Well, they don't compete at the same level. Small businesses are generally part of the supply chain.
There are two ways in which small businesses generally get directed contracts. Either you have a niche technology—that typically gets sought after by agencies and these are directed, very targeted purchases—or you have platforms or larger projects where you have a vendor of a chip, a plane or whatever, and that OEM has an entire supply chain. In those cases, what you want to do is get in on the ground floor in being a supply chain partner, a trusted partner to those OEMs. This means that you want to position your defence industrial base or your industrial base as players within that supply chain.
This is where we come to the idea of needing to ensure that we are trusted supply chain partners, by making sure that we have the appropriate regulations in place so that we don't end up with non-tariff trade barriers—in other words, those OEMs saying that we can't play in their sandbox because we are not certified. That's the way in which we ensure that the smaller business gets a piece of the action, if you will.