George Nguyen podcast interview – the importance of fresh voices in your content

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In this episode, I interview George Nguyen from Wix about the importance of fresh and diverse voices in content. George shares his personal experience of feeling alone and not seeing enough representation in the industry, which inspired him to bring in diverse voices to the Wix blog.

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Useful Links

Podcast page: ⁠⁠https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/azeemdigitalasks⁠⁠

My Twitter page: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://twitter.com/AzeemDigital⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

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George’s LinkedIn: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/george-c-nguyen/⁠⁠

Episode Transcript

Azeem Ahmad (00:01.058)
Hello and welcome back to another episode of the Azeem Digital Asks podcast. We’re flying through season six and I’ve got an amazing guest with me, George Nguyen from Wix. Just an absolute legend, someone I’m very pleased to call a friend. We’re talking all about the importance of fresh voices in your content. And if you can see the fact that we’re both smiling now, it’s because literally just before I hit record, we had a good little laugh. But yeah, George.

Welcome to the show, my friend.

George Nguyen (Wix) (00:32.504)
Thank you, I feel like it’s an honor to be here. It’s just like hanging out with a friend, right? And I hope we get to bring our audience today into that conversation. I hope you learned something. Or at least I hope you laugh at us. But yeah, thank you for being so complimentary. I feel like some people are so complimentary of me, right? And what I have to say about you is like, I’m so glad you’re back doing this.

Azeem Ahmad (00:56.472)
Thank you. Thank you very much.

George Nguyen (Wix) (00:57.556)
I wish that everyone could see your MozCon session, because it was both entertaining and full of heart. Right? Yeah. Let’s do it!

Azeem Ahmad (01:08.056)
I that man. Thank you. Thank you very much. Yeah, as you can see, George is a great guy and God, I feel bit emotional after that. Thanks very much. I typically like you won’t hear me talking a lot after this other than asking you questions like I’ve seen podcasts where the intro is like 15 minutes long. Nobody’s here for me. Everybody’s here to watch, learn and listen from you. So before we get into it, as always,

George Nguyen (Wix) (01:20.59)
Hahaha!

Azeem Ahmad (01:37.784)
Please like, rate, share and subscribe. You can get this on YouTube video and Spotify video, which is where most of you enjoy this stuff. But let’s get into the meat and bones of it. First question, George, 30 seconds quick fire round. Who are you and why should people know about you other than the fact that you’re a legend?

George Nguyen (Wix) (01:58.312)
I’m not quite sure people should know about me. don’t ever think about myself that way, but unless I’m applying for a job. My name is George Nguyen. I am the director of SEO editorial at Wix. I am not currently applying for jobs anyway. I don’t know that Wix is like, what did he just drop? I run our SEO learning hubs, article based content. My mission is a very niche one within the industry. Essentially I’m an educator.

Azeem Ahmad (02:05.024)
You

Azeem Ahmad (02:11.554)
Ha ha ha ha!

George Nguyen (Wix) (02:23.088)
and I work within marketing. work within SEO primarily, but other facets of digital marketing to bring the best tactics, what pros, professionals that get paid to do this with huge clients are using right now, and I want to bring that to everybody. I believe in that because I learn most of what I know for free, and I want other people too as well.

Azeem Ahmad (02:42.136)
Love that, love that. And the first person to stick to the 30 second thing. So amazing. This is going to be a great episode. So yeah, look, let’s dive right in. What inspired you to, you know, focus on bringing in like fresh and diverse voices to the Wix blog?

George Nguyen (Wix) (03:00.836)
Feeling alone, 100%, full stop. The last time I got laid off was like 2018. Actually, that was the only time I got laid off. But…

I remember I had moved to a new location in the United States. I had only been there for eight months. I didn’t know that many people. The area around me, there weren’t very many Asian people to connect to. And that feeling, once I resumed working, I was at Search Engine Land after that, that feeling kind of persisted, especially because I had transitioned from working in office to working completely remotely. And so it took me a long time to understand how much of myself I could be in front of very different people than I was used to. I grew up in a community of many Asian people.

many Hispanic people and working in a predominantly white space I didn’t always know if my sarcasm or my snarkiness would carry through or if people would be okay with that and so I never wanted people to feel like that.

