Morning Brew Daily - How to Find a Career You Love, with Author and Venture Capitalist Bill Gurley
Episode Date: December 29, 2025Episode 745: Neal and Toby sit down with Bill Gurley, a venture capitalist and author and discuss Bill’s new book “Runnin' Down a Dream, How to Thrive in a Career You Actually Love”. The guys as...k Bill about what practices one should have when pursuing an interest they might wanna make a career. Plus, where would Bill start an AI company, Austin or San Francisco? The 9-9-6 mentality, and more. Check out https://www.public.com/morningbrew for more Subscribe to Morning Brew Daily for more of the news you need to start your day. Share the show with a friend, and leave us a review on your favorite podcast app. Listen to Morning Brew Daily Here: https://www.swap.fm/l/mbd-note Watch Morning Brew Daily Here: https://www.youtube.com/@MorningBrewDailyShow Paid endorsement. Brokerage services provided by Open to the Public Investing Inc, member FINRA & SIPC. Investing involves risk. Not investment advice. Generated Assets is an interactive analysis tool by Public Advisors. Output is for informational purposes only and is not an investment recommendation or advice. See disclosures at public.com/disclosures/ga. Past performance does not guarantee future results, and investment values may rise or fall. See terms of match program at https://public.com/disclosures/matchprogram. Matched funds must remain in your account for at least 5 years. Match rate and other terms are subject to change at any time. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Good morning brew daily show.
I'm Neil Fryman. And I'm Toby Howell.
To follow your passion or not to follow
your passion. That is the question.
Legendary VC Bill Gurley
explains how to find a career
you actually love. It's Monday
December 29th. Let's ride.
Happy Monday, everyone. Hope you have
a chill final week of 2025
ahead. You know, it's not.
Having a job you hate.
Bill Gurley is one of the most successful venture capitalists in Silicon Valley history,
having been an early investor in startups like Uber,
and he came on the show to discuss his upcoming book about finding a job you're actually passionate about.
Are you implying that this is not a job you are actually passionate about, Neil?
We get into Jeff Bezos's regret minimization framework,
whether you should really follow your passion,
and he finally settles once and for all whether getting an MBA is worth it.
And make sure you stay to the end to hear what life is like as a person who is six, nine.
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Now, here's Bill.
Bill, thank you so much for joining us.
Thanks for having me on.
All right.
So you've written this book, running down a dream.
Shout out Tom Petty, in which you lay out the principles for essentially finding your dream job.
The first principle of that is chase your curiosity.
Now, growing up, I think I speak for a lot of little kids, little boys in the 90s, our main curiosity.
was sports.
I wanted to be a sports center anchor.
Toby over here wanted to be a professional soccer player.
He came pretty close.
But it probably wouldn't make sense for us to all pursue a career in sports
because maybe our skills don't exactly match onto the particular jobs in that industry.
So my question is, how do you differentiate between a passion that would make for a good
career and a passion that you should just keep as a side hobby?
Yeah.
So one thing I would say, like the initial impetus for the
book came from me reading biographies. And I think a lot of people go through a period in their
life where they just devour biographies. And I noticed some similar traits and processes that
different people in far-ranging industries were doing that led to radical success. And the three that
really kicked this off for me was a restaurateur, a college coach, and a folk singer. And those
are all three industries your parents would tell you not to go into. And the one thing I would
just say specifically, like about the sports comment, we have several profiles in the books that
are related to people that have thrived in sports in general, you know, often not the talent person.
But the number of jobs that surround the talent people is often 20 to one. You know, there's
lots, and I think a lot of young people don't perceive that to be true. We have a profile
of a woman that's been wildly successful as a Hollywood agent that loved movies growing up,
but never considered herself an actor, actress, and so never really leaned into it,
and eventually came back around and realized, oh, I could be an agent, and I can be around
this stuff. And the book actually concludes with this interesting experience I had at
South by Southwest, where I set in on this, you know, bizarrely peculiar panel on bedroom
producers. Apparently, now you can produce high quality content in your bedroom with the
modern tools. And it was a sold-out room. And then they did Q&A at the end. And this
girl walked up to the microphone and says, I'd really love to pursue a career in music, but my
parents tell me it's too hard you can't make money. And one of the panelists said, you know,
people say that, but I've never met anyone that leans into it and really pursues it that hasn't
been able to have a career in this industry. And so I think there's a little bit of a myth that
these things are too hard. My test in the book, and the reason that chapter's titled Chase Your
Curious is my test as to whether you're going to be successful in the dream job and whether you
should really push towards it is, are you willing to learn on your own time?
you know, this subject and to study it. And I like to say, you know, if you have three episodes of
Breaking Bad Left, would you study this instead? Like, does it compete with what you do in your free time?
