There are three challenges that I want to dedicate my future work to. 1) Educational inequality. I know from personal experience how different educational opportunities can be for children growing up in rural communities. I want to develop projects that help students from villages access quality education, career guidance, mentorship, and opportunities regardless of where they live. 2) Youth unemployment and career mismatch. Many students choose university majors without understanding their strengths, interests, or the needs of the labor market. As a result, graduates often struggle to build fulfilling careers. I want to explore how technology, career education, and mentorship can help young people make informed decisions before entering university. 3) brain drain in Kazakhstan. Every year, many talented young people and highly qualified professionals leave the country because they believe better opportunities exist elsewhere. Rural areas especially experience shortages of doctors, teachers, and other specialists. Rather than simply accepting this trend, I want to understand its root causes and contribute to creating an environment where talented people choose to build their futures in Kazakhstan. I know these are ambitious goals. That is exactly why this community is so important to me. I believe that meaningful change happens when motivated student, experienced mentors, university, and philanthropists work together.