One thing I would say about the sorts of headline statistics is that there will be a lot of SMEs that, for capacity reasons, will not be able to export because it takes a fair amount of bandwidth internally. Not every SME today is also ready to export today, but maybe tomorrow they will be able to.
In terms of being able to equip those companies, one of the things that we can do better in terms of how the trade commissioners speak to businesses is being as specific and tangible as possible about what a trade agreement means for that company. It's not just about promoting it to, say, the manufacturing industry; you have to promote it to the companies that understand very specifically what the trade agreement means for the specific product that they make. They have to understand how to get into the market and understand all the navigation of the government red tape, whether it's at the border or other paperwork we've filed in that country. It takes a lot of hand-holding to make that happen. That is the labour-intensive work that we have on the ground with companies to help them take advantage of the agreements.