The new tier is designed for businesses that have outgrown basic accounting tools but are not ready, or willing, to move into a full enterprise resource planning system. It extends familiar accounting, payroll and bank reconciliation functions with features aimed at larger or more complex operations, including consolidated reporting across multiple entities, improved data controls, migration support, data restoration and cash flow forecasting.
For business owners, the timing is important. In a higher-rate environment, lenders are generally paying closer attention to cash flow quality, tax obligations, payroll commitments, trading history and the structure of related entities. A business seeking working capital, equipment finance or property-related funding may find that clean, current and well-organised financial data is no longer just helpful; it can materially affect the speed and confidence of an application.
The real value of tools like this is not simply automation. It is visibility. A growing business might be profitable on paper but still experience pressure from stock purchases, delayed customer payments, seasonal revenue swings or upcoming tax liabilities. Better reporting can help owners identify those pinch points earlier and decide whether they need short-term funding, a longer-term facility, or a change in repayment structure.
That said, software should not be confused with advice. A dashboard can show where pressure is building, but it will not always explain which finance product is suitable, whether security is appropriate, or how different repayment terms may affect the business over time. Before applying, owners should combine internal reporting with modelling repayment capacity, reviewing fees and testing whether the proposed facility still works if revenue softens or costs rise.
The launch also reinforces a broader trend: finance decisions are becoming more integrated. Accounting data, lending requirements, tax planning and growth strategy increasingly overlap. Businesses with multiple entities or expansion plans may benefit from speaking with independent financial brokers or advisers who can help interpret the numbers and compare suitable options across lenders.
For Australian SMEs, the message is practical. Better systems can strengthen the story behind a finance application, but the final decision still depends on affordability, purpose, structure and transparency. The businesses best placed to secure suitable finance are likely to be those that can clearly show where they are now, where they are heading, and how any new borrowing supports sustainable growth.
Please Note: If this information affects you or is relevant to your circumstances, seek advice from a licensed professional.