And I think if you find yourself just so enamored with something that you're studying it, studying it
for pleasure in your free time, that's a really good sign. One thing I've heard you mentioned twice now
is my parents tell me not to do this.
My parents maybe are pushing me down a different path.
Why do you think there's a delta between what maybe our parents were telling us
and what maybe you were advocating for in your book?
Yeah, I think, I think, you know, a lot of our parents emerge from a time,
especially our grandparents maybe, and you and I are different generations,
but where people had to take the job that was available to them.
and a lot of people, you know, had to work two jobs.
There was a lot of grinding out there.
And so I think there was a natural reaction.
We quote in the book, the Willie Nelson song,
Don't let your babies grow up to be cowboys, you know,
but doctors and lawyers and such.
So we developed this mindset where you want to push kids towards economic safety.
And that meant jobs where you know that the unemployment's low and the salaries are high.
Interestingly, AI throws some of that into question as well.
But I think we've just pushed a lot of kids down this thing I call like the career industrial complex.
And Jonathan Haidt calls it the resume arms race.
Like it starts early.
It starts at like 10, you know, and you're adding in the lacrosse lessons and the cello lessons and the chess lessons and the foreign language.
And like we're really pushing.
these kids like in an industrialized way. You know, I had a chance to meet Rick Rubin recently,
and in his book, he just says we don't allow children to explore anymore. It's almost like
finding your fascination. There's not much time for it, you know? Your book comes at an interesting
time because the concept of following your passion or pursuing your dream job seems to be kind
of at an all-time low right now. You have all these prominent voices like Scott Galloway saying,
if someone tells you to follow your passion, it means they're already rich.
And Mark Cuban once said, don't follow your passion, follow your effort.
What are they getting wrong?
Well, I do think the phrase became cliched, you know, and when I gave the original speech,
it was titled, Find Your Passion, and I renamed it, Chase Your Curiosity, for this reason.
And when Seinfeld gave the commencement speech at Duke, he made fun of the word passion,
but then he reoriented it around a word fascination.
I think it meant the same thing.
I take exception to those points of view,
and I think in some ways they're being contrarian
because it did become so clichéish,
and people say it all the time.
But, you know, you're going to spend about 80,000 hours at work.
And I've met people, and you and I are discussing before we started,
that a lot of podcasters are in their dream job,
and they look extremely happy all the time.
Both of you guys look really happy.
Absolutely beaming.
And like, I do believe that the tools are available today
to be successful in almost any field.
Now, it requires an immense amount of commitment
and an immense amount of self-directed learning.
And so some people, I think, aren't up for the journey, you know.
I had an interesting conversation with Angela Duckworth, who in reflecting on grit 10 years after she wrote it,
she thinks that the passion piece should have been more accentuated versus the perseverance.
Those were her two elements of grit.
And she said, we've taught the kids how to grind.
Like we've literally taught them how to grind, you know, kind of helicopter parents.
And what happens is they grind and grind and grind and then they wake up either.
junior year in college, senior year in college, two years into the workforce, and they're just
exhausted. And the one thing I would say that's a huge advantage if you have immense curiosity
about a topic is that studying, that practicing comes for free, you know. And there's no athlete,
you know, in their 30s, 40s, Steph Curry, LeBron, where you would expect them to not practice.
but in most careers, people don't think of honing your craft and practice post-college.
And I think if you can put yourself in a career where you are able to continue to hone and self-practice,
you're going to excel past the vast majority of other people.
Yeah.
So when it comes to dream jobs, obviously a pro is you like what you do.
You don't show up to work hating your life every day.
But you argue it goes beyond that.
and it's actually a competitive advantage in the modern job market.
So can you break down almost the economics of passion for us?
Yeah, and by the way, one thing I should have said related to that,
don't, you know, don't do what you love or don't, don't chase your passion.
