 One of the fortunate things about the military is that you are always surrounded by really good people, people that can have an impact, both from people that you're working for as well as people that are working for you or with you, whether it's a division officer or senior or junior enlisted, there's great people all around you that just with their positive attitude or work ethic drive you to be a better sailor. In the military, if you're not trusting the guy standing next to you, your partnership with one another isn't going to go very far. Your collective team isn't going to act as one unit and it only goes as far as the trust that you build with one another. There's a whole ton of management and I obviously was hands on with management night and day while I was in the Navy and that's kind of my bread and butter here. While you're in, you're dealing with a whole lot all the time. There's always things going on and you're managing whether it's your mission critical task at hand as well as upwards of 50 people and with those 50 people, they obviously all have jobs that are going on so you need to make sure that all those pieces are in place and they're doing the things that they need to do in order to accomplish the mission. I think leadership is one of the primary things. Being directly responsible for a division or an entire department or over half the ship, that type of leadership can really translate into whatever else you're doing. Professionalism is people that join the service are kind of drilled that into them at an early stage and that I think for me is something that I'll carry with me.