Creating Confidence with Heather Monahan - The ULTIMATE Way To Find Your Flow With Arman Assadi The CEO and Co-founder Of Project Evo Episode 151
Episode Date: September 28, 2021On today’s episode, Arman Assadi is here to help us tap into our human nature and ancient wisdom. Arman is a brilliant startup strategist and the CEO and co-founder of Project Evo. He takes us on th...e journey through his challenging upbringing to his triumphant successes and business ventures, all while adding to our tool belts for life! From needing to make money to finding fulfillment, Arman shows us why we must COMMIT to connecting to the innermost part of our beings. We discuss the best part of seeing a therapist and how we can tap into the different layers of life through meaningful sessions. The mission of today's episode is to democratize wisdom, tune in to find out how! About The Guest: Arman Assadi is the host of the podcast FLOW with Arman Assadi, the founder and CEO of Steno, co-founder and CEO of Project EVO (which famously raised over $1 million for the EVO Planner), and author of the upcoming book UNLEASHED. He is the chief strategist behind 13 different 7+ figure launches, having worked with celebrities and NYT bestselling authors like Lewis Howes, Neil Patel, and more. Finding Arman Assadi: Website: https://www.armanassadi.com/ Text @1-619-825-2595 Listen to FLOW with Arman Assadi Check out Project Evo Youtube: @Arman Assadi Instagram & Facebook: @armanassadi Twitter: @ArmanAssadi Review this podcast on Apple Podcast using this LINK and when you DM me the screen shot, I buy you my $299 video course as a thank you!  To pre-order Overcome Your Villains NOW and get the bonus bundle click here: https://overcomeyourvillains.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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There's absolutely no way when I lose $100,000
because of one wrong button clicked,
that I'm gonna wake up the next day and do it all over again.
No, I'm gonna go cry.
I'm gonna go give up.
And so I think having this identity that knows it belongs
where it's going and that there's a reason for all of this which goes toward confidence is identity
I think that's what helps a person overcome each of these obstacles and say it's just part of it. What can I learn from this?
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Hi and welcome back.
I'm so excited for you to meet my
guest today, Armand Asadi.
Armand's mission is to democratize
wisdom, holy cow,
that's ambitious.
He is the co-founder of Steeno,
a stealth AI startup
and host of flow with Armand Asadi.
He is also the co-founder in CEO of Project
EVO and founder of Asadi Ventures. Armana bootstrapped Project EVO to multi-seven figures
and raised over one million crowdfunding for the EVO planner, which was crowned the most
funded planner of all time. He also created the Elements Assessment and Brain Type Assessment
for Piatrary Personality
Type Test taken by over half a million people.
As a consultant, our mom has been the Chief Strategist and Copywriter behind 13 different
seven figure launches.
He has helped his clients generate tens of millions of dollars with his strategies.
And that's why I'm so excited to have you here today, our mom.
Thank you for being here.
Thank you.
I've never had my bio read to me quite like that, actually.
Oh, that feels good.
I mean, it's pretty ambitious, right?
The mission to democratize wisdom.
What does that even mean?
Yeah, figuring it out as I go.
I think what it really means is helping people kind of tap into this combination of ancient wisdom,
which I tend to have this very philosophical disposition toward life,
combined with being a human being in 2021,
and needing to make money and have freedom and find fulfillment.
And so to me, there's this intersection of fulfillment and joy and money and success
and the way we look at that through the Western lens that I think is a little foggy for
most people.
And I think it's become very convoluted and confusing especially when you look at this
whole technology age that we're in.
And so I think that that, for me, was a grandiose enough overarching sort of theme
that I could at least point my compass toward.
So it was like, that makes sense to me.
That's something I could really commit my life to.
That's a mission to me.
But what I do along the way might be creating technology startups, writing a book as we were just talking about,
mentoring people, it could be a whole host of things,
but I think that's kind of the overarching mission statement.
Well, it's very impressive.
But what I like best about you is that you're very relatable
because you were not always someone who is trying to
democratize wisdom or take on these massive missions
and really, you know, these deeper understandings,
you were more like how many of us grew up
with challenges and traumas,
and I was hoping you could take us back to how you started out.
Yeah, definitely, definitely.
