Sure. We have capability around artificial intelligence, automotive engineering, chemical engineering, chemistry and other aspects of excellence. I don't think we've particularly been effective in deploying that capability in thinking about how we turn a $20-an-hour job into a position that perhaps could pay $70,000 or $80,000 a year and really be a professional occupation for somebody.
I'm not sure this is an issue of turning out people with undergraduate educations from universities as much as it could be a community college thing. It's almost more of a sub-engineering field.