I think it's because they are high performing. I have a really high performing team and I think that they know their strengths already, honestly, and they just want to keep getting better. And I've also learned for people like that when you really nail them and tell them, you screwed that up, it doesn't work because they're harder on themselves than I would be on them. So with, with a lot of people, I'll go, okay, that was a mistake. What did you learn? Sometimes if they're difficult employees and I need to take further action, I'm much sterner and I keep repeating the things over and over again. And then if they can't work on it, I'm not good at it, but I will let people go. I've learned over time that everyone wants to hear feedback differently, but everybody needs to hear the feedback. Now, when somebody is in a room and they mess up, I never criticiz publicly. Never, ever, ever. I praise publicly. I go, that was a great presentation. That was terrific. Sometimes they'll go, have you thought about this? Have you thought about that? But if someone does something, particularly if it's egregious and they're like putting somebody down or something like that, at the end of the meeting, I go, hey, come see me in my office. And everybody around the table goes, oh, they're going to get yelled at. So we go in there, I close the door. I go, okay, what did you do wrong? And they usually will tell me.