Yes, thanks for the question, Samad. The short answer is absolutely yes. I'll give more color about it. First of all, it's important to say that every conversation that we have today, regardless of what we end up doing with the customer, start with AI, both in terms of the way we position it, but of course, where the customer focus is. And they understand that in order to have AI, they need to obviously move to the cloud, adopt the platform, have all channels on it, look at digital and voice together, etcetera. That was important to emphasize. Going back to your question, yes, there is more budget funneling to it. First of all, because generally, there are more budgets available to AI, and it's easier for any type of executive to get approval for AI. There is somewhat of an AI format, if you would like, in enterprises right now, but specifically in CX, the value proposition is very clear. We need to remember that still 90% of the spending in CX goes to labor. With all the respect to all the technology that is surrounding this customer representative, still 90% of the cost is in labor. And AI, a very straight position, it has two parts of it. It has the augmented intelligence, where it augments the agent, make it a 10x better, obviously much more efficient, so more money can move from labor into technology. And of course, a full automation with AI that allows them to take out the head count on one hand, but applying a healthy amount of it with a greater ROI, 25% of it or so, and apply it to the technology side to AI. So I would say that if you look at CX as a whole, potentially there is no new budget, but there is a major shift from labor to technology. So for us, this is definitely a new incremental budget.