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Welcome back to Growth TV. I'm Carolyn
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Vallejo.
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Joining me here is Ron John Dad, principal
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product manager at SSNC Intralinks,
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to explore how AI is changing the dealmaking
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space, including job roles within M&A.
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Ronan, welcome to Growth CB.
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Thanks for having me.
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So first, I want to talk about some of the challenges
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in the dealmaking process that firms are hoping
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AI can really help solve.
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Yeah, I mean there are
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endless problems that happen in
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in M&A deal execution process
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that you could
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look to solve and and a lot of technologies
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out there are solving today, you
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know, our
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organization, we are positioned to
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talk to a lot of clients that are in,
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you know, focus on the diligence part of
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deal making.
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And the diligence part of deal making is what ends
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up taking a lot of the time
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throughout these processes that take years,
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months, however long.
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Over the past you know few years we
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have seen with COVID and
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a number of, you know, other just market
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issues going on that deals are taking longer
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they stall and
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time kills all deals
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so a lot of the.
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M&A professionals that we've been talking to have really
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been focused on just driving efficiency
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in the core
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due diligence tasks and jobs that
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their bankers or you know the
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their teams are working on on a regular
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basis so simple things of
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spending, you know, less time
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making changes to documents
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preparing them to be.
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You know, viewed by potential buyers
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and, you know,
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more time spent actually with our clients
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understanding them and then, you know, moving
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forward in the deal process.
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I think their main focus is
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there's a lot that can be done within with
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an AI. I always say you can probably
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think of and do anything with
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AI,
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but right now it's like how do I just
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get my job done faster with less
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resources.
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Right, that makes sense. And as you just emphasized,
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there is so much potential in AI, but actually
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putting it into practice is kind of a different matter.
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Can you get us up to speed on what some of the early
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adopters of AI in the dealmaking community
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have done in terms of really using the
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technology to its full advantage right now?
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Yeah, I think everyone you
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talk to, they
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pretty much everyone talked to it. They've put together an
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AI committee or something
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to start looking into it and where I've
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seen people be early adopters
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and and start to make a difference early
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on
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is
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not just, you know, putting together these committees,
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go look at a bunch of different products, what
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else is out there, how are other people utilizing
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it, but actually doing.
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In internal reflection of
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their own organizations and saying
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all right based on what we do, whatever
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our niche is, you know what
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we're providing to our clients
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where are the different jobs and tasks
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that that our teams are doing
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and even if they're easy ones that.
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Don't need fixing, getting all those
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on the paper and then identifying OK
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not only where there are
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there's a lot of time lost but
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how frequently are those tasks
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that are losing time happening
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then not only you know how many times
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that it's happening but
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how painful it is,
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how
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costly it is if a mistake is made.
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And then I think the final point, which
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I think is really important for people to look
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at is if I were to fix this,
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how much of a competitive differentiation
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does that give my organization in firm
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because even if you do fix it
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and you know it helps cut down
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on time or processes if it's not helping
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deliver to your ROI,
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get more customers,
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make customers, you know, happier
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or position, you know, my
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team as a knowledge expert that we'd have clients
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come to us rather than others.
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Then you know you're just solving some of the
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bare minimum pieces, so.
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It's actually not like the people
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that go out and can
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find every single AI tool out
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there and figure out
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all the things that they can do, but more so, let's
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internally reflect
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where the biggest areas they're gonna produce the
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most return if we fix them and then
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you can go and start that process
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outside looking at what else is is out
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there. So
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internal reflection I think is one of
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the most important pieces so
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that when you do have conversations and.
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When I have conversations with people, they, they
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fully know, hey, these are the this is the problem
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we're trying to solve. This is what we're looking to get out of it.
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And then you have a much more pointed focus
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as to the solutions and areas
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that you go to look at.
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OK, so dealmakers want to solve problems. They
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want to make their jobs more efficient, but of
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course, one of the biggest fears that we're hearing,
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uh, kind of in every industry is that AI
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is going to come after their job.
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Um, when it comes to deal makers, what can
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we expect AI to have an
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impact on in terms of the labor market?
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Yeah, I think um I'm
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a little bit more optimistic in in this
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sense, you know,
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yes, the, I even said it
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before that.
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You want to do more with less
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resources. That doesn't always mean people though,
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and you know, a lot of the things that people
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are looking to solve
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are not necessarily,
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you know, the
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individuals are, you know, constantly
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spending time on minuscule
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manual tasks, and we would rather not have
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people do that.
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But it's more so that typically
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in this industry, the people they hire are
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very smart individuals. They went to great
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schools or highly intelligent
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and their skills and benefits
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are
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used or more useful in the,
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you know, more high intelligent, high profile
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tasks that that have to be done, you know,
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creating financial models. Models the
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you know actual analysis of companies
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helping understand strategy set direction
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for the companies that they're working with. So
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in my view, you know,
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maybe we will have to have
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less people, you know,
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working on a single pitch deck
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to remove comments all night, but that
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gives them actually the ability to
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really
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jump start their career earlier on
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focus on high value tasks, high profile
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tasks and become.
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Better
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advisors, better
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vendors, better lawyers
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earlier on with their clients because they're spending more
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time with them rather than just sitting by
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themselves in a queue
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knocking things out of a spreadsheet.
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Um, and more time really doing what
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they've been hired for in their intellect, their
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strategy, their decision making, so
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I think it we'll see it changes
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absolutely where
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you're the jobs that people
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come into are less a manual
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process and grunt work that takes all night
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but allows them to be much more
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focused on how they can help their
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clients and be strategic earlier on,
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not just waiting until you get to that.
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You know, senior partner manager
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level, right, yeah, so you're
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calling some fears here, which is great to hear. Um,
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thank you so much for joining Growth TV. AI is
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such a timely topic right now in the dealmaking community,
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so we really appreciate it. Absolutely, happy
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to be here.