I felt like I continued to feel like that for long time because I didn’t see other role models, other Asian people on the stages or participating at the upper echelons of conversations about our industry and where we’re headed. And so to bring that representation for the next generation of marketers, and it doesn’t even have to market, it’s just the next generation of website owners or…

Anywhere any vocation is a beautiful thing because you get to show them that they can be themselves and That this craft is for everyone if that’s what you choose. So that’s that’s in a nutshell why

Azeem Ahmad (04:34.284)
Look, that’s amazing. Like I could literally just press stop there and we would have a fantastic episode. I think having such a powerful foundation to build from and like a ground to start from is just the only way is up really, which like I said, I’ve said this to you a million times before when we found out, but on a recording, gonna say, look, that is fantastic. Like the purest of intentions, which can only lead to good things, I think. So.

Let’s talk a little bit more about the people that you bring in to do this. How do you go about finding those people to contribute?

George Nguyen (Wix) (05:15.586)
The SEO learning hub by policy is by referral only. And I don’t like actively go looking for contributors on a regular basis, but sometimes we have a content, whatever the situation may be.

we keep track of our diversity in various ways, people who self -identify on their social, things like that, so that we can understand where our gaps are. By no means are we ever gonna reach a perfect status of diversity, whether that’s BIPOC diversity, neurodiversity, so on and so forth, but at least understanding.

where there’s a deficit can help you attack that deficit. Right. And also because of studies like the FCDC’s BIPOC diversity study and Lydian Fonte’s gender gap in SEO publishing, we understand where in the spectrum of SEO publications, digital marketing publications, we stand. And so that’s, that’s important to us. But then also the human element of just giving people opportunities. Sometimes our existing contributors will tell me, Hey,

I really want to put this person in front of you. Can I make an introduction?” And when I have bandwidth, more often than not, I’ll take that meeting. I want to know what people are about. That having been said, I’m a person of color and I find that… this could be totally false, right? Like I find that people of color are pretty willing to talk to me. That could be false. They could be willing to talk to everybody. I don’t know, right? But that’s just…

Azeem Ahmad (06:44.086)
Yeah.

George Nguyen (Wix) (06:45.292)
I think that’s something that you have going for you if you’re somebody like me. Right? The values that you bring forth will attract people, like magnetism. And to broadcast that, being on podcasts like yours, Azim, letting people know like, hey, that’s what I’m about, that’s what I’m here for, that opens serious doors. So broadcasting that intent and then carrying it through is a big deal. But if you are, let’s say, somebody…

who doesn’t have that going for you, right? But you still wanna do the right thing with your brand diversity in publishing.

I always tell people to start with communities, because communities have leaders, distinct leaders, and those leaders will have their pulse on pretty much everything about their membership. usually you can find some sort of trade -based organization. Obviously Women in Tech SEO is, I think, the biggest one in the SEO space, right? There’s FCDC. There’s now our Asians in Search Slack community, which you’re a part of, Azim.

I’m by far the weakest leader of those three groups I mentioned here. Shout out to those people. And what I want to touch on there is like, I want to touch on something else but like to wrap up that thought.

Knowing who leads those communities can help you You can talk to them to get what you need. You need a writer to do XYZ. You need someone to Rework your content. There’s New contributions. There’s a lot of ways that you can work with them and the best part there is also the people in those networks are generally likely and Happy to reshare whatever it is you publish from one of their members because they’re proud of those things

George Nguyen (Wix) (08:24.332)
Especially if those opportunities don’t come by very often so communities are the place to go in my opinion also It’s like getting it you’re you’re plucking a contributor an expert from your own target audience sometimes and that’s even better for the business overall, right? I also had another thought there, but I think it kind of kind of this was the thought

I mentioned that for a long time it felt like I didn’t really know who I could be or how I could approach what my goals. I always knew that diversity was something I felt strongly about, but in my early days in the industry I didn’t know how to project that. I didn’t know how to bring that into my work as much. I felt like, yeah, I felt like some jobs were just a little bit unnatural to me. Like even being on a podcast, I feel like one -on -one conversations.

are where I’m best at, which is why podcasts like works, but that’s why I don’t step on stage very often and things like that. Finding your medium and your way to approach diversity might be different than mine. Mine is to work behind the scenes with the contributors we select.

