Certainly from a procurement perspective, one of the key things is really the early planning. What we do as a common service provider for other government departments is to ensure that we actively engage with those client departments to define early on what those requirements are for the acquisition or the procurement of their goods or services.
One of the aspects that we often find in the context of procurement, in particular with small business enterprises, is potential barriers in how we define our requirements. We want to ensure that we work up front, early on, through the planning and the engagement to define those requirements and ensure the application of either the CLCA, comprehensive land claims agreements, or if that's not applicable in that context, the PSAB.
Then, in regard to how PSAB applies, through competitive approaches nationally, it restricts or sets aside essentially the procurement for the aboriginal groups and the suppliers that are registered through the INAC registry. Once we have that process launched, then we work with the supplier community, of course, through the outreach, to ensure visibility and an understanding of what the procurement is about, early notification, and different types of notification potentially, depending on what the goods or services are that are being procured, so—