Austin Singleton
Analyst · Truist. Your line is open, please go ahead.
Yes, I'll let Jack speak to that. I mean, we threw around a bunch of numbers, I don't know what he ended up putting in the model to kind of get us to the number, what we what we ended up settling on, or what he ended up settling on in the model. But me Anthony and Jack, once we got done with the Atlanta Boat Show, spend a lot of time talking about, Lauderdale, what we've seen since Lauderdale, through these, these first boat shows in January. And one thing that was pretty evident is there was a lot of promotional pricing for manufacturers, a lot more than we expected right off the bat, we expected them to kind of ease into that which in a way is good, because it allowed us to maintain our margins, and use those promotions as the discount. But that's like phase one. And so it just continues to go from there. As I've said many times, a third of the dealer network out there has zero to offer the consumer but price, and they usually sell they can usually get a sell on price the first time, and then they never sell that customer another boat because they don't have anything else to offer them. So you'll continue to see that a road promotional pricing from the manufacturer use usually leads the way which that doesn't work anymore than these, just say these lower side, dealers will start discounting on their own. So they'll start working on their margins. And we have to kind of follow suit. So when you start thinking about, let's say, 30 feet down, 35 feet and down, that'll move a lot quicker than what Anthony was speaking about earlier in his opening remarks about the bigger stuff that still got the longer build times. It's still got a backlog. So we'll start to see that a road. But Jack, I don't know what you ended up putting into the model. What you ended up selling?