Well, I think obviously, LTL is a market into itself. And there's -- at the fringe, some modal consolidation opportunities that we've seen where the truckload market has been so weak that customers have been able to consolidate some heavier loads into one. But at the end of the day, when shippers are moving 1,500, 1,600 pound loads and loads that have got specific appointment times when you got delivery, the need to leverage the real estate network that us and other LTL providers have built. Truckload carriers can't really solve that need. And obviously, we've got to keep cost in mind as we go, and that's what we do every day. We're thinking every day about how do we manage and keep our cost inflation in check. And I'm pleased when we look over the last 10, 15 years, we've been able to keep our cost per shipment inflation in the 3.5% to 4% range. And obviously, we target trying to achieve 100 to 150 basis points of positive spread above that. But when you look at our industry, we're down about 15% tonnage relative to 2021. And while GDP has been positive, I think that us and other carriers have felt the brunt of the overall volume environment being down. And so we've not seen anything that would change from a big picture standpoint. Obviously, this downturn has lasted a lot longer. But the continuous conversations that our teams have with our customers, we're thinking and planning out what we think this environment is going to look like on the other side and those conversations with customers are really why we were confident in investing in capital expenditures like we have over the last couple of years. We don't make those decisions lightly and on a win, they're grounded in multiple conversations with our customers. And so I think that's what we just got to continue is stay in front of our customers and continue to work towards what the environment is going to look like on the other side. I don't think you see anyone else from a -- when you look across the industry that's really doing anything a lot different. So if our market share was decreasing, for example, then that might be a point to try to reevaluate things. But right now, we've maintained our market share. We've done everything that we say we'll do. It's just in a slow environment, maintaining market share, maintaining discipline with respect to yield management and continuing to build out incremental capacity to prepare for the other side of growth, and we've done all those things while maintaining an operating ratio. We don't like to see our operating ratio up, but we're still, I think, about 1,200 basis points better than our competition. So we're going to continue to do all those things, but continue to stay in front of our customers and do right things right by them. And I think we'll come out of this on the other side a lot stronger, a lot better, get back to growth. We've got a lot of ambitions in terms of what we think our market share can grow to. And so you just got to do the day-to-day and month-to-month and quarter-to-quarter and year-to-year execution to make sure that we're going to be prepared for those better days, but we're confident that they're ahead.