 My name is Giovanna Watson and I am the owner of Detroit SIP, which is a soon-to-be-open coffee shop in Detroit, but also a community gathering space. The goal of this project is not to bring in new entrepreneurs necessarily, it's citizens of Detroit that want to grow their business and you want to give them a helping hand. They need better access to capital, they need better access to skills, and they need access to networks for business opportunities. So I partnered with Kellogg and then brought in the J.P. Morgan Chase Foundation and they have funded now a loan fund that supports minority entrepreneurs working in the city of Detroit. I thought, well, the University of Michigan has extraordinary skills in our faculty and our students. Could we bring those together across disciplinary lines? When we applied for the M-Cubed, it was really an easy, straightforward process. We were funded right away and that helped us launch the new center. So we've got law, business, computer science, and the Stamp School of Art and Design all involved. You've got students with all these great ideas and energy and a desire to go out and apply those ideas to entrepreneurs that could really potentially benefit from connecting with these students. And they came with their backpacks and their manuals and at my request, some quick book cheat sheets. Students are primary counsel, they're the front line lawyers. And they got down there, they were like, wow, these are families in coffee shops and people are coming and they need this and they want this. Students come away with an appreciation, number one, that problems are not just housing their discipline, number two, they need their counterparts from across the university. I wish to do my part as a native in current Detroit or to change the mindsets. There are good things happening here and there are good people here. I take that as my mission, my responsibility to show you. And all that happens over a cup of coffee.