Dirk Locascio : And you just come back to Dave’s comments that he made in his prepared remarks just around the lapping of Omicron. I mean that is 200 basis points or 300 basis points across much of the business. And so when you think of Q2 being a very normalized environment, I think the business is still growing at 3%. When you have a lot of businesses that are really going backwards pretty meaningfully. And the fact that we are growing much faster than that in these target customer types, which are more value-added, more profitable, et cetera, that Dave said we feel very good about. So where we are, what we saw in July and the stability of the overall macro.
Jeffrey Bernstein : Understood. And a follow-up just on the EBITDA margins. I know you talked about the 60 basis points of expansion to the 4.8%. I think you previously noted that for full year ’24, so a year from now, you would hope to get back to at least 4.6%, which was pre-COVID levels. I know the seasonality at play and it’s difficult to compare the second quarter of this year to kind of a full year guidance for next year. But Dave, if you were just taking a step back, I mean, how do you assess the ultimate potential for those margins over time? Whether you look at comparable peers or whether you’re looking at historical trends, just trying to get a sense because, again, at least this quarter, you’re already above kind of that pre-COVID level, again, stripping out seasonality, but just your thoughts on the EBITDA margin going forward.
David Flitman : I feel good about our ability to control what we can control, not so much concern to your point around what our peers are doing, but what we’re doing inside our company. And as you’ve heard Dirk say here a couple of times this morning, we’re focused on initiatives and things that we can control, and we think there’s still a lot of juice in the squeeze. And so I’m feeling increasingly positive about my comments last quarter around our ability to deliver against that $1.7 billion plus or minus in 2024. And obviously, we’ll have to say about that as we get further into the year and provide guidance for next year. But nothing gives me a reason to pause. I have just continued to gain confidence around our ability to execute and ramp up both our growth and profitability.
Operator: And your next question comes from the line of Kelly Bania from BMO Capital Markets.
Kelly Bania : I just wanted to talk about EBITDA margins. I guess, historically, your second half EBITDA margins in total are a little stronger than your first half, but your guidance, I think, seems to imply a little bit of the opposite, maybe a little bit lower in the second half. So just curious if you can talk about how much of that is conservatism or other factors that might be impacting the margins in the second half or any change in maybe seasonality that we should be thinking about as we think about the second half?
Dirk Locascio : Sure. Kelly, this is Dirk. So overall, pleased with the progress we’ve made on the overall margins. I think as we think about the outlook for the year, even what’s embedded in there, especially in my commentary about the higher end that includes being in a normalized environment, a pretty healthy EBITDA growth rate still in the second half of the year of high single to low double digits. So I feel good about ability there. I’m not going to comment on specifics within the different lines. But what we do expect is we do expect to continue to still make progress on our EBITDA margins. And I think there’s still, as Dave commented, plenty of opportunity ahead. We feel good about where we stand at the halfway point and our outlook for the balance of the year.