 Gullimba was simply born out of the need to provide a platform to share, celebrate and educate, I guess, white Australia around Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander culture. Gullimba is a creative agency. We get to work with a range of amazing clients and communities right across Australia, from non-profit to government to corporate organisations. Primarily, around the aspect of storytelling, can be anything from a brand to animation to photography to filming. It can be a full end-to-end campaign. Gullimba's had the opportunity to be involved in a number of DFAT public diplomacy programs over the years, through Europe, through China, in Bangkok, in Vientiane, in Laos and also in various markets in the US, which has been great because it exposes you to just a variety of different things out there, particularly in America when you're looking at First Nations over there, what they're doing in terms of their cultural preservation, their cultural maintenance and taking those learnings and bringing them back to Australia, which has been really good. I think the future of Gullimba really lends itself to be employing that next generation of young Indigenous creators. As Aboriginal people, we've been doing business for thousands of years. We're just doing it in a different way, you know, in the 21st century. We have a lot of value that we can bring to the process of storytelling. So from an organisation with a brand wanting to promote that overseas, looking in your own backyard to understand what our shared history is, to better inform where your organisation is and where you want to be, and with that shared understanding and history, it's that collectiveness that allows for a stronger narrative and a stronger relationship that I guess helps us all move forward as an Asian.