She Spark Podcast: All right, so thank you, Kacey, for being here on the She Spark podcast. I'm recording it here in the Ignite Sparked by BBB podcast studio, and I'm just so excited to have you. Welcome back to the She Spark podcast where we celebrate women who lead differently, build boldly and aren't afraid to take up space. Today's guest is proof that leadership doesn't always look the way people expect it to. Kacey Peters is the owner and operator of Buenos Banos LLC, a woman owned portable restroom company serving the Quad Cities area. Yes, you heard that right. And she's not just running a company in a male dominated industry. Empowering Women Podcast: You've been listening to She Spark, the show that celebrates women who lead, create, and inspire. If today's episode lit a spark in you, share it with a friend and join the movement at shesparkcollective.com. Until next time, stay bold, stay bright, and keep your spark alive. Kayce Peters: Thank you so much for having me. I'm excited too. She Spark Podcast: ⁓ So let's just dive in. So Kacey, take us back to the beginning. Kayce Peters: Okay. She Spark Podcast: she's raising the standard for how it's done. In a space where women are often overlooked, to show up anyway. She chose professionalism, she chose higher expectations, and she chose to build a business rooted in integrity and pride. This conversation is about challenging stereotypes, owning your authority, and proving that excellence has no gender. Let's spark it. What inspired you to start? Buenos banos. Kayce Peters: would have to say seeing a need for clean portable restrooms in the local community. I, like to tell people, ⁓ I was at a, a little kid's football game. My son was playing football. He was eight or nine years old and I six kids. So I had the rest of the kiddos with me ⁓ and my had use the bathroom. And they did not have like regular bathrooms down at the football field at the time. I believe they do now, but, child had to go and ⁓ took her and walked her over to the portable toilets ⁓ there was two sitting there ⁓ ⁓ swear you could smell them probably from 40 feet away. And I was like, ⁓ man, this is going to be fun. So, I get up to the toilet. Finally, it's our turn. And was just, it was a horrible experience there. You know, you didn't want to like go in as it was. didn't want, you know, you're trying to tell a two-year-old, touch anything, don't sit anywhere. me put some paper on the seat. Well, there wasn't even any paper. So thankfully I did have like baby wipes with me, but it was just really bad. And I remember telling my husband, I'm not doing that again. That was terrible. And just joking around. He was like, well, we should start our own portable toilet company. And just thought, took it as a joke at the time, but ⁓ works in the mining field in Baghdad and he a buddy there that does all the toilets for the mine. So ⁓ I he just kind of picked his brain a little bit on what was like, you know, to do portable toilets, if that's even that we would be interested in up here ⁓ and. It kind of just fell into place. Like we have a friend that's in the septic business and I remember reaching out and saying, Hey, you know, if we were to buy a few portable restrooms, would you pump them out for us? he just kind of explained. ⁓ septic and portable restrooms are different. septic trucks are for straight pumping where portable restroom trucks, they don't. They not only have the pump feature, but they have fresh water. There's different things on a portable restroom truck to service those. So he gave me the number of a lady that had a company, a few towns over in the Verde Valley. And he was like, Hey, call her. She's been in business a while. She might be able to pump toilets if you were to get some. And I was like, ⁓ okay. Well that'd work. So, I called her up and we ended up just like chatting and I told her what I was kind of looking to do and she took me under her wing and I went out several times just to see what it was like before I was going to make a commitment to something. I wanted to see if it was something that I could even do. ⁓ went out with her quite a few times, ⁓ how to do it. And I was kind of a quick study. Like it wasn't as Hard or as gross, I guess, as I thought it was going to be. Like I had this own image in my brain of what it was going to be like to pump portable toilets. And I wasn't like that at all. You know, it was, it was actually kind of fun, you know, being out and, you know, talking to people and they're so happy when you clean their toilet for them. You know, it's crazy. ⁓ but I was, you know, I told my husband, I was like, gosh, you know, I think this is something that I could really do. She Spark Podcast: Alright. Kayce Peters: So we just pretty much, went down all the like, try to get a business loan, see what we could do for money and nothing panned out. we, he had the truck already. He's a diesel mechanic by trade. So we already had a truck with a flatbed on it. So we sold a bunch of stuff. had like a, ⁓ side-by-side thing that we weren't using as much as we probably could have, but we sold that. We sold a couple like bigger