That's an excellent question. I'm going to answer it in a few ways.
One, we do focus on all small businesses. We don't necessarily carve out certain types. However, the threshold for what constitutes a small business is going to be different with each industry, so to some degree that's going to show that we're looking at each industry differently. In terms of the contracting opportunities, I've often heard it referred to this way: there are main street businesses, which are the ones you're referring to, your dry cleaners, your grocery stores, etc., and then there are your high-growth, high-impact types of small businesses, and that's often where the net new job creation is going to come from and a lot of that growth piece.
So when we talk about what a small business is, we don't put one of those categories above or below the other. When we look at who is most likely to compete for federal contracts, it's going to be more those high-growth, high-impact types of businesses. So while we're not looking to “protect” either one, we want to make sure that when any of them choose to play in the federal contracting arena, they're being dealt with fairly and have a fair opportunity to get an appropriate share of federal contracts. But as you mentioned, it's more likely that one group will self-select into that process than the other.