It will be a case of moving on swiftly for Ireland ahead of their final Test of the year against Australia next week, according to Nick Timoney after his Man of the Match perfomance in Saturday's 35-17 win over Fiji at Lansdowne Road.
Two tries from Timoney off driving mauls along with touchdowns from Robert Baloucoune, Mack Hansen and Cian Healy handed Ireland victory over a visiting side that were reduced to 14 men in the second period.
In a team that showed nine changes from the one that beat World Champions South Africa last week, Ireland were at times disjointed and illdisciplined in their play - something Timoney reckons they will need to correct before taking on an Australia side who lost by a point to Italy in sensational fashion on Saturday.
"It's about sort of taking the enjoyment from today but then you've got to be back ready to go on Monday so it's a pretty quick turnaround," the Ulster flanker told RTÉ Radio One's Saturday Sport.
"In international rugby, the standards are high so you can't afford to be down a peg or two.

"I'm sure we'll review this Monday morning. We'll probably all have watched it before we get back into camp Sunday evening and then we'll start focusing on Australia to see how much they're improving and if they lost today I'm sure they'll have a point to prove next week."
Despite the uneven performance against Fiji, Timoney insisted Ireland were not taken by surprise by the visitors' energy.
"We knew it was going to be tough. We saw what they brought last week, we know a lot of their players are world class in what they can be bring," he said. "We expected nothing less. In fairness they gave it to us. We came away with the result in the end.
"There's obviously loads we could work on, some of our discinpline let us down. Some of the tries they scored - albeit they were scintillating tries - were things we can work on."
With so many changes from the stunning performance against the Springboks last week, Timoney acknowledged that youthful enthusiasm can sometimes lead to basic errors.
"One of the things the coaches talked about was making sure that even though there's a lot of lads getting their shot today, to not try to force things too much and go off on their own," he said.
"I think there's always going to be a small bit of guilt in that regard in that everyone wants to make something happen, everyone wants to take advantage of the opportunity they've been given. We talk a lot about that, about trying to avoid that and trying to be smart with our discipline and stuff.
"I'm sure we'll review it as we always do. It's a trait of our team to be generally pretty good at that so I'm sure we'll bounce back and review it hard.
"This was my first start here in front of a full crowd, first 80 minutes and stuff. To get a try or two is pretty fun as well so yeah, very happy."