I think that is why I'm sort of able to understand
the commonality in terms of life journey that I have
with other people because I think we all share it.
Regardless of our background,
I really don't have this elitist thing about trauma
who's been through more as more of a waken
or anything like that.
But for me, it was really just a very challenging upbringing, very challenging upbringing of broken household, two parents that I
love, there are wonderful people that were just absolutely not meant for each
other. And so it was like World War Three off it. And it was a very challenging
sort of divorce for me. I was heavily involved in the whole process, whether
that was sort of by choice,
by my own sort of natural personality, his positions, to wanting to create harmony,
and wanting to find the peace, and wanting to be the bridge.
And at times, also in a very forced way, where there was absolutely sort of a choiceless
choice of being in the middle of all of this.
That combined with just not having money, you know, being raised by a single mom.
My dad was giving like 70-80% of his check to my mom. It still wasn't enough.
We had no money. I had had experiences of having food brought to the house.
A lot of difficult stuff that I haven't thought about in a long time.
Honestly, a lot of difficult stuff. I was broken emotionally.
I was not healthy emotionally. I had no escape outlets, even though I would
go and play soccer. I could never quite find joy there. But all along, you know, we kind
of threw a Jungian psychology perspective. We refer to this idea of the self. And the
psyche is this very spiritual idea. And myself had this voice always in the back of my mind, just sort of
barely, barely clinging on, reminding me of one thing, and that is that you have this
potential that is untapped, and that this suffering, there is a part of this story here
that will justify this suffering. It will allow you to relate to people. It will allow
you to understand the conditions of life that people have gone through, many
of which have gone through 10 times worse than myself in other countries.
You already won the lottery, I would think, just being in America, being in this incredible
place, like being born in California, what a place, and yeah, at the same time, knowing
that my suffering was real, but that it would be worth it, and that
it would teach me something, and it has taught me a tremendous, tremendous amount.
I mean, the level of conviction I have, competence, willpower, dedication, conscientiousness,
toward these goals, which at the same time I'm not incredibly attached to, like, I don't
give a shit how things actually go.
It's given me a lot and it's made me a very philosophical person to the point where now
I'm sitting in this position where my mission is to democratize wisdom because I have thought
deeply about some very strange, challenging things that we all at some point in our lives
go through.
Wow.
So how do you go from being this young man growing up in this really very challenging
environment to suddenly becoming an overachiever, or at least it looks that way on your resume,
right?
Ending up at Google.
Yeah.
Great question.
You know, I honestly like, I thought therapy was for people that were like serious emotional
mental issues. Like, that issues. I think that's just
the stereotype, right? In America, it's actually not the stereotype of many other parts of the
world. In Argentina, 85%, I'm totally ballparking this, but it's like at least over 80% of people
see some form of therapists or psychologists, it's celebrated. It is looked upon as like,
you got a doctor for,
you know, you got your orthopedist,
well, you got to have your therapist.
Like keep that brain healthy,
keep those emotions healthy.
I like that this is like a whole, wow,
that's for broken people.
I was judging it and stigmatizing it
just the way everybody else did.
You know, two years ago, I started seeing this incredible,
again, back to, I'm very interested in this branch
of psychology that was created by Carl Jung, this form of psychoanalysis.
And I just find them to be absolutely fascinating.
So I wanted to find somebody that specialized in that form of therapy.
And when I kind of started peeling back the layers of my onion, which I've never done before,
and I was like, you know, my best friend actually pitched me on it.
He was like, you know what the best part about seeing therapists is?
It's like someone basically has this file cabinet of your life. You know, my best friend actually pitched me on it. He was like, you know what the best part about seeing therapists is?
It's like someone basically has this file cabinet
of your life.
And nobody else has to know.
And it's just sitting there, not an actual file cabinet,
of course.
But like literally, just sitting there, going through all
the layers of your life and giving you a space to just
think through, it could be the on the micro level, what's
going on today, or it could be holistically a big picture on macro level, could be the on the micro level what's going on today or it could be holistically a big picture or macro level could be something from the past
all right yeah there's nothing nothing to lose there so anyway what I'm
getting at is I began to sort of peel back the layers of this onion and she was
like arm on the fact that you're sitting here is actually kind of a miracle
what do you mean she's like, we've been going through these sessions
now, I've been listening to you for,
I think at that point, it was like maybe eight to 10 sessions
in, eight to 10 weeks in.
