So the first go-to-market strategy is probably the one that most people think of when they think about go-to-market, which is B2C. So business to consumer or business to customer. This means that you with your product or your service take it directly to the customer yourself. Generally, what this does is it lets you communicate and serve your customers directly, which gives you a lot of control. Now, the other thing, the more difficult thing that companies struggle with is that in that case you need trust, which means you need to build a brand. Now in order to reach customers, obviously, as I spoke about earlier, you need to find your addressable market and what that looks like. But in general, with this approach, the more generalist you are, the more of a market you're going to have, but the more expensive it's going to be to build a brand. However, the more niche you are in setting up a company, the more immediate you're going to find your demand and product market fit, but you've already done your research so you know there's a fit. So the more niche you are, the easier and quicker you're going to be spreading in amongst that niche as the go-to product provided for what it is that you're offering. So generally, if you're going to take this approach and you don't have tens of millions to put into building a brand, which is often what it takes to really build something big, then I highly recommend going into a niche and serving a niche because that is something that can spread like wildfire on its own if you provide this niche with something that is specific and useful and relevant and not already there. There's a product market fit but again as we spoke about earlier if we've gone through the steps you've already sorted this out you know there's a fit so if you're going be to see. Go niche. That's my advice.