 Thanks for coming. I'm Henrik. I'm from Sweden. It's the first time I'm in India, so it's very fun to be here. I'm wondering, this is a case study I'm going to be talking about. It's a 60 person project that I was involved in. Is that a big project? I'm going to hear, I think, 60 people. That's a big project in your experience. That's about one third of the room. How many of you think that's a really tiny, purely little project? A few are like ass people. What about the rest of you? Medium. Medium, medium. Okay, yeah. You can almost be Swedish. Swedish is always about medium. We actually have milk, which is like medium fat milk. And that's the most popular one. Everything has to be medium. The reason why I made a case study out of this was because I learned a lot. And it was actually the first time I saw a successful project at that scale. Personally, I hear other people talking about it. Personally, I've just never seen projects succeed once you get around that site for some reason. And that, of course, begs the question, what is a successful project? I'm going to use Alistair Cobain's very simple rule of thumb. It's actually not about if the project was successful, but if it was the way it worked successful, it was the method successful. He spent a lot of time traveling around the world meeting teams and deciding is the way they work, working, right? And he concluded that, and the way he measured that was basically by checking two questions. Number one, did they deliver? If it didn't, it probably wasn't successful. But did they actually deliver? The second was the people who were in the project and stakeholders, would they consider using the same way of working next project? And if yes and yes, then successful. Because sometimes you have projects like, yeah, we delivered, but we never ever want to work that way again. And it probably wasn't a very good approach. So this was one of those projects that, yes, we delivered, and yes, we made an impact. The product pretty much delivered the impact that we hoped it would. And the people in the project were like, we want to work like this every project in the future. And that's the first time I've heard people say that, like such a big project. So that's why I wanted to capture what did we do and what did we learn, right? So that's what this is. It's a story about what we learned. And it's by no means a perfect project. We had our share of problems. But relatively speaking, it was one of the more successful projects that I've seen. So I've tried to capture some of the things that I think helped us. So a bit of context. This was Swedish, it was a government project. So not only was it a fairly successful project, it was a fairly successful government project. What? How often do you hear these two words in the same sentence?