For you it might be something else and so my position has afforded me the opportunity to work within what I’m comfortable up with but also like it’s kind of forced me out because Wix likes to have me at Brighton SEO and things like that too which I also enjoy but it’s also I’m an anxious person so yeah yeah. Lots of context there. A little bit of advice for you though. A little bit of advice, tons of context.

Azeem Ahmad (09:42.092)
Mm.

Azeem Ahmad (09:53.708)
Yeah, no, I totally understand. For me, slightly similar. I just have a straightforward pitch form every so often. I’ll put it out and I can’t remember the exact wording that I use. I don’t explicitly say I don’t white men to pitch, but I’ll always say you’re welcome to. But the mission of the podcast is to typically give voice a voice to the marginalized.

people of color, from the LGBTQ plus community, et cetera. Those are the voices that I will prioritize. However, I’m mindful that not everybody is confident enough to go in and put themselves out there and fill out a pitch form. So I will try and do what you do on a probably a much, much smaller scale. And I’ll reach out to people. I’ve done it before in the past through the women in tech SEO, like speakers list. I’ll find someone who might be an expert in, I don’t know.

Digital PR or Technic Le Sion. I look for someone who, I don’t know, someone who’s, I can’t remember how they had it before, but like a new face in the industry, someone who I’ve known to be a new face. And I’ll say, look, I’d love to have you on the podcast talking about this, this this. Generally with those types of people, it’s much more back and forth. Like I don’t feel I’m ready, et cetera, et cetera. And I was like, look, we can just do one. We can keep it between me and you if you want. I can send you the recording, see how you feel.

just go from there but literally let’s do it see how you feel go from there and that’s how we do it pretty much

George Nguyen (Wix) (11:30.838)
Let me give those people a piece of advice for anyone who has been approached to do something that’s a bit more public that’s out of their realm, especially if it’s as you know, if it’s like a podcast is podcast pretty low maintenance. Azim sent me a list of questions, I think like three months ago. And then we got on this call. He’s like, you ready? Like, the questions okay? And I was like, right. You sent that. And at the time, of course, like when I first got it, I reviewed the questions, right? But having not seen it at

Azeem Ahmad (11:55.03)
Hahaha

George Nguyen (Wix) (12:01.114)
all this quarter and he’s like nah just go into a cold and here we are so if you’re still listening this far into the episode maybe like don’t feel burdened by the amount you have to prepare also this is a Ziem’s podcast and if it sinks it’s totally on him I’m so good at passing off the buck man

Azeem Ahmad (12:18.488)
Correct.

Now in one of my like previous episodes right at the very start I was unsure about swearing and I was like well this is all I do it all like nobody else does it so I’m only anxious about upsetting myself if I swear so fuck it. Anyway let’s move on. We’re talking about you know featuring diverse voices and the importance of that. You mentioned and we’re talking a lot about you know the Wix blog.

George Nguyen (Wix) (12:38.829)
Fuck it.

Azeem Ahmad (12:51.528)
Are there any particular standard articles or authors that you featured and some that have any, you know, particularly lasted or, you know, resonated with you, like sort of hit you?

George Nguyen (Wix) (13:05.09)
So when we’re talking about here is the Wix SEO Learning Hub specifically Wix has three publications and the SEO Learning Hub is the one I manage. I wish that I could give my authors

more of an opportunity to expand on how they actually felt about something and grasp, kind of communicate their feelings about certain topics in a much more personal way. In that regard, I’m a little bit disappointed with myself because I haven’t steered things in that direction. Lately, I’ve been able to move things a little bit closer, like Petra, whose last name I’ve never been able to pronounce, so I’m just gonna spell it out, K -I -S -H -E -R -C -Z -E -G

I’ve committed it to memory because I can’t pronounce it. She did something on SEO career development that you’re featured in, right? That kind of stuff is stuff I want to do more often because it deals with people in their lives. That having been said, we have so many talented authors that it’s sort of really unfair.

