Yes. So AOV is really a function of mix. And when you look at the Overstock customer, the frequency that, that customer visits the website is lower, primarily because they are larger ticket items, large furniture assortments, outdoor aboveground spas, big outdoor patio furniture and larger items that Overstock.com had historically really, really excelled in. When you look at driving overall revenue, you need the frequency of visits that Bed Bath & Beyond brings to the table with common items from bed, bath, kitchen and dining along with other things that Chandra is expected to grow over time. What we really have learned is that if we can stay myopically focused on the premise that our job is to deliver products and services to everything inside of the 4 walls of the home and the 4 corners of the property, we then really understand which brand is going to actually execute that different part of each strategy. Clearly, on the outside of the house, Overstock is going to lead that process with things like trampolines, aboveground spas, outdoor patio furnitures, outdoor kitchens, and things like that. When you come inside, it's clear that Overstock is going to be better at delivering large ticket items around furniture. Now that doesn't mean that Bed Bath & Beyond can't sell furniture? But if you look at the historical brand attributes, the consumer didn't intrinsically think of them that way. And I believe what happened in the fall of 2023 is that when the company made the decision to shut down Overstock, it believes that it could transition that large ticket, high-AOV consumer to Bed Bath & Beyond. And quite frankly, it didn't happen. And anybody that had a brain, would have known it wasn't going to happen. When you look at Bed Bath & Beyond and you look at those historical categories that had high margin and high frequency, it was obvious to us that we needed to lean into those things. So when you look at growing customer count, well, clearly, Bed Bath & Beyond does that. When you look at increasing frequency, clearly, Bed Bath & Beyond does that. But when you're looking to drive AOV, you need the trust and relatability that Bed Bath & Beyond created to then have Overstock be able to convert that consumer in our database. We know that driving overall revenue and getting to this $2 billion number are essentially Lego building blocks. The core Bed Bath & Beyond business has to deliver. And you heard about adding new vendors and adding new relationships and eliminating distributors and picking up margin by having first cost dollars. But we also know that, that particular consumer has life events, having a baby, getting married, going to college, buying their first home, whatever that may be. And Chandra is a world-class expert and has proven over several decades that she knows how to execute that, quite frankly, better than all of us that are currently here. That's why we added her to the team. But when we look at driving to $2 billion, we believe that Overstock is going to fill that gap up. You heard Adrianne mention, Overstock was a $1.5 billion brand before Bed Bath & Beyond even showed up. Now it is true that there are some categories that both businesses played in. Overstock sold some bedding, off-price bedding, but it sold some bedding and it sold some household items. But for the most part, for the most part, that revenue was driven by other categories. I believe that splitting these roles, giving them full P&L responsibility, giving them the resources and the tools they need to grow their companies and improving vendor relationships will drive the gap that everybody seems to be so convinced that we can't achieve. We're telling you today as you can look at our pay plans and look at our stock incentive plans, we signed up for a program we believe we can achieve. As opposed to what the historical model was where management was just taking bonuses and taking RSUs regardless of what the outcome was, we've all signed up for a program that we firmly believe we can deliver. In spite of the headwinds, it is our intention to aggressively grab market share. And if you look at the P&L for the full 2024 year, we plan on returning to profitability by the end of the year on a run rate basis. We know the first 2 quarters are still going to be -- we're still going to be operating at a moderate loss. The first quarter, we expect that as we continue to build the database as we get ready to launch Overstock, as we reengage with customers on a continued basis, we're confident that that's going to happen. Keep in mind, last fall, this company told you that it was going to take up to $175 million to reignite the brand. Dave and Adrianne and myself prior to Chandra coming committed that there was no way, no way we were going to spend $175 million. We believe that we will materially improve that statistic but we know that launching Overstock was the simple silver bullet that, quite frankly, was obvious to us, but not obvious to others.