What was the intention there? Like, what were you hoping to get out of migrating from, like, what you already had, which was Looker, to any other tool, like count, or it doesn't have to be specific to count, but just, like, what were you trying to achieve with migrating? Yeah. It's a fair question. I think the the key problem we're looking at over time, there were there were a couple. One one was very much that we felt like we were being slightly compromised on both the cost perspective and then also a length of contract on on that side in particular. Yeah. And secondly, was just the accrual of the amount of assets that we had in it. Right? It was it was quite difficult, I think, for end users to navigate, quite difficult to onboard new users to because of the amount of data products and assets that we had on there. And, again, difficult even just in getting consistency across an individual team over which assets to use when for which processes, etcetera, because there was just so much. So really, yeah, the key things that we were looking for were migrating to a slimmed down version of what we already had Yeah. In terms of the amount of materials on there, but then also thinking about how quickly we could build out those new assets or the equivalents of the assets that we cared for and wanted to retain, and how quickly we'd be able to update those once we'd finished the migration as well and sort of take them to the next level. I had used Count before Get Ground at my previous organization at Severo, and it was a tool that I grew to really enjoy working with with stakeholders. It wasn't the only tool that I looked at when we were considering the migration for Get Ground, but I think the thing that really stood out for it that I knew and trusted already was the level of collaboration you can get with stakeholders on count when you're building out these assets. It's just, I think, unparalleled probably across BI tool suites. Yeah, so that in particular. I had a lot of confidence in the count metrics semantic layer in being able to deliver enough of what we needed. I didn't think it was ever gonna quite meet what Looker and LookerMal can support. But enough confidence that it was gonna give us what we needed to to get the get over the line as it were.