tools that he wasn't using anymore, just something to where we could have the money to buy the pumper tank and seven toilets. So that's what we did. Sold a bunch of stuff, bought the tank. He installed it on the truck, bought seven toilets. ⁓ then January ⁓ 2024 ⁓ my first day running a route for my own company. I also took over ⁓ some of the that the lady that I had learned from, they were more local to me and she was driving really far to service. ⁓ I did take over a few of her contracts and bought, I don't know, maybe about 15 used portable toilets off of her. And that's how I started. That was January. And by March we were already out of toilets completely. looking to get more. So it was very fast growth. ⁓ to really put myself out there and like really hit on the fact that I was a woman known business that my were going to show up impeccably clean, you ⁓ know, that woman's touch, you know, and yeah, it, the growth was ⁓ insane. think we ordered toilets. three different times that first year. like the first order was 11. The second order was 14. One order was 20. One order was 28. And it was just like toilets, toilets, toilets. And we were having to, you know, save money and ⁓ different ways to ⁓ for these toilets. it, yeah, so that's pretty much the startup story, but it also gave me the opportunity to take the two kids with me in the beginning because they weren't in school yet and I didn't have a babysitter. So it was coming, I was coming off of being at home for a decade, raising my kids to going out and, you know, making something that was mine where I had the ability to take them along with me for the ride. And yeah, so that was, that's the beginning. Yeah. ⁓ She Spark Podcast: Wow, yeah, and what a start. I love that. And I love too that portable restrooms aren't typically seen as a woman-led industry, I'm sure. What has it been like stepping into and leading in a space traditionally dominated by men? Kayce Peters: No, no, It's interesting because early days, ⁓ know, you would roll up on site and this construction crew would see this five foot three small woman jump out of this huge pump truck and start servicing toilets. And it was always like the deer in the headlights look like, ⁓ you're, you're the owner or you're the one that's going to be taking care of these toilets. And yeah, that's me. You know, this is what you get. and lot of times. I would go on a delivery and I had to learn how to pull a trailer, which was a feat itself, but I got it down. I had to learn how to load a toilet on and off a trailer, tie it down properly and stuff. And more often than not, I would come up to a site and start unloading my toilet and taking my straps off. And there'd be guys running over to jump in and, hey, can I help? Can I get that off your trailer? And I'm like, no, no, I'm good. I got it. I know how to do this. And they're not as heavy as I think people assume that they are. So I can get a toilet off a trailer like nothing, know, just pull it off, drag it around. It's all good. But it was definitely that shock factor of a woman up to a job site, ⁓ ⁓ male job site, if there was even another female on the site and slinging toilets around. She Spark Podcast: I think that's kind of awesome though, because it's kind of badass. Kayce Peters: Yeah, it is awesome! It is! It is badass! I- I- That's, you know, that's one of the feelings I really felt like, like, dang, you know, I'm a badass for doing this. She Spark Podcast: Definitely, you very much are and I think that's so cool. I love that first of all it came from this sort of glimmer of an idea and then manifested into this full-fledged business in such a short amount of time and then you get to show up and be a badass. think this is just an incredible story. so you kind of talk about this in a lot of your things, the bar. Kayce Peters: Mm-hmm. Yeah. . Yeah. . She Spark Podcast: And what standards did you feel were missing in this industry? And how did you decide your company would operate differently? Kayce Peters: So one, main standard that was missing was the cleanliness. I think when you, people, I feel automatically when the word porta potty or portable toilet is brought up, everybody's brain goes to gross, nasty, disgusting. I would never use one of those. I wanted change that stereotypical thought of portable restrooms. And when people think of a Buenos Bajos toilet, They're like, ⁓ man, those are clean. Those are stocked. Those are going to show up on time. So that is what I wanted to base my business on. First and foremost, the cleanliness factor. I'm always going to put out a clean toilet. I'm always going to put out a stocked toilet. My toilets will always show up with three very large rolls of toilet paper in them. All my units come standard with hand sanitizer dispensers in them. Like I'm not going to give you a toilet where you can't sanitize your hands when you're done. And my toilets are always going to show up on time. Always. And if I can't, for some reason, if something comes up, I'm going to communicate with that customer. Hey, I ran into a snag. I'm going to be 20 minutes late. You know, the communication is a