So, I'm going to try to answer the question broadly for you, because I think that's where you're going to think that six, 12 was an example. From a non-rate perspective, we're doing a variety of things. We've -- some of it is underwriting, we might change as an example -- and all of these are examples. They're not precise and done in every single state, they're all examples. We might adjust the underwriting criteria. In some cases, that means it's a yes/no decision and we'll take something where we might have at a different rate, adequacy level or rate level, have taken something and now we say it's a no. In other cases, there are pricing tiers within a program and something that might have qualified for our best or most lowest price tier now drops a tier or two, and is a less competitive tier, which is effectively putting in at a higher rate level. Something that was in our highest rate level might now be ineligible. So, that's a case where the underwriting moves things through the tiers. In other cases, we're adjusting billing plans, where we might take something that -- in the most liberal sense, we might have just taken a one month down payment, we might go to the most the least liberal or most conservative stance and say now we want 100% down payment. The result of that is fewer customers are likely to take that because of the cash flow dynamic, it effectively reduces the business that's going on. In other cases, we are -- where we have the ability to do it in certain states we're non-renewing certain exposures. Sometimes we're taking individual agents and we might terminate that agency relationship or we might restrict the writing to that individual agent. In other cases, we're modifying agent compensation that might be either reducing or -- you should assume that we've reduced all override programs, we're not driving that. So, in some cases, we've lowered base commissions and done that. We've also made changes where we've restricted full coverage and move to liability-only. As I think most of you are aware, liability-only coverages include bodily injury coverage and physical damage coverage where we're liable to a third-party after an accident. And so coverage has all of those plus first-party damage, since a lot of the inflation that's driving through our losses right now are related to metal coverages. By shifting towards liability-only, we reduce a lot of the lines of coverage that are metal related. So, that changes the mix underneath. And in some cases, we've shifted from 12 months to six-month policies. But we're doing that not always across the board, but sporadically where we think for the right cells, it's providing the right answer. So, it's -- again to highlight I know I said it, but we're doing a mix of all of those types of activities. In some geographies, it might get all of them and others it might get parts of them depending on how much medicine is needed and depending on what the regulatory environment is in that spot. Is that scratching the edge Greg, you were looking for?