I would say, to a certain extent, because social interventions that are accomplished by non-profit organizations or charities don't have a market value. They don't have a market value. Part of it is looking at proven innovations and then asking what it would take for an organization that has a proven intervention, that has worked at a local level, say, in a community in Montreal, to scale that up to other parts of Montreal, or to use it in another part of the country, if that was appropriate. Often those not-for-profit organizations don't have the resources to be able to scale up or export a model they know has worked in a certain local situation because they don't have access to that kind of capital and they don't have access to that kind of grant.
If you have something that has worked for a small cohort, what would it take for it to work for a larger cohort and be able to address challenges on a broader scale?