The job satisfaction numbers are at an all-time low.
The Gallup poll numbers are like only 40% of people consider themselves engaged at work,
this whole phrase, quiet quitting.
there's actually people who are like actively disengaged at work that are like trying to harm the organization.
Like it's horrific.
And we did a survey with Wharton where we asked 10,000 people if you could go back again, would you do something differently?
And 60% said yes.
So I think people aren't ending up in the right place, you know.
But to your specific question about this disadvantage, like if you, you know, if you, you know,
know, if you study a lot of the greats, they're just all self-learners, and it's almost
independent of industry. And if you can, you know, find your way to be so curious about
what you're doing that you're constantly learning. People that I profile, the first profiles
on Danny Meyer, the amazing restaurant tour in New York City. And my co-writer and I talked to him
recently, and he was coming back from a European learning trip where he took all his
chefs and they went, you know, one after the other after the other.
His learning trips are a little bit different than maybe some others.
But but, but, but, but, but when, when, when, when, when people read the book, you'll see that
they're, I understand how you can say like, yeah, you're eating in fine places in Europe,
but, but they take copious notes. They, they, they, you know, they, they, they are there to learn.
And every one of his endeavors, including shake shack, he went on a tour, you know, before he did
this thing.
And it's just a really amazing unfair competitive advantage.
If you're young, one area of learning is always the new tools.
And so if you're breaking into a new industry and you understand podcast or you understand
what makes Instagram work, like imagine if that company has a product or a consumer product,
you're going to be highly differentiated by knowing what's on the margin and what's on the edge.
And that can be extremely valuable to a young person in their career.
Speaking of new tools, if you were to start writing this book now instead of seven, eight years ago,
would you change anything about it to reflect the impact of AI on the workforce?
Should people still follow their passion if AI is better at it than they are?
Yeah, well, I would say two things about that.
The first thing, which is a piece of advice to anyone in the world, is lean in and play with these tools.
you know, it is the modern tool set.
Like if, you know, if you come to the workplace and can't use Word or Excel or PowerPoint or email,
like you're disadvantaged.
And this is the new version of that.
And so no matter what you're doing, you should understand how these tools can be used to make you more competitive in your field.
And just as I mentioned understanding Instagram, like understanding AI in your field is the best way to stay at the
forefront of what's of what's possible and and could accelerate you to the front of the line
by being the first person that does that.
You did say on another podcast, Tim Ferriss's show that you don't think there's ever been
a better time to have a self-determined job process.
What is a self-determined job process and why is now the best time to pursue that?
I was talking to my friend Mike Mowison earlier today about his career journey.
He's a famous in select around finance and investing.
And he talked about it in the very early days of his career.
His self-learning meant going to the New York Library with a bucket of coins so he could feed the microfiche printer to go find these articles where people had written things that he wanted to learn.
You contrast that to today with all the greats that have gone and done interviews on YouTube.
immense library of podcasts that are out there.
And now AI, I mean, you could be driving down the road and put AI in voice mode and just have a
conversation with the most intelligent encyclopedia of all time.
And so that's what I mean by that.
Like, if you have a curiosity and want to engage in self-directed learning or studying the
greats or anything like that, the stuff that's free.
and at your fingertips is is unprecedented in human history.
Another one of your principles for career success is find great mentors.
Maybe that's chat GPT, but maybe it's a person.
And a lot of listeners hearing this are probably thinking themselves, yeah, I'd love a mentor,
but where?
How do I find one, let alone a great one?
What is your advice for seeking out a mentor?
There's a lot of detail in the book, but at a high level, the things I would do is
I divided into two pieces.
I would create aspirational mentors.
So these are people, and Danny Meyer did this.
He created a list of 12 of them that were innovators and people that were changing the restaurant industry.
And he profiled them and studied them.
So these aren't people you're going to meet tomorrow,
but they're people that if you can fully understand what they've done differently while they're successful,
who are their mentors, what do they read, like study them like you would.
you know, studying for a history test.
So that's one.
And then and then be more practical about who your mentors are going to be at this point in time
and find people who are either close to you or a network you know or just go a level
or two down the ladder.
I mean, people are flattered to be told that you're inspired by them, right?
And if everyone shoots for Michael Lewis as a writing mentor, like everyone's going to fail, right?
