 The national associations, they normally involve large, medium and small holders. So when we have a new technology, when we have decided that we are going to reach one market, we will inform and we will do the work for the large, for the medium, for the small holders. Of course, there's always some small holders who won't have a special association for them, but the majority of the national associations reach the three types of farmers. And the small holders have the same opportunities in terms of technical assistance, information, communication as any other farmer in the country. It's the reality I know the most. Our broad-based approach, whether it be through our associates of which over 2 million people work for our company, whether it be from our suppliers, which we buy from over 100,000 suppliers globally, our NGOs that aid us tremendously and we work with directly and they have offices actually in Bentonville and also too, obviously the customers are shopping our stores. We purchase and we serve our customer and so what our customers are looking for is what we put in our shelves. And so those 200 million people who are in our stores every week, that's also a tremendous listing post that we have that we have information coming into us on an ongoing basis that we monitor and make changes on based on their behavior. We have an extensive network of relationships that we built up over the last 50 years with civil society, NGOs, national research systems and government agencies that allow us to receive a lot of direct feedback from farmers, exactly what they need, what they want and equally importantly how technology is working for them and how it's not working. That relationship has allowed us to guide the development of next generation technologies. Our Feed the Future strategy actually we read the document on our website focuses on small holders in terms of making sure that they have access to technology, making sure that they have access to financing. The other piece that I think we're going to try and do more work on but I think in some ways it's low hanging fruit here is post harvest technologies because the large companies may not need that kind of advice but in a developing world you get 50% of your produce doesn't make it to the market and the small holder needs help in that. So we're going to try and focus as well on post harvest best practices and technology. I'd like to thank our panel. I think what we tried to do today was to have a conversation up here and I think we did achieve that. I'm on a sort of movement up and down and across the different conversation topics. So thank you very much. I hope you've enjoyed being part of this conversation with us. I know it's the end.