I guess I'll be biased and say that one thing we see working really well is this.
There is a bit of a process in place, in terms of encouraging farmers to do the assessment piece and then getting access to...and some provinces are all different.
Some provinces are incentivized. Some are voluntary, and some are not voluntary, but we see a process for assessing the business, assessing where you want to go, where the market will go, and where there are different structures like co-operatives that might be available to you.
Then there is funding for skills development and for advisory services available to the farmer, because they're not used to paying for those services, to be quite frank, and we're still facing a lot of, “Why should we be paying for this? This is where our tax dollars go.”
In terms of education and providing some incentive for advisory services, which are, again, the best practices of farmers, I think that's where we're doing something right. We're appreciating the continuous learning—life-long learning—as well as the notion that it's okay to ask for help and to get outside help for our businesses, because that's what every other business sector does.