But there may be someone in your community that doesn't get that request that much and they're going to be more available.
There are certain industries, Silicon Valley, you know, where I spent 25 years building my career, it is remarkable the number of people that will say yes to a coffee in that area.
And I think it's because it's such a dynamic industry and people.
move in and out of different companies, but it's remarkable. And I've heard, and I actually saw a
documentary about this, that the songwriter community in Nashville is similar. Not the stars,
but the songwriters. If you reach out to somebody, they'll give you 10 or 15 minutes.
Neil, reach out to Taylor Swift. See what she thinks about your business. She's around.
She's around. One thing that this reminded us of is that Tyler Cowan, the economist Tyler Cowan
said, all my mentors are younger than me at this point.
Have you seen something similar in this age of, you know, rapid technological innovation?
Well, I certainly, well, one, you know, the industry I come from venture capital,
I've had a philosophy my whole life that had been stored to youth.
That the disruptors of tomorrow are frequently in the, in the 20s, and your ability to associate
with them gets harder as you get older.
and the rule sets that you that crystallize in your brain as you get older makes it harder to see the disruption that's coming next.
And so, yeah, it's a bit awkward, but if you're self-learning, you should be indifferent to the age of the person you're learning from as long as you know they know something you don't.
We'll be back with more Bill right after this.
Principle number five in your career playbook is go where the action is.
In your view, where is the action right now?
Well, I mean, that whole chapter is about identifying the epicenter of an industry.
And I have a list in the book of 10 reasons why this is something you should do.
I recognize that it may not be economically feasible, and we should talk about that at the end.
I'm launching a foundation to try and help even in that scenario.
But the benefits that accrue to you, you know, by being a songwriter that lands in Nashville
or an entrepreneur that lands in the Bay Area are immense.
And all the learning opportunities go dramatically higher.
The optionality gets really enhanced.
Like a lot of famous people, when you hear them tell their story,
there's always this chance meeting that kind of came out of nowhere.
I was super lucky to meet this person.
Like, if you're where that world is, the odds of that,
that happening go up and up and up and up.
And I think I don't know who said that luck is when preparation meets opportunity,
but opportunity is enhanced greatly.
I mean, you guys are in New York.
You know this.
Like stuff happens because you're in New York that wouldn't happen if you were in Topeka.
Yeah, you get honked at a lot.
But you're a big Austin, Texas guy.
And you came from Silicon Valley.
So if you were starting an AI company, would you do it in Austin or would you do it in the Bay Area?
I mean, quite frankly, if you were going to, if you, let's say you're a young person who just loves AI and wants to be in and around it, I would be in San Francisco tomorrow.
I would get on a plane and be there tomorrow.
It is where everything's happening.
The new, oddly, this is very unusual, but COVID led to a malaise, I would say, in the work ethic of the older Silicon Valley crew.
as a writ large, these new AI kids have adopted this phrase from China, 996, and they are living
it. And by the way, if you don't go there and don't know about 996, you wouldn't know your
odds of succeeding are so low because they're working so goddamn hard in San Francisco right now.
Way in on that for us, because we've talked about 996 a couple times on the podcast.
Do you think it's healthy?
Do you think it's something people should strive for,
or is it maybe just a fad right now?
It may just be a fad,
but there's a window of opportunity around AI,
and some of the early winners
are going to be rewarded substantially for that success.
And whenever there's a disruption,
the opportunity to grab the flag,
if you will, in an industry is way higher.
And so from a very pragmatic point of view, you should want to run harder right now because it may be a window of opportunity that won't last.
And I also just have a general philosophy and this ties back to fascination and curiosity.
Like in sports, or even let's say the ballet, would you ever look down upon one of the greats because you read that they practiced more than the other.
person. Like, we don't ever apply that lens to careers, which I think is a bit unfair, because
we celebrate the fact that Michael Jordan or Kobe Bryant worked harder than anybody else.
Like, we celebrate it in there. So why don't we celebrate it in AI? I think there's a bit of
an unfair lens that we use on careers. I'm just going to put my, like, pragmatic hat on
for a second, where if a lot of your advice is geared towards, you know, going where the action is
and following your passion, following your interest,
but then someone is sitting there saying, like,
I'm literally just trying to make it to next week.
