 Increasingly, social impact is becoming embedded into most businesses and actually I don't think new businesses can get away with not factoring that into their business model. A challenge is actually the fact that social impact is seen as something separate from the business world. I really would prefer we don't make any difference but that business becomes much more socially conscious. The millennials, who my understanding is about 20-25, you know, they're 75% of the workforce is going to be millennials and statistics say that at least 90% of millennials actually want to work in a purpose-driven organization. The future is actually a purpose-driven economy. If you look at big corporations and all the different businesses, I mean that's what's driving everything around us and if we don't change the way they operate and enable them to be less hierarchical and provide the tools and also the literacy of how to do it, I don't see how we're going to transition. Inherently as Māori it's just something that we've always done. Social impact and social enterprise, while they're relatively new buzzwords, around the world it's always how we've operated. I like to think that New Zealanders in general have encapsulated that and we've just hosted the World's Social Enterprise Forum here and there's hundreds of businesses popping up in New Zealand. We think this is the way the world's going. If you look at what customers are now demanding from the businesses that they consume their goods and services from, things around supply, change, transparency, sustainability of the products that are being sourced, even just the treatment of workers, these are all issues that are really coming to the forefront and it's kind of one step further for investors going from aligning their consumption decisions with their values to then stepping to actually investing in ways that align with their values. Social impact is where businesses should be starting to focus. If you're creating something that's authentic and something that has the community in mind and it's going to nurture everyone, then not only is it easier to attract customers who believe in your story and are willing to support you, but you can also create a ripple effect throughout the community and you can become a sum of something that's much bigger than just yourself. Social impact to me is primarily about making the best use of our time, being able to sustain society and sustain people. From a social impact perspective, I think there's a lot left to be done because it's still a very nascent focus for businesses, but what's inspiring about New Zealand is that it's a place where it's actually been a focus for quite a while.