“We call them the angry, young accountants,” Macolino says.
“They are typically aged between 28 and 40. They are in mid-tier and larger firms. They feel they are crunching numbers [and] they can’t support their clients properly. They are bound by old technology and the old ‘this is how we do things’. Really what they want to do is take a new approach and develop long lasting relationships with businesses.”
Read the full article at The Sydney Morning Herald.









