Yes, I think it does. We had a government cybersecurity initiative in 2016, and there was already a big focus on the big end of town. With new Labor Party policy and a general election coming up, there is more of an emphasis on the cybersecurity needs of small businesses. With the skill shortage in the market, the expensive salaries of cybersecurity practitioners, and the fact that, I think, Australia is about 60% to 70% small to medium-sized enterprises, those small to medium-sized enterprises suffer because they usually get general IT or ICT as a service. In many cases there's a lack of understanding of even the need for cybersecurity as a service.
But if you look at it the other way round, from a financial point of view, there has been a huge investment in Australia with government Department of Industry cyber growth centres, cyber growth sorts of nodes in a network, which in part has been to boost the national cybersecurity posture by producing incentives to get the small players in the market. You will have a lot of very small players, say in Canberra, where people who have retired from government service and who have cybersecurity skills are setting up small businesses and developing niche products, niche hardware and niche software. There's a lot of government incentive to actually produce more of that.
It has actually been very successful, but there has been a large amount of federal government funding to make that happen.