big thing in this industry because I think my customers really appreciate the fact that I am an open book if they need to call me if they need to change a delivery date if you know if for some reason they need in a different spot I I have a very open line of communication to make sure that my customers are feeling seen and heard and that they are my priority at this point in time. They are my priority ⁓ show up and do what I say I'm going to do. She Spark Podcast: And I think that's huge. And that could be why, you know, you're such a powerhouse in it too as a woman, because it's that attention to detail and that attention to communication that, you know, maybe not every company has, but what you have and that you can offer and that you noticed based on that experience of probably not just that one toilet, but that, you know, that experience sticking out to you of I can do this better and then doing it, which is huge. Kayce Peters: . . Yeah. it was, it was, can do it better, but I can also do it. I adjust it to like my time. I can take my kid along if I have to, if I have a sick kid that stays home from school and I can't have them sitting in the house and I have to run a delivery, they can come with me. They can, you know, lay down in the back of the truck. It's, ⁓ it's that freedom to show up a mom for my family, but also provide an exceptional service without having to scramble for a babysitter or, hey, babe, you need to take off today because is sick and I have to go run and do this. It's that freedom to be able to become successful in the workforce, but also as a mom. She Spark Podcast: And I think that helps you stand out too because that's something that we need to do. mean, men have to do it too, but women really, you know, we wear so many different hats to so many different people. And if you can run a business and then feel comfortable also being a mom at the same time, you know, it kind of goes hand in hand and it's not trying to set something aside in order to make this work or that. I think that's just, that's a powerhouse right there. You know, that's badass also. Kayce Peters: Yeah. . Yeah. ⁓ of my sites, ⁓ have a ⁓ really large contract at the VA. And I out there servicing those toilets, my youngest would always come with me. ⁓ Well, it to the point where the guys on the job site were like, well, where's Quinn? Is Quinn here today? And ⁓ she knew of their names ⁓ and ⁓ roll her window and she'd talk to the guys as I was servicing the toilets. And it's like, She Spark Podcast: huh. Kayce Peters: You get these personal connections by, you know, I didn't bring them along all the time, but when I would, was like, it was a breakup of their day where they got to talk to a little girl, a little four year old girl who was curious as to what they were doing and innocence of asking them ⁓ questions as her mom cleans the toilets. It definitely a different kind of... experience, you know. She Spark Podcast: And empowering for her too, to see her mom doing this amazing job, but also get to have, like you said, those experiences of meeting new people, being in different environments that she normally wouldn't be in. And I love that curiosity factor because, well, of course that's an age of just so much curiosity, but be able to learn so much and to see you learn too and grow and thrive. That's really empowering. Yeah. Kayce Peters: . Yeah. . Yeah. Yeah. And then of course you also get the comical factor that comes along with kids. I had, I had both of them with me at this time. think Waylon was, ⁓ was five and Quinn was four or some white right around there. was before they were both in school and, had go out and run my route and I had these three toilets downtown. were in like an alleyway, ⁓ on one the side streets downtown. And I, get out you know i do my thing i clean the toilets well wailin thought it would be funny to hide my keys i was ⁓ missing and was sort of playing beat the clock because our dump here when you your waste you have to make it to the dump before two o'clock so i think it was like one fifteen or something you know right at the end i just these were my last toilets and got back the truck there's no keys in the ignition and i'm looking around and i'm like Okay, guys, like who touched the keys? neither one of them are saying anything. And I'm looking under the seat. I'm checking my pockets. I, ⁓ know, I got out, I looked under the truck. I'm like, ⁓ my gosh, like where are these keys? And I hear a snicker coming from the backseat and Waylon hid them somewhere, but he still won't tell me where they are. So, you know, of course that panic sets in, like I got to get to the dump. Like I got off of this truck. Like, so that She Spark Podcast: ⁓ no. Kayce Peters: That was definitely one of those moments where I'm like, gosh, what am I doing? But that was the only time that happened. So it was fine. eventually gave them to me and I made it to the dump. So ⁓ did. ⁓ She Spark Podcast: you Yeah. Yeah. Well, that's good. It ended positively, but that is hard because it's like there's always those challenges and sometimes they just come so unexpectedly where it's like, oh, great. I