 Yn y gwaith gydw i wedi ymmiŮt hwn oŷwaith, peirwch byddo'i cael ei gynnig o gyflawnir eich cyflawn i'r cybancau. Gan yw'r iddynt o'i wahanol nifer yma, eich cyflawni i'r cyflawni, dwi'n sredig. So, yna nifer alsiydd yn y gaeliaeth gyda'i, cwyddo yma? Nid yw de nhw'n chi'r pwbl yn hyn ychydig, yna fan ychydig i'r hafu a'r cyreflawn i'r yrhaith gwaith. yn ymgyrch, mae'n olygu'r cyfnod o'r cyd-dweithio i ddifudiantau o'r cyfrannu'r cyfrannu o amglygu. Ddyn nhw yw'r gwaith chi'n ffordd i ymgyrchol. Felly mae'n unig i helpu'n gwneud, nid o'n ei wneud i'r gwaith, ond mae'n rhan o'n gallu gwneud i'r cyfrannu. Mae'n helpu'n gweithio'n gweithio'n cyfrannu of £10 billion opening new stalls. I think principle of any business, that was taught to me very young and I've tried to stick to is whatever you do try and be the best in the world at it. Now when I said Jill has picked up, it was just me for 10 months. So trying to be the best in the world when there's only one of you is kinda hard. So you have to slice what it is you do very small. I aimed, my little dream, to be the best set of UK retail spatial data analysts and modelers. So keep it as small as you possibly can. And as part of that we use vast amounts of open data, all of the usual stuff you'd expect. And we publish our own open data as well. I think it's terribly important that those of us who exploit open data do give back in some way we can. Along the way, I'm always uncomfortable with the term data scientist. I think it slightly is a bit pretentious. It's slightly self-aggrandising. I think we're more data shephers. We help businesses through a complex world of open and closed data. Along the way, we're very lucky to have been recognised, won seven awards so far, including the very first ODI business award, which was very nice. And then probably the one that's most relevant just last month, the very last one on the end. We won the demographic user group annual award. And I think why that's interesting is that that award has been made for 15 years. And it was the very first time it was awarded to a business. Someone in the business of making money and making profits out of open data. And there's a nice circularity to it. The previous winners of the Doug Award include Francis Maud, predecessor of our next speaker. So Tim Berners-Lee and Senaigel Shadbolt, the ONS, the DWP, loads of massive organisations. So it's kind of cool that a scrappy little 10-person company won it. So where are we now? Three and a bit years on. Depending on a phone call I'm expecting in a couple of hours, we'll either do slightly less or slightly more than a million pounds this year. Nice and profitable. And one of the main reasons I'm here is we're hiring. So if there's a couple of data modelers, shepherds, unicorns, scientists, you can pick your own job title. You want to work in King's Cross Clark and well with some great people. Come and talk to me over coffee. And because of our clients it would also help if you liked shopping and eating out. So where do we go now? The big dream. We haven't fulfilled the little dream but we're a long way. But there is a bigger dream out there. And we're lucky. I can't remember who it was. To be born in Englishman is the greatest luck in the world. But it's similar to that for businesses. Geolytics was born in London. And we are immensely privileged to work at the epicentre of the open data world. So we've just finished our very first major global project. Interestingly for one of the massive Silicon Valley giants. I'm not allowed to say who they are because they're incredibly shy. But we've just done seven countries in Europe. They showed it to the Americans. They loved it. So hopefully we might get that gig as well. And the other area that is a big dream is, as people have said already, commercial companies are going to start publishing open data. They're very scared of doing it at the moment. But we hope as they already are our clients and we know a lot about data. We can help them navigate that journey through open data. So thank you very much.