Yeah. So good morning, Shlomo. Thanks for the question. We operate in a very competitive industry. It always has been. So nothing noteworthy as far as change there. Certainly, we're aware of the changes in the organization at the top level of the organization you're speaking of. But I don't know if that's changed any dynamic of how people are taking care of their customers and what have you. And just keep in mind that our new business wins tend to come from the vast majority are from what we call no programmers, those who are not renting when we walk in and when we walk out they are. So, yeah, we love winning business and always, but for the past several decades, we've grown our business primarily by growing the pie of customers, those who were sourcing products somehow. They might be buying it on the Internet or they might be buying it at Costco or Walmart or what have you. And then we've shown a better, faster, smarter way. Even with garments, especially with garments, I would say, everybody's wearing garments and that, Jeff, matter of obtaining those garments. So, in fact, I've got a couple examples I'll give you. You know, we recently converted over a large equipment manufacturer that was purchasing flame-resistant clothing from a competitor. They were really excited about our Carhartt branded flame-resistant clothing line. And they were looking for a higher quality garment to improve employee comfort and overall satisfaction. And as we dug into it, we were actually able to save them some dollars in the rental program because of the turnovers that they had. And also our first aid and safety team at the same time was able to provide some essential training for that customer around their electrical program in conjunction with some recent OSHA guidance change on that subject. So that's an example where they were certainly wearing garments. They were, but they were not taking it from a rental competitor there. But it resulted for the customer in a safer, more compliant customer with happier wearers and lower overall cost. So I've got other examples like that that we've seen. You know, we just recently converted over a Fortune 500 global field service company with thousands of remote service technicians that were in a direct purchase program. Again, they were dealing with long lead times, how do they repair the garments, how they replace them, size changes, new hires. And the challenge is the workforce doesn't report back to a central location. So in that case, we placed them in a managed program where their employees were able to clean their own product, clean the garments, but we manage the inventory, size changes, repairs, placements. So I give those examples because, yeah, certainly, we're always interested in the competitive landscape. It's always been competitive. Always will be, but we see the greatest opportunity is to expand that pie and sell programs, manage programs into companies that are buying product or haven't seen the value yet in having a uniform program. And we grow that pie. So it's really important to us. It's been a key strategic lever for us for decades. And we'll continue into the future.