Yes. Again, when we say a lot of value added, their business is – it has a broader customer base. So, just think of maybe more airline hubs where they're preparing food. Think about more of the high end retailers who are looking for grab and go products to sell that are put together. And it's a sale that if you're going to a market and you're looking for something to serve at home that's quick. So, I think, it's not 100% towards your restaurant customer. Where hotels -- and a lot of it is the hotels and caterers that everyone today is challenged with the workforce. So, it's more processing, right? So it's cutting more fruits and vegetables and products that are faster, peeling onions, chopping, putting them in an environment where obviously they are fresh, and it saves a lot of time, and it allows them to get by without labor. And I think that trend's been coming for a long time, and it's really been of course accelerated during the pandemic where hospitality was hit the hardest and we lost the most people in the workforce. I think everyone could say that it's better than it was, but it's still challenging and it was challenging before the pandemic. So I don't think that's going to change much. So, just the same way that we're cutting tons of steaks for restaurants, hotels, steak houses. Number one, I think we do a better job at it, because that's all our processing units do, right? We're producing high end hamburgers and we're cutting steaks and we're experts at it. And most establishment don't have that kind of expertise, right? You don't have a lot of trained butchers, you don't have band saws. So I just think it's a gradual evolving industry and it was going that way, anyway and now it's accelerating because of labor shortages. So Hardie's has a great footprint throughout all of Texas. I mean that's what's really exciting to us. It's a great organization. It's been around for a long time, great people, very well run. And the thing that takes us the most time when we are entering a new market is making friends. It's a relationship business. So, you need to build that trust. You need to build the credit history. And having someone like Hardie's joined Chefs in a – maybe the biggest market that we're entering for foodservice that we're not in, that in Florida, gives us access to thousands of customers. And we're starting to build the specialty department to be able to visit all the Hardie's customers and give them support to their existing sales staff. And I think we're going to have tremendous success over the next 05:10 years.