I'm just trying to make it paycheck to paycheck.
How do you ground your advice to the reality
that maybe a lot of people are facing right now in America?
Well, I'm going to mention two things.
I want to address the question directly,
and then I want to tell you about the foundation
that I'm launching simultaneously.
So I think it is hard.
Like, I think there are a lot of people that have limited ability to change what they're doing.
They may, you know, some people put themselves in that situation.
I think young people, I ended up in New York at age 27, and I had a lot of friends that, you know, got to place in the Hamptons, kids in private.
Like, they made all these decisions that locked themselves in because they were spending right up to their salaries.
So one thing you can do to increase your flexibility, you know, Danny, when he became a restaurateur, took a 90% pay cut, like, but he could afford it because he saved money from the previous job.
So, you know, you can create your own flexibility.
You also don't have to, you know, go to the epicenter.
There's many versions of that.
There's online communities everywhere that are very purpose built.
and you can plug into those.
And then let me tell you about the foundation.
So I'm launching something called the Running Down a Dream Foundation.
It'll be at RDAD-O-R-G.
It's going to really ramp up next year,
so we're still putting the pieces in place.
But we're going to take applications and award a $5,000 grant to people that want to chase their dream job
but don't have the economic means to do it.
So that's coming.
I would also tell you, like, there's a great story in the book about Jen Atkin,
who is the most successful hairstylist of all time.
You should go check.
But she went to L.A. with $300 in her pocket, got a job working in the front desk of a salon,
and then went to a vocational school in L.A. that's free to learn cosmetology.
Like, and so, you know, she was resourceful and looked around and used those things that were available to her.
But she had next to nothing.
Like, like what you just described was her starting point.
Now, you got your MBA from University of Texas.
And I'm sure a lot of people listening to this are saying, maybe they can get leg up or pursue my passion by getting an MBA.
But I've heard a lot of criticism about it.
It's expensive.
So is getting an MBA overrated or underrated?
I think it's an awesome opportunity if you, so there's some data in the book that we borrowed
from Dave Evans, who does the Designing Your Life class at Stanford.
And I should have the numbers in front of me, but I don't.
But like five years in, like 40% of people are no longer in a career associated with their
major.
And like 10 years after that, it's even less.
And so a lot of people don't end up working in this area they may be.
in. And so you may, you know, have majored in something that you're not particularly passionate about. You may have figured that out by working at it for two years. Sam Hinky, who he profiling the book, you know, did this. He was at Bain. He, you know, he read Michael Lewis's book on the Moneyball, and he just decided I'm going to go to NBA program as a way to repop myself to go chase this dream of being a sports general manager.
And it worked for them.
And one thing I would tell you about an MBA program is you get out of it what you put into it.
If you go in there with an intentionality to learn and maybe to repot or redirect, you can get a lot out of it.
You know, if you go in there and just coast, the grading's not that hard maybe outside of Harvard.
So you could you could coast through it.
But I wouldn't do that.
I wouldn't think it's not a stamp that's going to.
going to change your life. But if you want to go learn for two years and read pot, it's fantastic.
Neil, what do you think about Sam? We're a big process trusters here at Morningbrood Daily.
Okay, great. There's a whole chapter on my good friend Sam Hinky. It's pretty amazing.
He read that book and 10 years later was GM of the Philadelphia 76ers. Ten years later.
And we're still searching for a title or even a playoff first. I see your path in front of you,
though, read the book, Neil.
Speaking of your book, and just this is the process of bringing a book to life,
is there someone that you wish you could get one blurb on the cover or the back of your
book that you either got or you didn't get?
Talk to me about, like, who is the, you know, Michael Jordan of book blurbs that you wish
you got?
I'm very fortunate.
I was really nervous about this, but it turned out I feel like I've gotten to know a lot
of great authors.
I have a huge respect for the art and craft of writing.
And one of the reasons it took six years was I was devouring books and advice from people
to try and make the book as good as it could possibly be.
But I lucked out.
I've got James Clear, who saw my original presentation and was part of the encouragement to go do this.
Jonathan Haidt provided a quote, Jeff Bezos, Adam Grant,
It's like a who's who David Epstein.
I got very fortunate.
It's good blurb.
That's some good blurbant right there.
Jeff Bezos just reminded me of another question.
