Reckon was the QuickBooks distributor in Australia until severing that relationship a couple of years ago to launch its own product in the competitive small business market. In the U.K., Reckon One is competing with hometown application Sage One. And in this country, it will going up against a cast of thousands. Or so it seems. There are so many low-cost products I expect the Girl Scouts will be handing them out with cookies next year. Reckon was already in the U.S. with n-Queue, which markets a cost recovery line called Bill Back, and a document product, Virtual Cabinet, that is has shown at conferences in this country, for example the Scaling New Heights conference. The financial report says no American revenue has yet been booked for Virtual Cabinet. In terms of results, Reckon reported net profit after tax of $9.3 million for the most recently ended half, down 8 percent from $9.5 million a year ago. Recent revenue of $54 million, up $6 percent from $51.1 million the first half of 2014. Reckon also reported it spent $9 million to buy the 30 percent of Virtual Cabinet it did not own. All figures are in Australian dollars.