Edinburgh head coach Sean Everitt is "excited about where the club is going" as he admitted he is already looking ahead to next season, with little to play for in their remaining fixtures.
The capital club have beaten Zebre and the Sharks in their past two games while fielding a very young side as 18 first-team players are currently injured within the squad.
Off the pitch, they have announced the arrival of two new coaches, Brad Davis and Tim Sampson, with two incomings already announced - centres Riley Higgins and Geordie Gwynn.
On top of that, they have also been linked to Crusaders scrum-half Louie Chapman, who is also Scottish-qualified.
"There will be a couple more," Everitt said of on-field signings. "We really are excited. We're actually excited about where the club is going.
"We started this process about 18 months ago - giving youngsters opportunities within the group so that they could grow into senior players.
"We've seen teams like the Lions being very successful in that process that we're going to follow.
"It's exciting times for Scottish rugby because we've been talking about 'who will be the next generation?' We've got several them on the field here."
In a dismal URC campaign, the rise of blindside Liam McConnell, 21, has undoubtedly been the bright point. Alongside him, tighthead Ollie Blyth-Lafferty and fellow flanker Freddy Douglas have become regulars.
Besides that trio, there have also been encouraging signs from scrum-half Hector Patterson, centre Findlay Thomson, and back-three players Jack Brown and Malelili Satala.
Speaking to Premier Sports, Everitt added: "The team came together and it was a question of 'what are we going to play for in the last four games?'
"They wanted to show fight, care for the jersey, and make the fans proud. We had a full house tonight and I'm sure they've done that."
The head coach also touched on the importance of Ewan Ashman, who had another storming performance in a strong individual season.
"He's a very important player to us," Everitt said. "He joined the leadership group several weeks ago and he's made a massive impact there as well. He's normally a quiet guy around the group.
"With that, his rugby has grown as well. He's improved his set-piece, but he's not getting uptight when he does lose one or two."
