Okay. Somebody talked earlier about the witnesses we had the other day from Industry Canada. They said about 41% of businesses in Canada had websites in 2007. That moved to 70% in 2011. As I understand, the numbers today are around 90%. I think that's accurate.
As a former business person and former member of the CFIB, I would perhaps address this next question to them. At the time I relied on our website to inform our customers in the past of the business we were involved in, what products we offered, the features and benefits—all the good things. It wasn't related to the global supply chain.
I wonder if you would talk about local business. You talked about having 109,000 members. I get your surveys and I love your surveys. I'd like them to be a little more detailed and in-depth, and I'd like to see the names as well, because I'd like to talk to some of your members. The reality is that you have franchisees, you have distributors, you have those who are truly smaller in business. They have their websites, but they're not part of the global supply chain. When you start looking at SMEs, how do you differentiate between the two levels of business, between those who want to do business globally and those who are strictly local providers?