Thank you for your time in this course. I hope it's proven helpful. Now, our focus in this course was on that challenge of explaining something. And I do see informative speaking as a puzzle. Now, sometimes it's a fun puzzle, often it is not that fun. But it's always challenging. And it's about finding that right response that clarifies in an engaging way. And to do that really demands a strategic approach to speech design and speech performance. So, now that we're at the end of the course, let's go ahead and just recap some of the key themes from this course. So we began the course, in week one, by planning our speeches. So, thinking through speech goals really forces us to come to terms with some key issues. Stuff like, what does this audience know? What don't they know? What can I realistically accomplish in the time that I have? Now, answering these questions kind of helps us dial in on the content. Goals help us figure out what to include and what to exclude. Good goals can help us identify what we really want that audience to be able to do. So that's week one. Then in week two, we moved on to designing our speeches. So, having figured out our goals, that's our destination, we worked on the map to get us to that destination. And good arrangement is paramount in clear informational speaking. So we worked on a number of outlining and arrangement strategies. In the third module, we worked on illustrating our speeches. So there, we're looking at examples, and stories, and images, these are the tools that allow us to ground our explanations. So a good example is like a good slide, right? It supports our explanation. They help the audience visualize the ideas. Then, in that fourth module, we focused in on delivering our speeches, ethos and interactions. So ethos is an approach to style and to delivery. It's an approach to the presentation of the self. You want that audience to see you as leaderly, knowledgeable, and passionate. But a good speech is also interactive. So we talked about, sort of, working the audience and working the space. So again, thank you for your time and attention. Presenting information well is one of the most common challenges we're going to face as speakers. I once taught a class with a speech consultant who had this great saying. He said, the higher you go in an organization, the more you're expected to speak. Right? Success and speech are very closely related. Now, I hope this class has given you some strategies and experience in explaining complex ideas vividly, accessibly, and with passion. [MUSIC]