Yes. I mean, it comes back once again to this discussion around trial and frequency. I would argue that every human in their right mind wants Shake Shack. I mean, it's literally the best burger, fries, shake, drink you can get. I mean, just like, maybe I'm biased, but that's why I'm here, because that's how I feel. And so, once again, we do not have a problem driving trial. I think, when we opened that Shack in Pittsburgh, where I'm from, there's a lot of hard work and blue collar people in line to try Shake Shack, when we opened that day, when I was there. The problem or the challenge, I should say, and the opportunity is really what it is, is for us to be able to mitigate the barriers to frequency. And those two barriers are the speed of service and some of the value perception. And we're working on both of those things. And once again, we're not going to degrade the quality of the experience. We're not going to degrade the quality of our products. But I do think there are opportunities for us to evolve our menu strategy, evolve our LTO strategy, evolve the way we approach how we position things across our revenue model and our menu to drive a better value perception. I think those are the two things that are really going to help us to drive frequency. So I don't think it's like, hey, lower income customers don't want Shake Shack. They do. And frankly, they show up and try it and they love it, but it becomes more of a special occasion. I don't want to be a special occasion. Like, I want to be something that is a Friday night staple for the family, that is a after work stop on the way home. And in order for those things to happen, we got to work on our speed of service and we got to work on our value perception. So from a brand positioning standpoint, that's where a lot of our effort is.