And she was like, you're not a drug addict,
you're not an alcoholic, you're not homeless,
you're not bankrupt, and I don't understand why.
How did you do this?
How did you escape your reality?
And she's still, by the way, asking me this question at times,
two years later, because it's, and I think
that this is something that's internal within all of us.
We all know that one day we're going to die.
We don't like to think about it.
We don't like to talk about it.
It's taboo, just the same way as therapy is.
But that awareness can provide such an incredible sense of fire deep inside the belly of a human
being when they are aware of and meditate on their mortality.
And I think that I have always had this awareness that I have one shot to leave it all on the field regardless of my circumstances.
And so my circumstances rather than turning me into a victim which according to my therapist should have,
because they were so overwhelming, I somehow squeaked through and I had no escapes. School isn't one of them either.
School is a terrible place for me. Until I got to college and I even just didn't get to college,
I had to go to junior college, community college, and then my dream was to transfer to San Diego State
because I just had this feeling. I was like I need to be in San Diego.
And when I got to San Diego State, my life really started to change.
And for some reason that I can't explain, I mean I could explain it if I try,
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which this was in 2008 when no kid was getting a job.
At all, whatsoever.
All my friends went back home or worked at Starbucks, and I got this incredible job with
crazy benefits, and my own car, and my own credit card, and my own everything.
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And the middle of the great recession.
And then that led to getting recruited to work at Google.
And I just kind of have a look back.
But then that went on its own journey as well.
Whereas I was like, oh, no, I'm an entrepreneur.
And I eventually decided to leave Google.
But the point is to answer your question, it took
an incredible amount of, I honestly don't even know what to call it, it's a connection
to the inner most part of my being.
This is the best way I can describe it.
Okay, that's very hard to understand.
However, I can tell it is your truth for sure. And I have not had all
these off-hawn moments that you're explaining that you've had across your life. However,
you just made me very hopeful that you never know when those things can come, or if your
child can become an avid learner in his 20s, which thank you for that hope that I now
have.
Yeah, you don't wake up.
Because you should have chased your your curiosity and I had no
curiosities. And instead I would just kind of numb myself and be like, that's not worth
it. I remember really, really clearly either like until that point of making the commitment
to just going all in on my life and becoming the best version of myself, I always would
imagine this like crossroad, just this intersection. I'd be like, well, this way it would be really easy and I could
just chill and get a simple job and not work that hard, but be okay and not have to really
stretch and expand myself.
And this way, I know, it was a red pill, blue pill moment.
And I just saw it. I was like, this other path of seeking truth
of incredibly hard work, sacrifice,
will be more fulfilling along the way.
And I just made that decision.
And I went that path.
Knowing that once you go, there is no turning back.
It seems on the outside looking at your resume
that you just had success after success, after success,
that it doesn't look that hard on the outside especially coming out of
a Google and having the success that you even had built there did it feel that
way for you? Did it feel easy and like one no no it's still really really hard.
I say you know I say this all the time but I think like Elon Musk described
the best he said that his friends said to him, starting a business, starting a startup is like chewing
glass and staring into the abyss.
I fundamentally believe that running a business of startup of any kind, launching an enterprise
is one of the most challenging things a person will ever do in their lifetime.
One of my best friends is a scientist,
pharmacogenomics, is his specialty, worked at Pfizer, and now he started this
incredible personalized medicine startup. One of the most really of people I know,
and him being CEO and founder of his company, he says, is the hardest thing he's ever done.
Harder than being a scientist. And so, no, it hasn't been easy for me.
I don't think it's easy for anybody really.
And I think if they tell you that they're probably lying or they're one of the outliers that got
really lucky. And that's cool too. But my life has been one of overcoming challenges, learning
along the way, developing wisdom, expanding my skill set, and becoming extremely confident
as a result of that.
When you look at the different things that you've had success in, is there a recipe to
what you project or plan for, or is it different with each one of these different situations
you've taken on?
The only sort of commonality that I can find if there was a through-lite would be curiosity.