But I am going to do the little bit unfair thing and give a huge shout out to our homeboy Ashwin because he’s a mutual connection here. And Ashwin does have an amazing way with words that… There’s some authors you can, by reading a paragraph, you’re like, I know who wrote this, right? The crispness and the flow. So I definitely have to shout out Ashwin at this point, but I don’t want to say that anyone is… Like everybody has their strengths, otherwise we wouldn’t continue to work with them. I want to say that…

Everybody’s trying to do their own little thing. A lot of them have their own websites, trying to start their own communities. And that’s what’s really, really beautiful. I wish I had a list of everybody who was doing something on the side, whether that was a consulting thing or something for it to actually drive a community. But I don’t off the top of my head.

Azeem Ahmad (15:01.93)
No, no, that makes that makes total sense. I guess naturally, since we’re talking about things like this, I’m led to move on to in terms of how does this type of approach, how has it impacted reader engagement and reach? How many people are seeing this? What impact does this approach have?

George Nguyen (Wix) (15:28.804)
well, let’s talk like a metric that most people understand. Time on page. Our time on page is really, really good. It is so good. I’m not going to say it again because I’m starting to sound like a certain politician that I don’t like, but yeah, just like overemphasizing how good it is, right? and you have every context is everything.

Azeem Ahmad (15:44.377)
Hehehehehe

George Nguyen (Wix) (15:52.056)
We do not, if you’re looking for raw numbers, traffic, right, what the other publications have, you some people think of them as competing publications. I don’t like to think of them that way because we all do something very, very different. But if you’re talking like a search engine land or search in general, we definitely don’t get that kind of traffic because we don’t publish news. We publish education, best practices, tactics, strategy, right? That having been said, the publications that we appear alongside in studies or when people talk about the industry, you know,

the Moz blog, SEMrush, Ahrefs, Search Engine Land, Search Engine Journal, those types of websites, you have to contextualize that we’ve only been around since about May 2022.

So to be considered in that sphere with an editorial staff of essentially like two people, I used to say one, but now looking at it, Crystal Carter does so much that she is in essence an editor amongst the other things that she does, right? But you have two people here, you don’t have an entire staff, you don’t have a huge machine. Like as a team, we do more, we do the podcast, we do event sponsorships, we do our meetups, right?

marketing things, we try to help out with the product. There’s a lot going on there but I’m so proud of the ground that we’ve covered in just over two years and I would say that the contributors are the key to that success because you tap into them, you tap into their networks, getting them to believe in you is everything. That’s like yeah we compensate our writers.

But if you’re talking about somebody with a lot of followers who owns their own agencies, you cannot pay somebody to write when their job is to run an agency. Like you’re never gonna pay them enough. Like are you gonna pay a doctor to babysit? It’s not feasible, right? So you have to sell them on something else and sometimes that’s the WIC’s domain and getting featured there and that partnership looks good for them, right? I’ll take what I can get realistically.

George Nguyen (Wix) (17:55.544)
But for me, in terms of the diversity, telling them that, look, this is the reason I talk to everybody in my onboardings and I ask them the same question. Why is it that you want to contribute with us? And I ask them to be honest. And sometimes they’re like, yeah, I really want that link on your domain, which isn’t the most inspired thing, but the truth is the truth. And I respect it. And for me, it is that, well, I constantly get career development through what I’m reading and what I’m editing, but also I get a medium to change the industry in the way that I

want to, which is through diversity, to highlight these people. And so when I tell contributors, potential contributors, that this is like one of the main things that keeps me in this role, they see that and they feel that and that helps drive the work. And then when it comes time to, you know, promote their content, share, talk about their experience collaborating with Wix.

Usually it’s all positive as long as I do a good job, which I always intend to do, right? So you’re getting somebody who works to improve how well you write. Like remember, my name’s not on the content. Yes, I’m the publisher, but my name’s not on the content. It’s still yours. So it’s gonna come out better. And you get to know that, hey, there is a…

Azeem Ahmad (19:01.75)
Yeah. Yeah.

George Nguyen (Wix) (19:08.544)
Deep -seated component of equity that goes into this whole thing and so you get to feel good from that perspective From someone is helping you improve your work from the compensation perspective. You didn’t just spend time Building your profile without like maybe offsetting it with some babysitting money

That’s the way we attack the situation with as many tools as we can to make it as easy to say yes and as easy to promote us and to tell your clients about our content as possible. And through the editorial experience, you see that, wow, if this is the way George will edit my content and this is way he does it across the board, I can look at this more seriously when I put it in front of my stakeholders or my clients.

