone back and watched it. So there's content out there where they go through in detail, everything that Kirstie just outlined. Yeah, that's awesome. Yeah, I presented it at the user group at the beginning of the month and had gone right through everything that was going on. Because I was a little excited, and I've been working kind of with the webinar team around a lot of things on that. I love that, and the other possible option is to have a Microsoft form on their website, and then Power, again, that exports to an Excel spreadsheet. Somehow I'll automate that to connect it to. Needing, I don't know if that's worth the effort, especially since I want to use my favorite channel quote of, wait for it. Sounds like it's coming. So good news. I think most sites just get around that initial problem of, it's not embedded, and so just provide a link, use a graphic, have the graphic to sign up here, register here, a button or something or other that takes you then to that page. I know that's not what is being asked for here, but that's the immediate answer to go and provide that. Well, when the new feature comes out, because it's a registration page, you might actually be able to embed that registration page kind of thing. It depends how many webinars you're doing, because once that registration page is live, it's not like you wouldn't be able to put it into your own website because it is its own page. And then effectively it's a form anyway with the new look. It's just a matter of, because it is its own page, it can't. It's iframe versus having a native app that does that. So whether Microsoft creates a native app that can be dropped into your website and have that information or iframe it, which you can do to any other HTML source. Yeah, yeah. In theory. What's in this space?