So I think that skill of developing my curiosity being highly open, being extremely open has its
drawbacks as well because very open people tend to be very anxious as well. I luckily don't have that,
but they tend to be very anxious.
And so, you know, the more creative types, the more they want to seek and put more and
more knowledge and information and art and everything, you know, there's this trade-off.
Everything has a trade-off.
But I think, for me, practicing being really grounded, knowing that the next venture is
going to be really hard, but being really curious, wanting to approach it like a student and go, all right cool, I'm
gonna do a rena, e-commerce, what do I need to learn? Who do I need to know? Where
do I start? And treating it like a student, I mean it's, I'm sorry, I don't know if I can curse, but it's insane, like, YouTube to me is one of the greatest technological revolutions of all time.
And then you combine that with like Khan Academy where you can go and learn the basic fundamentals
that I was half asleep for during school, like microeconomics, like knowing how microeconomics
actually works has been incredible for me.
And when you combine this process of learning and stepping into a new venture, a new
arena, like right now, the latest company that I started called Stena, it's like rooted in
artificial intelligence. I know absolutely nothing about artificial intelligence. I know absolutely nothing
about speech to text platforms and how these processing functions worked, why they worked
at all in the first place.
I have absolutely no development background.
I cannot quote a line of, you know, nothing for a website, but I can learn.
I can learn anything.
And I believe that wholeheartedly, it's like a belief system.
So if there was any one through line, it would be this curiosity, but no, it's building blocks all
over from scratch every single time, whether it's AI or e-commerce or podcasting is actually
not easy, as you know.
Writing a book is not easy, getting a book deal.
The only thing there that really supported me was this, I'm just going to try to make
the best decision I can.
And I take all the knowledge
like when I wanted to figure out, should I traditionally publish, hybrid publish, self-publish,
I went to every author I knew, talked to them, extracted the information. But I also realized
when we ask people questions, they're just projecting their own biases and at times,
they're insecurities. I don't want you to be a traditional published author like me and make more money than me and some more books than me. And there that could be your best friend.
Oftentimes, oftentimes it's a people closest to you for sure.
Yeah, so you gotta be careful. You gotta stay curious. You gotta be careful what you take in,
but I think that the strongest factor, I was listening to Serena Williams' tennis coach
last night, and I think you can apply this
to anything.
He was like, if you don't actually believe that you're better than the person that you're
basically up against or that you deserve to win that trophy, there's absolutely no chance
in hell that you're going to win.
And that belief system of, I can learn this and I can do this, is what gives a person the diligence and
hard work to overcome the obstacles when they show up.
Because if I believe that I'm just going to give this a shot and have a plan B ready
to go, there's absolutely no way when I lose $100,000 because of one wrong button clicked
that I'm going to wake up the next day and do it all over again.
No, I'm going to go cry.
I'm going to up the next day and do all over again. Now I'm gonna go cry, I'm gonna go give up.
And so I think having this identity that knows it belongs
where it's going and that there's a reason for all of this,
which goes toward confidence is identity.
I think that's what helps a person overcome
each of these obstacles and say, it's just part of it.
What can I learn from this?
I just move forward quickly now when these things happen.
I agree with you there.
Moving forward quickly, especially when things go wrong,
taking action definitely helps to start figuring out
or start the process around which way we're going
and how do we move forward.
What about, you know, you have interesting skillsets
that you've developed like the copy rating, you know,
and having success in that.
How do you not just leave behind
success or do you just leave it behind or how do you incorporate it into the new endeavors
or things that you're doing?
Yeah, that's such a good one too.
You know, it's funny because like, I have this skill of copywriting and I could easily
just be the guy, you know, I've been recognized as the guy. I could literally have endless
deal flow where I charge people $50,000, $100,000 for this much work and have a little agency
and just basically be free. But I choose not to because it's not in line with my truth.
And instead it was just a sort of skill set that I developed because I couldn't sell my products. I was an entrepreneur. I was a solo printer trying to get my life
going and make some money initially after leaving Google. I was like, this isn't converting.
My offers aren't converting. My products aren't selling. And I accidentally stumbled upon
copyrighting because I thought this is the most valuable thing that I can control.
