Yeah. I'd start with, as we went into this calendar year, we did not see kind of -- like kind of across the board a meaningful increase in budgets for our services. So we saw more of the same, which is consistent with what we've been talking about, and as we went into the budgets -- as the budgets were set, it was kind of more of the same. And it's pretty early right now in terms of processing, right, what just happened and there's a lot of different things that can happen, right? So you sometimes see clients reprioritizing like maybe they'll go faster on the cost cutting than on some of the building in that, and it -- even those -- that kind of a conversation, it's super early, right? And so what we are seeing though is a continuation that these conversations always turn to, okay, we got to go faster and we got to go bigger. And this theme around cost and growth because that's really the unique way that we can help clients. So one of the examples that I gave in the script around a major manufacturer of food supplies is all about like when you are better managing inventory and supply chain, that's both driving growth and at the same time, self-funding big transformation programs. So I think right now, if you think about just what is the impact of an elevated level of uncertainty, it's the same thing as what we've been seeing like, more desire to do larger transformation. And while we're at it, because I'm sure the question will come, discretionary spending this quarter, Q2 was overall about the same, still constrained. There were some pockets of improvement, for example, in banking and capital markets in the Americas, but again, going into the calendar year, discretionary spending was overall about the same constraint, and particularly in small deals that we've been seeing. So yeah, that's kind of where we are.