didn't know I'd be playing find the keys today, but you know, good. So what lessons have you learned about maybe confidence and leadership that you wish you had known earlier in this journey? Kayce Peters: Right. Right, yeah. Ooh, that's a good question. I think I just starting this business, my confidence level has ignited, guess you could say like, I, I never was like a super confident person. Like just always the type of person to like stay in my own lane, like not try to out, just sort of like live my life and be a mom and ⁓ a wife and, be good at that. And think since starting my business, my confidence in like what I do and like the service that I provide has just, ⁓ gone through the roof. Like it's given me a voice. It's given me the opportunity to be a woman in a quote unquote man's world or man's industry and just shine and not be afraid to shine. And amazing because It makes you feel so good, like as a woman doing something that's stereotypically not womanly and being being the best I can be at it. It's very empowering standing out in a community where She Spark Podcast: . Kayce Peters: I have truly made a name for myself and my company just by the work and service I provide. She Spark Podcast: Yeah, and I think what's amazing too is in those just short years, how much recognition you've gotten for being kind of in this industry, for shining in it, for, you know, that it's business awards and I know you've been up for Prescott Woman Awards and it's just really inspiring because that's a short amount of time to really grow and shine and gain confidence and Kayce Peters: Right. She Spark Podcast: I think that is inspiring to other women who see you and go, God, that is just so amazing that she took this idea and then, and it is predominantly in a man's world, which whatever that is now, you know, ⁓ you really, really set yourself apart by doing so. And I think, you know, that's impressive and that's empowering for other women, which I think is. Kayce Peters: Yeah. Yeah. She Spark Podcast: is huge. So for women considering entering entering industries where they don't fit the mold, if you will, what advice would you give them about claiming their space? Kayce Peters: First and foremost, don't be afraid to go for it. Don't be afraid to chase that off the wall dream that you may not think could ever become a reality because it's that day one that you have that idea that if committing yourself to this idea and you're working as hard as you can to make that idea a reality, just don't give up. Keep pushing forward. ⁓ Keep adapting, overcoming, and come. It will come and it's mind-boggling to me ⁓ how I turned ⁓ into something. And just makes feel good. Like it makes you feel wanted and needed. And I think as a woman, for many women, is one of those things where Women just have that natural instinct to want to help, to want to be needed, to want to be wanted. And this industry has been amazing in that sense because people want clean toilets. You know, they want, they want somebody that's going to show up on time. They want somebody that's going to communicate with them ⁓ really put yourself out there to do the best job that you can do. She Spark Podcast: I think that's such good advice and I think what's so, what... makes it seem obtainable is that you did do all of these things while being a mom and being a wife and, you know, wearing all these other hats that we haven't even probably talked about, you know, everything else that goes into just life. And so I think that that's what's so amazing is that you took those steps, but you knew that everywhere along the way, your family was coming with you, right? So I think that that's important is that you found that balance of, yes, I'm bringing my four and five year old along with me, but Kayce Peters: Yes. Right. Yeah. Right. . She Spark Podcast: They're going to learn and they're going to grow and it's an adventure for them. when they're hiding the keys, it's a big adventure for you too. Kayce Peters: Yeah. And they're probably going to pee in every single toilet you stop at to clean that day. But in the same sense, you know darn well that that toilet's going to be clean enough for them to use. She Spark Podcast: Yeah. That's right, that's right. And see, that's good. And I think that's, I think we've probably used this a lot, but empowering those women to know, hey, it is possible. can ⁓ it all. ⁓ you know, there's strategy involved and there's... Kayce Peters: Yeah. . Yeah. . She Spark Podcast: figuring it out, the growth and how you said you went from seven toilets, I think it was, right? Seven at the beginning to like all these multiple orders that kept growing and growing in that first year, which is huge, you know? Where you think, I'm sure you thought at that first seven, okay, let's see what happens with this. And then bam. ⁓ Kayce Peters: . Yeah. Yeah. . Yeah. Yeah, like how long is it going to take me to get these seven on the ground and a month later, all my toilets are gone and I booked an event that needed 11 and I'm like, well, shoot, I need to order some toilets, you know? But, ⁓ another. Right. And it's like