It's a skill set where it's repeatable, there's an art to it, there's a science to it, I can
learn this, I can integrate it into all of my businesses.
And if I don't, I can have the most incredible product or service in the world.
But if it doesn't translate to why this person needs it and how it's going to actually
help them, it's dead in the water, like it's done.
And I've seen so many good ideas die.
Heather, like so many on the client side,
like when I work with people, I'm like,
holy shit, you've got a brilliant product here.
You put millions of dollars into it,
and it's not working.
Let's think it's generally because of copyrighting.
But I integrate that, and I just take that as a skill set
in my tool belt, and I just kind of move on to the next day.
And so, Steno, Projectivo, my podcast, my social media, like all of this stuff integrates all
of the previous experience.
But just not everyone from the outside, you know, can necessarily see that.
So, no, I think every single skill set, every single venture, I just think of them as building
blocks.
And you don't always know, I don't always know how it's going to work out, where it's going to go next.
But, you know, running a startup for me for the first time versus just sort of being more independent as a solo printer
and only having contractors and only having people on upward appeal.
It was a completely different experience.
It leveled me up 10X.
Because when your environment becomes more challenging,
then your force to become more resourceful.
The books I've read, the people I've talked to,
and met, the difficult conversations I've had,
the tears that have been shed, fire at somebody
that I really care about, hiring somebody
that I desperately try to recruit.
These are all skill sets that just came over time.
And each one, I think, just compounds over and over.
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And you don't see any one of them as more important or impactful on your business today than
another? I think that the, for me, the skill set of actually being a real executive has been
incredibly, incredibly powerful. An executive is such a
broad term, but the jump from like a six-figure business to a seven-figure business is actually
pretty big. But the jump from a seven to an eight, whether you're raising money or you're
scaling and you're hiring people, is enormous. And so, you know, a lot of people just float
and dance in that six to seven-figure region, but leveling
up and building like something much larger, I just think of as like an executive skill
set, right?
Because it's like, I might call myself CEO or whatever, but it's really all of it.
How do I properly understand these financial statements when they're given to me?
What do I do with the information?
Should I be optimizing for operating income? What is the difference between operating income and
EBITDA? How do I properly value, you know, place evaluation on my company? How do I do a
foreign eye? Hey, like all these things really are incredible, as a skill set, because now I feel
that I can build anyone's company or start my own, and that's a different level of power, I guess.
So I think that's the skill set that's probably the most valuable.
But I don't know if it's a skill set as much as it is, like just being a hard working person.
I don't know many entrepreneurs that are just successful in a very easy sort of way.
I happen to agree with you 100% on that.
So tell me what are you most proud of after all these different endeavors when you look
back and what do you feel that wow this is the moment I'm really most proud of that.
I'm just proud of myself for not giving up.
I'm proud of myself in that way and as far as things that I've created tangibly, you know, I am very proud of my element's assessment. I created
a free assessment that gives people what I call their brain type, and I also created
a more in-depth version of that a full-dlon personality assessment that took four and a
half years to build. And I put so much time and energy and perfection
into every aspect of this and countless interviews
with people to fine tune these results.
And we still continue to do this.
I have a partnership now with Syracuse University's
Business Department, where we're doing another round
of integrated this study.
Essentially, this informal study
with their undergraduate and graduate business
department to put them through this assessment because the reason I created that assessment
was because when I left Google, or when I was ready to leave Google, I was actually quite
unfulfilled.
I didn't know what to do with my life.
I was like, okay, well, I figured out how to be curious, I figured out how to learn,
I figured out how to be somewhat successful, but now what do I do?
Like who am I?
What do I do best and that basic question? Who am I? What do I do best?
Let me to create this assessment so that other people regardless of their age
Which I think this is one of the most common it's like a disease of our time honestly
people don't know who they are,
and they're drifting,
and they're just reacting to their environment.
Oh, that's a cool opportunity.
Maybe I should buy a doge,
or maybe I should go on a crypto in general,
or, oh shit, you know, AI,
maybe I should go that way.
No, no, no, no, no, what is true to you?
Like, what is your own overarching mission?
And what's the skill set that you bring
where you know if you step into that,
you'll thrive, you'll feel flow, you'll be fulfilled.
