Sure. Maybe I'll just talk about the mentorship networks because that was something that we worked directly with the minister's office to get in the fall economic statement. We were very happy to see it in there yesterday.
The idea simply is to get people who know what they're actually talking about in front of other people who are struggling to do that and transfer knowledge. Knowledge is power. These small companies of five or 10 people who haven't exported, or maybe have only exported across the border into Vermont or something like that, don't have the breadth of knowledge that they need to even go to Michigan if they were already in Vermont, let alone to China, Europe or somewhere like that.
Get them in the room with people who have been there. Talk one on one. They're not government people. They're not association people. They're people who have actually done it themselves. We run these types of things across the country. In fact, Jocelyn is part of a manufacturing executive council that we run in Ontario, and we run those across the country.
The idea would be something similar to get exporters talking to exporters to actually help them build up their capacity at a local level. It could be run through associations. Again, it doesn't have to be government controlled. It's about getting the people who've been there and done that to transfer their knowledge and then be a resource for them on an ongoing basis. Then they're sharing, learning and growing together, rather than being out in the wilderness—which a lot of them feel like they are—and not knowing where to go for that help.