 My name is Aaron Banks. I was an industrial engineering student at Purdue, graduated in December. During my time at Purdue, I played football for four years, was quarterback on the football team, and I was also student body president. When I was initially deciding to come to Purdue, I had wanted to be a biomedical engineer since about sixth grade. We did a little dissection lab and I was really into it and I really liked it. However, when I got to Purdue and realized that biomedical engineering was a little more intricate than just a simple sixth grade dissection lab, I realized that I didn't really have the same passion or that I thought I did. The overall goal was to help as many people as possible and I saw a biomedical engineering as a way to, I don't know, create my own prosthetics or some of the type of new technology where I could help a lot of people. But through my experiences at Purdue, I kind of realized that I could do that in a way that I'm more passionate about, even through business. So that kind of sparked my shift from biomedical engineering to thinking more about industrial engineering because I still wanted to have that engineering background but also wanted to learn more about business. So I was able to make that transition and that inspired a lot of the current thought process about business and my passion for helping people that I still have today. And I was able to see how entrepreneurship could play a role in a lot of the different extracurricular activities that I was already pursuing. So for instance, when I ran for student body president, the idea was to also give myself an experience like running a business. So I tried to mirror student government around what I thought was a successful business. And it worked out pretty well. I was able to do some very cool things. We partnered with Just Water which is a sustainable water company founded by Jaden Smith to bring that product to campus and have it sold on campus. But we were also able to bring Damon John from Shark Tank as the founder of Fubu and I was able to orchestrate a conversation with him as a part of the Giant Leap series. Very excited about both of those things. Both were sparked by my passion for entrepreneurship which was again continuously fostered through my experience at Purdue by the people I met mentors that I was able to interact with. I had been working towards that in my final semester at Purdue this past semester I was able to actually have one of my, the starter company that I'm working on as my senior design project. So I was able to work on that all semester with a team of very, very smart senior industrial engineers who helped take the business from just a vision to something actually tangible that I'm continuously working on now as well as starting my career here soon at Accenture doing management consulting as an analyst. So very excited about what's ahead for me and very thankful for the foundation that Purdue has allowed me to create for myself through the different opportunities that were available to me at the school.