That's interesting. I hadn't looked at the divergence between the two numbers.
Canadians are innovative. There's a lot of great things that have come out of this country in the technology space. The challenge is that first customer. Having been there and taken my IRAP funding, we spent that not on responding to an 800-page government RFP, but we directly worked with another country, New Zealand. That was our first customer and we did it over the phone. The barrier to entry was low. That was a big thing for us at that time.
The other piece of that is small and medium enterprises need credibility. Credibility comes with a large brand name. There was a company in Canada that was acquired a couple of years ago. Their first customer was Facebook. That really helped them. A big customer gives credibility to small and medium enterprises. Government opportunity represents that for this. What that does is it gives somebody the chance to say that the Government of Canada, which has hundreds of thousands of employees, is their customer. It validates them. I think you heard that in the Jenkins report. I think you've heard that from other speakers who have come here before. They can then go to other jurisdictions around the world and say that they have passed that test. That is a big barrier and it is one of the themes of what we've presented to you today.