 Hi, I'm Marnie Webb. I'm the Chief Community Impact Officer at TechSoup and the CEO of our Product Development Division, Caravan Studios, and I'm going to show you how to use the geography feature in Excel. Just in your Excel spreadsheet, navigate over to the Data tab, highlight the list of places, I have a list of states here, and select Geography, and you'll see this little map icon comes up, gives you a lot of interesting information about the state, okay, great. But what if I don't just want to look at it like that, but I actually want to populate some columns, so I can totally do that, just by choosing this little grid, and then saying, well, I want to know the median household income in this state. I want to know the largest city in the state, right? And whatever else I want to know, and then you see with other places, I can turn around and do the exact same thing if I wanted. And just like anything else in Excel, I can grab it and pull it down, and it copies the formula into the other rows. So I have it for the other states in my list too. It works, you can see that it works for cities, right? But it also works for countries. If it's confused about what Ireland, you know, you mean, it asks you. And then, you know, for countries of course, it's giving you a lot of different information. You can even have the names of the leaders in an area, and again, you can just grab it and copy it down, like anything else. That's it, thanks.