 The professional networking is unbeatable. This is where everybody who's involved in data governance comes eventually. So whether you want to meet your heroes, you know, the people who wrote the book, or whether you want to find the leading practitioners from your industry, this is the place to be. You can Google all you want to Google. You will not get the comparison and the context of this unless you come to an event like this. Energizing, because I know what needs to be done, sometimes it's hard at our company to do the right thing, but you say, okay, I'm on the right track, I know what needs to be done today. And we are getting into this journey of data governance and that is why my interest to attend this TGIQ and so far it's been like all learning experience. Like I'm right now a sponge when it comes to data governance. I have all the lessons through my data analytics, like my career has been in data analytics, but never specifically into governance space. So I'm thoroughly enjoying every part of it. It's been great. It's really given me a solid base in data governance to go back with. I have my whole team here, so we've been collaborating, you know, touching base after our sessions. Without dataversity, we wouldn't have the venues to be able to come here and it's not just networking, which we do. We get a chance to share our ideas. We get feedback. Ma'am, this is a really just great environment to learn, obviously I mean San Diego is gorgeous, but a lot of really smart people that have learned, I think a lot about best practices and things like that. Well, the wonderful thing about dataversity conferences is we're all here because we're data nerds or we're data governance professionals or we're very close to data. So we've brought a wide variety of cultures and backgrounds and people together from everywhere, but we all have a common thread amongst us. So it makes it much easier for us data folks to network in that kind of environment. The experience of being together in person with that rich community of expertise and experience is, I think, quite unique. In the case of this particular meeting, it's even the environment that we're meeting. You know, there's places where you can sit down around a campfire, quite literally, to share stories and learn from each other. So it's fun, it's educational, it's tremendously valuable, and it's really one of the things that makes this community unique. We walked into this event, as many people do, and go, ah, we found our peeps. You know, this is where we've been looking for. These are people who want to talk about data. This is the way we should be talking about data. It's been absolutely wonderful. I think the biggest thing for me has been the networking and getting to meet people with similar interests or different interests that are complementary. Absolutely. For me, it's a mix of getting to see old friends that I haven't gotten to see for a couple of years now, and then always, as we're talking to people and we see folks coming into this organization, it's some of the community for the first time and realizing they're not alone in the data world. And just the way it lights up their eyes, that just makes me so happy. It's so much a bunch of like-minded people, my people, people who share the same passions, who share, you know, this desire to help each other. So, like, it's what I call a shared learning experience. So you have people who know certain things about data governance, other things about privacy or information quality, and I feel like we're all on this path and we're all bringing our own strengths to come together. I think the experience of being face-to-face with your colleagues is virtually irreplaceable, or irreplaceable through virtual means. You know, a colleague of mine used to say a five-minute conversation with the right person is worth five hours of research online.