Building Businesses Through Better Structures

Since 2019, we've helped Australian business owners move from paperwork confusion to operational clarity. No corporate jargon. Just practical guidance for people who want to get their company formation right the first time.

We Started Where You Are Now

Back in 2019, our founder Rhiannon Falsworth was working with small businesses in Western Australia. She kept seeing the same problem—people with great ideas getting stuck on company formation paperwork instead of actually running their businesses.

The existing options were either too expensive or left people feeling lost. So we built something different. A service that explains things in plain English and walks you through each decision without the confusion.

By 2025, we've worked with over 340 businesses across Australia. And honestly? We're still figuring things out as regulations change. But that's why we stay focused on one thing—making company formation straightforward.

Business formation consultation workspace

How We Got Here

Six years of learning what actually matters when you're setting up a business structure in Australia.

2019

Started with Sole Traders

We began helping sole traders in Bunbury transition to company structures. The first year was messy—lots of late nights figuring out ASIC requirements and ABN applications. But we learned exactly where people get confused.

2021

Expanded Services

Added trust structures and partnership formations after clients kept asking about them. We also started offering ongoing compliance support because turns out, forming the company is just the beginning.

2023

Built Our Resources Library

Created detailed guides on director duties, shareholder agreements, and tax structure decisions. These came from actual questions our clients asked repeatedly. Nothing theoretical—just practical information people actually need.

2025

Focus on Education

This year we're putting more energy into helping people understand their options before they commit. Better decisions up front mean fewer headaches later. We've seen enough people rush into the wrong structure to know this matters.

What Guides Our Work

These aren't mission statement buzzwords. They're the things we actually use when making decisions about how we work with clients.

Clear documentation and transparent processes

Clear Explanations Matter

We skip the legal terminology when plain English works better. If you need to google three terms to understand our email, we've failed. Our job is making complex regulations understandable, not impressing people with vocabulary.

Long-term client relationships and ongoing support

Long-Term Thinking

Your business structure should work for where you're going, not just where you are today. We ask about your plans for the next few years because that context changes which structure makes sense. Quick fixes create problems down the line.

Practical business formation guidance

Realistic Timelines

Company formation takes time. ASIC processing, bank account setup, getting your tax registrations sorted—it's not instant. We give you honest timeframes so you can plan accordingly. Rushing these steps usually creates more work later.

No Hidden Complexity

We tell you upfront what's involved and what it'll cost. If your situation needs a lawyer or accountant, we'll say so. We're not trying to be everything—we're good at company formation and we stick to that.

Rhiannon Falsworth, Director of Client Services

Rhiannon Falsworth

Director of Client Services

The Person Behind the Process

Rhiannon spent eight years working in small business accounting before starting tutammirariene. She got tired of watching clients struggle with company structures that didn't fit their actual needs.

These days she splits time between client consultations and keeping up with regulatory changes. Which sounds boring, but when you've seen someone choose the wrong structure and regret it for years, you understand why the details matter.

Outside of work? She's usually hiking somewhere in the southwest or arguing with her garden about what should grow in Western Australian soil.