another thing I would tell another woman venturing out into this, this crazy world would be, yourself out there. Like, don't be afraid to. She Spark Podcast: Yeah, and what a good problem to have. Kayce Peters: put yourself out there. What I did personally is I joined all the chambers. Like I joined the Chino chamber. I joined the Prescott chamber. did, ⁓ I got on, you know, social media to try to make a platform for myself. I did the face. I did the Facebook. I do Instagram. I do tick talk, ⁓ kind of showcasing what I do. And ⁓ know, in this industry, the lighthearted funniness really goes a long way because you are working with poop and poop is funny. So, ⁓ just, She Spark Podcast: Right? It is. Kayce Peters: really put like I did a lot of business mixers, like any type of like business mixer I could find that, you know, pertain directly to like construction or like construction industry or events. I made sure that I showed up at those and, I always came with squishy poops. found these little packages of ⁓ their squishy poops and ⁓ I had bunch of Buenos Ponyo stickers made up and I stuck them on these poops and I handed them out like business cards. You know, I had those too, but She Spark Podcast: I love it. Kayce Peters: It really stuck in a lot of people's minds where like this girl is going to these business mixers handing out squishy poos to people and it's something that you don't forget. last the first award I ended up winning was one with the, ⁓ the Chino Valley chamber of commerce. And, ⁓ I originally met the lady that was running that chamber ⁓ at one of mixers ⁓ and she, ⁓ she me award. the original squishy poop that I gave her, she had with her. And she was just explaining to these people how this random girl that started this random toilet company came up to me, introduced herself and handed me a squishy turd. that was, that was my first award. was the director's award with the Chino Valley Chamber of Commerce and because a squishy poop. And So that was like that vote of confidence from the town of Chino Valley, the town that I grew up in. I was born and raised in Chino Valley, was amazing to me. later on that year, I took home the Emerging Business Award from the Prescott Chamber. And that was just like a whole nother level because Prescott is huge. You know, there's so many people now seeing my toilets on the square during event season and seeing, I think I had 20 toilets downtown for the whiskey row marathon. know, these bright orange toilets right in your face you know, getting called up on that stage ⁓ getting the emerging business award and meeting the mayor and getting ⁓ a, I got like a, like paper award from Eli Crane, the, ⁓ Senator. it was crazy to me. ⁓ And most recently, actually last week, my husband and I traveled to, it's called the wet show. And that is the big nationwide show for ⁓ wastewater industry. So it's, it's portable toilets, it's sewer, it's septic, municipal, ⁓ it's pretty much. But one of my reps had nominated me for a young professionals award for this wet show, which is like open to everybody in United States and I got it and it was crazy like was a whirlwind like we flew to Indiana and the show and they had the ceremony and I was ⁓ up with it was I think it was 12 or 13 other young professionals that got these awards ⁓ I only one of two girls ⁓ that it everybody else was boys was guys and ⁓ She Spark Podcast: Whoa. Kayce Peters: It was incredible. was like to have that national recognition for this little idea that is two years in, was, was Like I can't even describe it. Thanks. ⁓ you. ⁓ She Spark Podcast: Yeah, congratulations, because that is huge. And to be recognized amongst your peers sometimes is just such an honor, because all doing the same, ⁓ similar work, or kind of in the same fields. And so to be recognized for standing out in that field by people that are also hustling in that way, it's just so amazing. So congratulations on that. Congratulations on all the awards. But I think that one, that's. Kayce Peters: . Okay. Thank you. Thank you. She Spark Podcast: That's just really cool to hear and mean, obviously I think you deserve so many awards. So one's really exciting to hear and I love that. Yeah, and I love that you had these like genius marketing ideas of how to stand out and ⁓ kind make a name for yourself with those memorable squishy poos. ⁓ Kayce Peters: you Yeah. Yeah. I like to keep it lighthearted and funny and see my husband's more of like, I don't want to say uptight because that's not the right word. He's more of like more professional type person and he doesn't sometimes I think he doesn't get the humor in like the poop world. where I'm like directly like immersed in it. Like every time I pop on social media, there's some funny poop video that I'm watching from like another creator. I mean, you show up to this wet show and there was a gal, ⁓ was decked out from head to toe in poop. She had ⁓ leggings, poop purse. And I mean, I did partake. I did have my poop earrings and then tiny little orange porta potty earrings, ⁓ it's definitely a thing. She Spark Podcast: My God. Yes. Kayce Peters: like in the industry, just