And that assessment to me is like gold.
I review my own results all the time.
People get like a 30 page report.
But it's more than just like, here's who you are,
it's like, well, now what? Okay, cool. I'm a relational architect, now what?
And like, what's the blueprint of my life? So that's something I'm very proud of.
And actually, speaking of our book earlier in our offline, like the book I'm writing
integrates that assessment. So that's what the book on leash will be all about.
Is the case that is the stories that the what next
After taking that assessment is there one story or one person that you touched through that assessment that you want to share a
That story with us sure one of my favorite stories is I'm having a side if we're gonna reveal her real name or not
You know obviously do do the privacy. I'll call her Jessica
so Jessica had a very very rare form of cancer,
extremely aggressive, and prior to all of that was quite dissolution as well, and drifting
throughout life. And she calls her cancer, her master sensei, her greatest teacher in life,
remarkable amazing woman, like one of the most inspiring
people I've ever met in my life. And her sort of learning these aspects of herself that
she had not been able to put into words before, is what an assessment like the elements
assessment like mine does, is it takes these elusive parts of ourselves that we've never
put language toward, and then the language makes it kind of tangible. It's like, oh cool, I can describe that part of myself.
The reason I have strong boundaries with people is this. I have a disposition toward that.
The reason I don't have strong boundaries and tend to take on more work than I should
is this. Oh, and my skill is that and they can finally put like I'm a chief I'm a connector like they can finally put language to it in
For Christina it was I mean I hesitate to use the word life-changing
But in many ways it was it gave her a new sense of how to have healthy proper relationships and I think relationships are
Everything and assessment goes through every component, you know life. It's not just relationships. It's your career
It's a personalized approach to life.
Because you, the guy mentioned earlier, as a famous quote that says there is no one recipe to life.
You know, the shoe that fits one person, pinches another. So it's like getting our advice from other people about how to live.
This doesn't necessarily make sense. That's why I believe in this personalized approach to living for it. So her story is probably my favorite so far.
I love that story and I like I like that idea and agree with you
100% that giving empowering people to make their own decisions,
giving them the information and some ideas to move for, but not
saying here is the only way to go is so much more helpful in
someone's growth. I know that you've been asked all the time
about mentoring and I know that you're launching the new solar pranora academy. Can you share
a little bit about what that is?
Yeah, it's basically for years that I haven't had any project or service or anything outside
of my actual companies. And so on Instagram, I've been getting asked over and over again about
mentoring. So I finally decided instead of doing one-offs, which is not a scalable little,
I would do a group live mentoring program.
So it's on Zoom.
It's this incredible group that I literally just launched.
This actually, it's funny, we're talking like today,
which is super ironic, but it's an incredible group of people.
All the founding members are actually amazing,
and it's live calls with me with Q&A,
and they get access to all this kind of stuff
including my elements assessment and all kinds of video lessons that I've recorded over the years
around. Essentially how do I take my existing idea and my business and scale it if you're an
existing entrepreneur or how do I take this new idea and unravel the mess of what it is to
develop a startup. But it's business, it's investing in money,
and I also talk about personal development,
self-development, but it's basically coaching,
mentoring with me.
Where do people go to find out more information
about the Academy?
DM me on Instagram.
That's probably the easiest way.
Just DM me and say, you heard about the Academy,
or go to armonassaudi.com.
Armon, I'm so excited to see what happens next.
I can't wait for the new book and just to keep following you
and following on watching your flow and your journey.
Thank you for the great work that you're doing.
Thank you, Heather. You're awesome.
So are you, my friend?
All right, everybody, check out the SolarPronor Academy.
And until next week, keep creating your confidence. I'm Jennifer Cohen. I decided to change that dynamic.
And if I'd go out, I couldn't be more
and say that the world wasn't here.
Start learning and growing.
And inevitably, some people happen.
No one succeeds alone.
You don't stop and look around once in a while.
You can miss it.
I'm on this journey with me.
I hope you're enjoying this episode so far.
I'm Jennifer Cohen, host the top ranking business
and entrepreneur podcast, Habits and Hustle,
apart the YAP media network, the number one business
and self-improvement podcast network.
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