 Cheyenne asks, is there a way to power automate an MS Form Surveys Answers into, I like that to power automate like a verb. So did I power automate that? As a Microsoft Form Surveys Answers into a Templates Excel document, like have the form response go into a specific location on a document for customers? Yeah, I do this myself, honestly, and use the Excel spreadsheet or Excel file or a SharePoint list. That would be probably my pushback to Cheyenne is, why are you putting it into an Excel template? When you could be using a SharePoint list, which you get a lot more flexibility and capability than you do in a line items and Excel document. But yes, Christian, I put a link in the spreadsheet there to share with people, and the most common things you can do with power automate. The one challenge that I've had, and I've had people try and help me is, when you have a multi-select in the multiple choice in your form, how that maps into the SharePoint list and Excel spreadsheet, because they come in as common delimited values. They don't come in as like multi-select. They kind of has to break them apart and then put them back together. So that's been probably my only challenge, but otherwise it's fairly easy to do. If you are familiar with the data source, and the destination, make sure the data types match. Depending on how complex your form, I mean, understanding how it treats that might mean that use, instead of having a multi-select that you have separate questions and yes or no for each of those so that it's cleaner on the automation. But yeah, this is a, again, we've had variations of this question. I think, one, it's good to see more and more people that are using as simple as Microsoft Forms are incredibly powerful, and when you do publish into, capture that within a SharePoint list, for example, then there's so much more that you can go and leverage that as a data source to automate other things within your business. So yeah. Well, I think one of the best secrets about forms is you can actually expose those forms to people outside your organization, where like Power Apps sometimes are limited to who you can share those with. So you can have your customers do a survey or a product group or somebody outside the organization, capture information from them, and then put it into a SharePoint list and or Excel file if they wanted, and it doesn't have to be somebody with a license within your organization. Best kept secret. Yeah. The really cool part is too, if you want to take that even one thing further, because I do that too, Sherry, same thing, Power Automate super easy, but then you can also like, let's say for example, you have people to go there, you can actually tab that list directly in Teams. So now I've got people filling out a form, taking the survey, dumping it into a SharePoint list, and that SharePoint list has served up nice and neat in a Teams tab, nobody ever has to even go anywhere. Yeah. Yeah. Perfect. Or a QR code. Or a QR code. Yeah. Then create your views for the different people you need to access that for different reasons, and oh yeah, that's great. Workflows, they tied to it. Yeah, it's a beautiful thing. That's a great answer too, is that it's, yeah, if you are doing anything external, it's a form. If you're going to do something, it's so much simpler than if it's a pure, right, if it's pure internal, I mean, even then it's a simpler approach, depending on what you're trying to do and what you're trying to automate, but it's a very simple and quick and easy way to go and build out that interface.