like promoting poop, I guess. ⁓ ⁓ Yeah. She Spark Podcast: I love it and I think you have to if it is your industry you have to own it and you have to find you also have to find the humor in it because because it is poop and it is funny but it also is it helps I mean even the stress of everyday things because you know you are a business owner and so there's stress involved but to be able to kind of you know turn it the other direction yeah so when ⁓ Kayce Peters: Yes. capitalize on the hilarity. Cause there's always going to be a poop joke. There's always going to be the person that comes up to you and I don't know if I can say this. I'll use a different word, but the person that comes up to you and goes, wow, you have a really crappy job. And I'm like, dude, like if I had a dollar for every single person who told me how crappy my job is, I'd be really rich. She Spark Podcast: Yes. You're like, ba-dum-bum. when you look ahead, ⁓ what does growth look for you and what kind of impact do you hope to leave ⁓ your industry and community more so than you already have? Kayce Peters: Cough I know it's it's crazy when people ask me like what does growth look like for me? I'm like gosh I've grown so much in such a short time like I can hardly wrap my brain around it, but we would like to expand ⁓ and want to sort of go like north I wouldn't to do anything ⁓ like southern like it's too hot for me personally But it's also too saturated ⁓ so I our next ⁓ move I ⁓ is gonna to like She Spark Podcast: Yeah. Kayce Peters: grow like expand north or northern ⁓ there's a lot of like different places that I do get calls for where they're just so far out there people like there's no company that goes out there. ⁓ my dream for Buenos is to have different hubs ⁓ in different areas where we can reach like the more desolate places ⁓ that She Spark Podcast: . . Kayce Peters: I'm sure have extreme needs for portable restrooms. I don't know what that looks like yet, but hoping that someday we can expand to where we're getting all the business in the areas that nobody else will go. She Spark Podcast: I love that. And I think, you know, anytime you can speak a dream into the universe, sometimes it's like then slowly or quickly in your case, you know, it starts to evolve. doors start to open once you start to open your mind to it. So, and I think with your drive, your humor and your dedication, it's the, it's mounding up. ⁓ Kayce Peters: . ⁓ yeah. Yeah. Yeah. haha Yeah, it is. more ways than one, let me tell you. ⁓ She Spark Podcast: And what are you saying? Well, so for the listeners, if they want to learn a little bit more about your company, can you tell them how they can reach out to you? Kayce Peters: Yes, for sure. So we are actually having a website built as we speak. So I don't have a website up at the moment, but I am very popular on Facebook, Instagram, and or Tik Tok. then I do have a video out on YouTube that I did with, ⁓ his name is Daniel Tom and he is the owner of Bay Area Sanitation, but ⁓ goes to different. companies like portable restroom companies and like interviews them you know rides along with you for the day everybody like what you do what you stand for and i do i do have that video on youtube if you'd like to watch and then ⁓ pop onto the buenos bonyos page on facebook and ⁓ can see some funny videos for a of different random things associated with portable toilets and or you can just give me a call shoot me a text like This the number that is on, you know, my cards and stuff and my, ⁓ socials, that's just, it's a cell phone. So call, text, reach out, however you want. ⁓ She Spark Podcast: Perfect, and we'll put all of those links to all the social media and the YouTube video in our show notes so that people can just click on through and get into contact with you for whatever events they're planning or our construction needs or I'm sure there's a myriad of reasons why anybody ever needs a portable toilet more so than we think. Kayce Peters: Yep. Yes. And I have to mention, I have two very, very special event toilets now in my fleet. They are bubblegum pink and they say Buenos Bano special events. And when you go into them, they have a motion sensor light that will turn on in the dark, but they also have mini chandeliers and they smell like cotton candy. Yeah, that's real fancy. She Spark Podcast: ⁓ my gosh, I'm like, man, if I was having an event, those are the toilets I would want. Yes. Kayce Peters: those are my favorite. I call them the Barbie toilets and they're so fun. ⁓ She Spark Podcast: Every girl loves a good clean situation, clean toilet situation at an event. I think especially because we're usually the ones waiting in line and at the end of the line, you want it to be a nice situation that you waited for. ⁓ Well, thank you so much, Kacey. I appreciate it. I appreciate you being on the podcast and I can't wait to see what else you do and what other awards you can get. Kayce Peters: Yes. Yeah. . Yeah, for sure. She Spark Podcast: All right. Well, thank you so much, Kacey. I appreciate it. Kayce Peters: Awesome. ⁓ you so Brianna. have a good day. Bye. She Spark Podcast: You too. Bye.