Unidentified Analyst
Analyst
Congrats on setting yourself up for a successful future and closing the door on 2020. My question here focuses on SG&A, but I have 2 apologies. First off, I was disconnected during this call. So if this has already been hit, I missed it. Second, I'm only on Page 26 of the 10-K, and I haven't seen the answer yet, so it might be in there. So historically, you have maintained SG&A expenses, and I mean, going back 5, 6 years, 7 years that were non-intuitive. I mean, like lower as a percentage of revenue, though, your operating margins were higher as a percentage of revenues, and I can give companies names, but just think of some low-margin peers, they run tight SG&A, but also low operating margins. Their SG&A might be in 12%, 13%, 14% range. And in some of your higher end peers, and you could think of those or I could name them, more in the IT space. They run operating margins like 8%, 9%, 10%, but they might have SG&A, 22%, 26%, 32%. You also have been weird because you're like teens, 14%, 16%, 18% for SG&A, but your operating margins have really been like cream of the crop, really impressive. So it's not intuitive, and that's what I mean when I say nonintuitive. I'm curious, this past year, you jumped about 200 basis points, and you explained that in your release that going from about 19% to about 21% was attributed to the 2 acquisitions, both of them in the IT space. I'm wondering, generally speaking, looking forward, we probably should expect similar things going forward as you expand in IT. And more specifically, looking backward at legacy, this is really aimed at Dan. If we just looked at legacy SG&A year-over-year, 2019 versus 2020, were they essentially the same?