I know of many small businessmen who wish they weren't not-for-profit, and they attempt to take advantage of most of these things too.
Mr. Carrière, you mentioned this morning the incredible sustainable success rate of cooperatives—I just read it over the weekend, and it's the first time I saw it—more than double, it seems, the regular start-up of a small business. What do you think the cause of that is? Is it just the fact that it's a group effort, it's a cooperative effort, rather than one entrepreneur? I've met many successful entrepreneurs in life who have been terrible businessmen, because they're all about one thing rather than their total business. Does a cooperative give you that type of thought process, where there's more than one brain perhaps attached to the business?