Azeem Ahmad (19:27.009)
Hmm.

Azeem Ahmad (19:53.612)
Yeah, absolutely. I was just thinking as you were speaking, obviously the passion with which you speak. I’ve written for publications before and it’s just a very cold process. It’s just like, we want you to talk about X, nothing for ages. You send them a document, then you hear nothing back. And they’re like, yeah, it’s great. Knowing that it’s not been read and then it’s published and then you’re done. I could have written like, you know, something.

not controversial or rude or whatever but I could have written something factually incorrect and I know it hasn’t been checked and that would have been published and gone live and in comparison the passion and the care with which you take is just excuse me it’s just really really impressive and you should take some time to reflect on that because that shows really well for you. Again mindful that I’m talking a lot but I want to go back to one of the things that you said there in terms of

the size of the team and you mention that it’s just like maybe one or two people. Other than that, in terms of headcount resource, what sort of difficulties have you had in terms of the editorial process in the past and how did you get over them? In essence, it’s just a roundabout way of, or I’ll ask you separately, tell me about the difficulties first and then to give you a bit of a heads up, my next question will be what’s your biggest regret?

So don’t tell me you regret yet, but tell me some of the difficulties.

George Nguyen (Wix) (21:18.79)
George Nguyen (Wix) (21:22.501)
I would say that being too proud to formalize my workflows. Like, trusting myself too much to remember to do this before publishing, to remember to…

take it slow. Like during the first few months I thought that I could just read something and then edit it as I read it. Now the workflow is at least three full complete read -throughs before anything goes live. Before it was just like two. There’s a lot of things that I was overconfident in. I would definitely say that.

Yeah, and I would also say that the first year you run a publication, like on your own, is we’re using profanities here. Yeah? Yeah man, it’s a shit show dude, it’s so… If it’s a fresh publication, at first it’s really fun because you’re like, I can publish on anything! I’m not cannibalizing any content! Nothing has to be done with intention!

Azeem Ahmad (22:08.63)
Yeah, go for it. Yeah.

Yeah

George Nguyen (Wix) (22:22.754)
Which is how I felt for about three months. And then you start realizing the greater context of things. Especially if you’re at an enterprise, there’s other people working on the website, you really have to be diligent about things like that. And also seasonality. People like to go on vacation in the summer. So if you’re trying to plan out your editorial calendar and you don’t factor that in, you’re setting yourself up for a bad time later on. Which I definitely can’t remember. Yeah.

George Nguyen (Wix) (22:54.293)
regret though.

George Nguyen (Wix) (23:00.504)
You know, can’t say that I regretted anything about the content or the strategy or how things turned out. I only regret the level to which I’ve allowed the work situation to get the best of my emotions. And that’s kind of a personal thing.

George Nguyen (Wix) (23:21.442)
It doesn’t matter what setting you’re in really in marketing because every setting is stressful to some extent. Being the person that is in charge of a publication means all those backlinks, well not all of them, but a ton of them point back to you. You are responsible for all of that and so I had to get something up initially and I don’t think that I have been the kindest to myself.

And if I saw my younger self from a decade ago saw the way that I have worked or I’ve learned to work, I’d be both impressed and scared. And I’d question whether or not it’s worth it. I question whether or not it’s worth it on a regular basis to give so much of yourself to make it like it’s kind of my identity. You don’t have to know who I am through the industry to know what I do for a living because I talk about it because I’m passionate about it. I think that

you people could handle their job with more balance with more work -life balance than I have. I’m fortunate enough to have people like you in my life that I consider true friends outside of all of this. But then I’m also that also ties us together in a work sense, right? I mean, here we are on this podcast and so everything is kind of linked, right? And so, yeah, you can’t have the best of both worlds, but you can manage better than I have. Learning to fight against.

stakeholders that would have you do whatever is a real thing. Learning how to present the conditions that you’re working in in a way that they can understand is a big deal. And I think initially I was very immature at that. It came off as very me, me, me.

And that is what I do regret. I see now that I should have been better at communicating those things. you, like pressure cracks everything. You gotta learn to deal with that as you go through your career. And I don’t think that I’ve always been the best at that by any means.

