Richard B. Cohen
Sure. So first of all, we're continuing to sell the big-box guys, the wholesalers, UNFI just announced that they're -- our second system with them. So -- and we have a lot of those type of customers still in the pipeline, which will get announced when we sign deals with them. But there's a lot of that in the pipeline. So one of the things that -- so one of the things I wanted to do is I really didn't know, quite frankly, a little bit surprised how big this market is considering that I thought I was just going to do automation for C&S 10 years ago and find out how much in demand this product is. So we still have in the Big Box, and we continue to talk to existing customers about even more projects. So that's one thing. The GreenBox, let me give you an example of -- so GreenBox could be as small as Mama Browns spaghetti sauce that makes something that you might buy on online or you might buy at a Whole Foods a small supplier and they're warehousing products before they're shipping somewhere. So that could be somebody that takes 50,000 case positions in a building that holds 1 million. So that would be a small customer. It could be a lot of small customers. On the other hand, one of the things that we've talked to SoftBank about, which is one of the reasons why we're excited about them as a partner, so the sovereign wealth funds, all of them whether it's Singapore or UAE or the Saudis, they're all very large owners of ports. And the way the ports work is that they basically build warehouses for people and then they have operators. So if you automated all the ports in the world, that would probably be the world's largest customer. So they're both big customers and small customers. So who would go into the ports, everybody that's unloading containers has got to store that stuff somewhere. And so you could have big customers that today only do that themselves. And now we could offer somebody like some of the big shoe companies instead of having six warehouses where they put their shoes, they might want to have 20 warehouses that are much more efficient freight wise, they can't do that today because they have these massive warehouses with massive warehouse management systems. And so we could say, you could store 200,000 boxes instead of 2 million boxes in our facility and spread around the country. So the concept that we're talking about, the way I describe it, is it's a combination of Iron Mountain, which created a whole business for secure storage and of course, that's not a great business anymore because of everything going online. But when it started, it created a business that nobody really understood because everybody stored their records themselves. So there were small customers and big customers. That extreme -- and then the other thing that I focus on is all these storage sheds that are being built around the country, they never stop building them. Every time they build an apartment building, they build these more storage and nobody had any idea how big that business was 20 years ago. If they had, they would have built them all out. So we're offering both small customers and large customers a whole different supply chain flexibility that they never had before.