I think there are two things.
If you're going to invest and you're going to encourage Canada's movement towards a greater smart city movement, you have to get a better handle on what we have today. There are cities across Canada that have great innovation and great smart technology already. Get a handle on that and do an assessment across Canada of the cities. Now you have a baseline. Then you can decide what types of problems you might want to solve, and they will differ. The small communities will differ from the larger communities.
If you have that baseline, two things could happen. You could tell the story of Canada. We have a strong brand as a country, but we don't have a strong technology and innovation brand as a smart city leader. I think that's a huge opportunity, because there are great things happening. Use that information to drive programming around investing in innovation and smart technology across Canada, and get everyone involved.
Collaboration is a great way to kick this thing off. I heard someone talking about a contest as a potential way to kick this off. That would be a great way to initiate it, but there has to be some sustainment, and I think there has to be a story told across the country.