 My job consists in giving advice to some companies in several cases spanning the competition spectrum, so mergers, collusion, state aids and also regulation cases and my mission is to work on data and also to provide reports to advise these companies. What I like the most is to link the empirical research with the theoretical research and mixing both to understand some economic phenomenon like mergers for example. I think I'm using two main skills drafting of course because I drafted some reports at TSE but also the state skills, the coding skills in order to explain the data and to explain some phenomenon. So now that I'm graduated from TSE I know that I can explain a lot of things thanks to data and thanks also to my theoretical background. So now I have a very broad picture of every phenomenon and every cases. I mean the one of the things at TSE is that we have a very strong alumni network and I had a lot of help from the other alumni and now I'm now an alumni so I know that I need to add the other ones and I know that thanks to that it's easier to get a job with the TSE master degree. I would say trusting your abilities. You have a very good school, people are really involved, you have a huge background but also trust in yourself. Common good for me is using my economic knowledge to try to explain some very difficult phenomenon and try to translate it with simple words. I think it's one of our strengths is to explain to non-economists very difficult things basically.