It could help people record bank transactions, plan budgets and measure expenses, track investments and their stock price performances.
Of course, the most important thing was it assisted users in tax calculations, with various calculation formulas already integrated within Quicken.
As it turned out, Cook's judgment was right, financial software had its application market.
After several years of updates, Quicken had entered into household life and even the medical field, and Intuit was gradually showing a trend of growth.
The initial intention of Byte Company to acquire Intuit was to develop tax software for enterprise users.
At the very least, they wanted to add some financial functions to Work title, or make them compatible with each other, even supporting data transfer would suffice.
The office area, that's Byte Company's forte.
Intuit was the perfect fit to fill in its deficiencies in that regard, given that financial software has a certain level of speciality.