 Well, I won't go through a lot of the detail I planned on, but what I will do, we'll send out one more yet hand out, and it's a flowchart of the awards process, and really the big thing I just want to mention with the awards process, you may receive the award directly as a PI or it may come to sponsored programs or it may come to your department. Whatever fashion it comes, make sure you send it to sponsored programs. I say more times than not, where a PI is meeting to start spending money, doesn't know where the award is, and it's hanging out by some of these desks somewhere, so make sure you get it our way so that it can be reviewed, signed, and set on. And like I said, the handout is going to kind of point by point kind of caught what's grabbing when with the awards. And the other thing, I don't have this in a handout, but some of this is on our sponsored programs website related to some non-financial matters. If you need to begin pre-spending an award, contact sponsored programs will walk you through what needs to be done in order for that to happen. When it comes to budget revisions prior to the award, we may be asking you, you know, the sponsor may be funding you less than what's funded. We'll work with you to get the lower budget changes and scope of work change. If it is a drastic difference. Time extensions as well. Those need to be read through sponsored programs to request the extension from a sponsor. In some cases, those extensions, we may already have the authority to grant it, but in others, we may need the sponsor's approval for that. PI transfers. Now's the time of year where new faculty may be coming to the university. If you've got faculty staff that are bringing awards with them, make sure you contact our office. We'll walk through with you with what needs to happen. Those awards will be transferred to NDSU on the reverse side as well. If you've got any staff that are leaving NDSU, please contact us. We can work with you to help you understand what that process is, whether awards need to be transferred out or if he had to change the PI's and close back with you that are leaving. And then a re-budgets of funds into equipment. Those requests come through our office as well. Like I said, I won't go through the details, but come talk to us and we'll walk you through that process. And lastly, all other requests that need sponsor approval. Those need to come through sponsored programs. I think some of the questions earlier related to budget changes. For a lot of the budget changes that those can happen between your department, grant and contract accounting. We're only involved, again, if there's a change in under our costs or sponsor approval is necessary. 30 seconds and lost. Thank you. This is very helpful. Once in a while there's a hang up between three and four. We know it gets sent here and then we don't hear anything and like she don't know what to call. Oh sure. Yeah, what exactly? And I would mention, because I get those questions all the time what's the status of the award, what's going on, is it over a grant contract, is it not. A lot of the times it's one of two places either it's in my stack of awards to get to, which I haven't gotten to, or it's in the process of being sent to the sponsor or we're waiting for signatures back. And so I, you know, and it does, I mean, sometimes we send it to the sponsor and they don't realize it's at their office or whatever. Who knows what happens. But, you know, we, yes, if you give me a call, send an email, I'll certainly take a look and see who it is. So that's okay to bug you if we haven't heard for a while and it's you and me. Yeah, when it comes. How many weeks did you say you'd give you one, I know you have a stack that talks to you one time and there were 12 people out of line. So what's the, because our, on my end, they're always asking is it signed, is it signed, and you are dealing with a large university here. So what should I give the partner as far as time frame? You know, again, it's sort of that, it depends. What I would say this time of year, when you look at from April to September, that is our busiest time when it comes to awards, because the federal agencies are trying to get stuff out. State agencies are commodity groups. And so in terms of the volume for me, that my time is like tripled when it comes to the awards, because, you know, I may see 60, you know, 50, 60 in a given month, when it comes to this and that time frame, I'm at 110 or more in a given month. And it just, it's busy. So as far as time frame, I really, really, really try hard to make sure I've responded to everything within 30 days. I try hard at that. It doesn't always happen, but I at least give some attention to it. And as far as the timing to get, you know, final negotiations, again, that would depend on the sponsor. If it's USDA, it's review, sign, out the door. Now, when it comes to some other, whether it be like a private company, that's a federal flow through, it took me about a year and a half on one, because it was a lot of work with the attorneys trying to negotiate IP terms, other things like that. So it really, you know, it really depends on the circumstance and it depends on the agreement. If the agreement has very standard terms and means no negotiating, those can get quickly turned around in less than a month, but it really depends on what we get. And sometimes it's not just private companies, sometimes foundations as well. It can be a little sticky. But again, I think as Julie and some of the grant coordinators have mentioned too, we're here to help not to be a hindrance. And so we, you know, if you have questions, concerns, if things are taking longer than you anticipate, you know, I'd rather you give us a call. You know, there may be good reasons why. Or it may be simple things that we need to look at process changes or adjustments. Things that maybe made sense at one time that don't make sense anymore. So anyway, yes. Yeah, the way Maria and I have really tried to encourage people to send questions to the NDSU research listserv, because, well, let me kind of preface that. If you have proposal questions, generally that's going to be all Maria award questions. Generally is going to be me. If you have that mix of interpreting guidelines, time extension requests, some of that send those questions to our NDSU research listserv. Because if I'm on vacation, Maria is on vacation or either of us are sick, at least one of us will respond. At least we'll see. At least we'll see it. And that's not our idea. Wow. Okay, so, deep breath. We got through it. First of all, huge thank you to this crew and the panel. We've not done anything like this before. We have tried to really focus on extension and pull all of these pieces together. And so, your feedback will be appreciated. There were some topics that came up. Carl brought up a good one that I mentioned to Charlie Carl. We will follow up on that one. Had to do with an eye-cut thing, and we'll work on that. We'll try to follow up on any of your other questions. A piece that I would request of every presenter who had a handout. If you will see to it that I get emailed a copy of it. We did our best to do just a video recording. We're going to take some clips of it, put it on our website with some of the handouts. You know, just some little chunks of information. Chuck it out. See what it turns out like. And hopefully the people who couldn't attend will at least have an opportunity to review some of that. So, we may follow up. We talked about how once it's awarded, now it goes over to grants and contracts with the purchasing people and all that kind of stuff that we go through. Maybe we'll follow up and do something like that down the road. But this was our effort to try to share and improve grant proposals and grant writing. Thank you guys again very much.