There's an idea that he advocates for it called the Regret Minimization Framework.
Oh, yeah.
We talk about it.
When he was deciding whether to start Amazon or not, he kind of put himself in his shoes as an 80-year-old.
And looking back in my life, would I regret not making this choice?
How do you think about using regret as almost a North Star to make career decisions?
Well, it relates to that survey we did, right? Because that was measuring career regret. And Daniel Pink, who also provided a blurb. He has a book about regret, and he has this concept called boldness regrets. And he mentions the Bezos thing. And what he has, he studied and says it exists in every country around the globe is the regrets that weigh heaviest on people are regrets of inaction. This is what he
cause boldness regrets. And as you get older, they're kind of bigger in your brain and cause more
anxiety. And he argues regrets can be very helpful because that anxiety should force you to go do
this thing. But I think a lot of people never take the chance. They don't feel they have the
permission or the audacity. And part of what I hope to do, like what will be truly defining a success
to me is if I unlock that potential by giving people that permission to do this thing. So for those
that don't know, Bezos came up with this thing. He's walking around Central Park. He's got an
incredible job at D.E. Shaw, and David Shaw begging him not to go. And he asked himself,
if I imagine myself at 80, will I regret more leaving D.E. Shaw and maybe, you know, screwing up
my finance career or missing out on this chance to be an entrepreneur? And he said, immediately,
it was easy for him. And by thinking in that frame. And I, I, I, I,
I've mentioned this to executives along the way in the venture world.
Like people don't sweat that much making a mistake.
Like you get over it, you move on.
And so why not take the swing, you know?
Speaking of regret, your longhorns are not in the college football playoff this year.
No, there's a point to this question.
It's a very controversial process.
A lot of people are angry about their teams not being in and they think it's a broken system.
So if someone put you in charge of the NCAA, how do you fix what's going
going on in college football?
Well, there's a lot.
I mean, there's so much in that question.
So the first thing is I was very nervous about the arrival of NIL, especially unstructured
NIL, and the open transfer portal, both of which don't exist in any pro sport.
And I worry a lot, not about the kids at the top, but I worry about the kids at the bottom.
I think there are a number of humans in all the different sports that took an incredible life experience away from D1 athletics and even all the way down to D3 athletics.
And I worry that the end result of all this might be several schools just terminating those programs or those efforts, which isn't a direct answer to your question.
But I worry about that.
I do think you're going to see either with or without the NCAA, I think the big, either with or without the NCAA, I think the big.
conferences are going to try and establish a rule set.
I don't know if the judges will let them, but you literally have a process right now that's
worse than any pro because there's no salary cap.
There's no limit on walking away.
And so it's really, it's really random.
In terms of the playoff itself, you know, let's go to 16, maybe 32, why not?
It's actually, this raises an interesting Venn diagram of two of your interests.
you've talked a lot about regulatory capture and how it often, you know,
ends up benefiting the incumbents in industries.
So when you're talking about putting more regulations onto college football,
I'm wondering if those two are diametrically opposed to each other,
would more regulations around NIL just end up benefiting Alabama again?
Or do you think that it's a different case when it comes college football?
Well, I mean, to your point, there's been, I think, unexpected parity.
since this happened.
And I think one of the things that's been really hard to hold on to is your second string.
So one of the things that made teams like Alabama so dominant is the second string and third string were all incredible athletes.
And now those people will go somewhere else and get playing time.
So that probably has led to parity.
I don't know that the path run is sustainable.
like I think a number of, you know, a number of the board of regents are going to just call quits to the game that's escalating.
We got one final question for you, Bill.
How do you think your life would be different if you were five, nine instead of six nine?
It's a good question.
I mean, I've read the books on height.
I mean, I wouldn't have had the experience I had riding the bench of Florida, which I think shaped me in some, you know, weird way.
And I, you know, if you read those studies, you know, it could, it could impact other opportunities as well.
I don't know.
I would have been much more comfortable on commercial airlines.
Oh, I can't imagine.
That's tall people problems, you know, tall people problems.
All right, Bill, thank you so much for joining us.
This was a really fun conversation.
Everyone listening, make sure to check out running down a dream, how to thrive in a career you actually love.
It drops in February, so keep an eye out for that.
Bill, thank you so much.
This was great.
Thanks to both of you.