Azeem Ahmad (25:13.292)
Yeah, absolutely. Like I always say in my conversations at club, pressure makes diamonds. the flips, excuse me, the flip side of that is it also bursts pipes. But the fact that you recognise those behaviours in yourself is like I said, it’s a massive step in the right direction. Speaking of directions, we’re rapidly heading towards the end of the show, but there’s definitely…

One last question I wanted to ask you before we wrap up and it would be really bad of me if I didn’t leave it with this question. So there’s probably going to be people listening to this and watching us who have a mind to start including more sort of diverse perspectives in their content strategies. What advice would you have for those people listening and watching? Where would that begin? What can they do?

George Nguyen (Wix) (26:10.254)
I would say, first of all, don’t overthink what it takes. People are people, right? Just because they have a different cultural identity than you or they have different circumstances than you doesn’t mean you can’t appeal to what is common. You can see the differences. And when you’re talking about diversity, we are talking about differences that make us all beautiful and make life worth living, essentially.

But you can still focus on commonality here. Everybody is trying to build a career. Everybody is trying to, if you’re publication that pays or promotes content, everyone’s trying to build their profile. Everyone’s trying to get paid. Everyone is trying to be somebody, the hero of their own story. And finding a way to work with that.

Like yeah, of course the diversity component is what you’re talking about here, but that isn’t what you have to appeal to necessarily when you’re communicating with people. If that’s what makes you, you’re not a person of color, for example, right, and you’re scared about how this might go, take it slowly, one at a time, then ask for referrals, because hopefully those diverse people will know more diverse people and that will help get you through the door. Put your best foot forward through in the collaboration so that when they give you that referral, other people are already

excited to work with you. And also review all of your messaging. Like anything that you have templated that goes out to contributors, have it reviewed because you don’t know how that wording is going to come off to anybody and you don’t want to like, you don’t want to have your own internal communications with a potential contributor put on blast in front of the world on eggs or on LinkedIn because of an unfortunate oversight. So cover your bases.

scale slowly, get those referrals and appeal to the things that

George Nguyen (Wix) (28:00.129)
like appeal to goals, appeal to dreams, hopes. For me, that looks different than for other people. I try to go for the middle of the Venn diagram between who I am and who like a contributor like you, Azim, might be. What is the middle of that Venn diagram? What can you offer? It’s simple marketing, really. But go back to your principles and speak their language. Everything that you say about a persona in your target audience is the same thing here, but it’s a potential contributor. And the best part is potential contributors often come from the target audience. So you can still

use that information you can figure out how to talk to them.

Azeem Ahmad (28:34.776)
Yeah, absolutely. Solid gold and a literal perfect way to wind up this episode. thank you very much. Couldn’t agree with you more, in fact. The Venn diagram thing, absolutely stealing that 100%. Before you go though, George, it would be a crime if I didn’t give you the opportunity to let listeners and viewers know where they can find you, follow you.

George Nguyen (Wix) (29:06.733)
Check out the SEO learning hub on Wix, wix .com slash SEO slash learn. And I say that first and foremost because how much of my advice is really all that good if I can’t produce good content? And you should be the judge. I put that in front of everyone, right? Check out the content and see whether I’m as good as I say I am, right? It’s up to you to decide.

And if you have feelings about it, want to chat about it, anything like that, I’m on X, my tag is G -E -O -C -H -I -N -G -U, or my handle or whatever. It’s just the first three letters of all of my names. And on LinkedIn, I’m just GeorgeWin, but if you send a request, please like say, hi, I heard you from this place. Otherwise, I’m just gonna think you’re spam.

Azeem Ahmad (29:50.968)
Yes, absolutely. Yeah, 100%. Definitely swing me those links. I’ll put them in the show notes so they’ll go across all the platforms. And yeah, look, thanks very much for being a brilliant guest. I knew you would be. You’re a friend, great guy, and I knew this would be an awesome episode. So thanks for giving up some of your time. And as always, for the listeners and viewers, please like, write, share, subscribe.

George Nguyen (Wix) (29:51.831)
Keep it real.

Azeem Ahmad (30:20.28)
to tell a friend to tell a friend and then tell that friend to tell six more friends because like George says, the power of referrals. And yeah, look, that’s a great way to end the episode. And I was always like, ugh, I can’t even talk. As always, we’ll see you for the next one. Peace.