This Accounting Revolution, a new national accounting service for small business, has officially launched from the Whitsundays, and it’s gone loud.
This Accounting Revolution is redefining small business accounting with simplicity and transparency at its core. New clients receive six months of free accounting and tax, followed by a flat fee of $56 per week plus GST – no surprises, no jargon.

Designed for cafés, tradies, small retailers, and freelancers, the service provides everything a business needs to stay on top of its finances, including monthly profit and loss statements, balance sheets, cashflow reports, quarterly BAS lodgements, and annual tax returns.
By cutting out unnecessary complexity, This Accounting Revolution empowers business owners with clarity, confidence, and complete control of their numbers – all at an affordable price.
At the core of This Accounting Revolution is a groundbreaking AI accounting engine that builds accounts straight from bank statements, removing the slow, error-prone data entry of legacy systems.
Having already processed thousands of business accounts across Australia, it learns from every transaction instantly recognising industry-specific patterns – whether it’s a plumber’s hardware invoice or a café’s milk delivery – to deliver clean, accurate accounts in real time.
To celebrate the launch, This Accounting Revolution – and Your Business Angels – founder Gavin Waring teamed up with local rock-punk band The Diesel Gypsies to create an anthem for small business owners fed up with confusing systems and costly accounting software.
While most companies mark a national launch with a boardroom, This Accounting Revolution chose a band and a Proserpine cane shed.
The Diesel Gypsies, a Whitsundays-based rock and punk outfit, recorded the anthem inside a working shed in Proserpine’s cane country. With two band members also running their own businesses, they understood firsthand the frustrations of BAS deadlines, compliance fatigue, and juggling the daily grind of running a business.
Gavin explains:
“We wanted something real, not polished. Something that resonates with small business owners who deal with the grind every day. A punk anthem from a cane shed says more about us than any glossy ad ever could.”
The anthem now features in This Accounting Revolution’s national launch campaign, capturing the raw, authentic spirit of small business.


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