Raising Entrepreneurs

Teaching Kids About Money and Business
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Archive for June, 2008

Cash-Smart Kids YouTube Competition Update – June 30th

June 30, 2008 By: Jenny Category: News No Comments →

Welcome back!

Still waiting on word from the publishers …. nothing ever happens when promised! Sigh.

Meanwhile, I want to remind everyone of the great opportunities which are available to entrants in the competition – for example, having your business mentioned in a magazine which goes out to 6 million readers!

Whether you win or not, being in the competition has all sorts of ongoing benefits. For example, young Rhiannon’s video has been seen by news outlets all around the world, and is currently featured on Peter Economy’s blog.

I know there are lots of people out there intending to put entries in, but procrastinating.

Do it NOW!

The longer your video is online during the competition, the more exposure your business will get.

Parenting – When Loving Care Creates Pressure To Perform

June 27, 2008 By: Jenny Category: Parenting 1 Comment →

Following on from last week’s conversation about “helicopter parenting”, I was thinking about some of the other, unintended consequences of pouring so much energy and effort into making life easier for our kids.

Kids are far more savvy than most of us give them credit for. If their parents are running themselves into the ground, pouring all their energy and focus into providing every possible opportunity and advantage for their kids, the kids know that they are darned-well expected to return that investment in the form of material success – getting good marks, getting into the right college, getting a good job, even marrying the right kind of spouse.

The more effort the parents put into their kids at the cost of pursuing their own interests and dreams, the more pressure the kids feel to follow the path their parents have laid out for them, whether or not that path is a good fit for them.

Even when the path is a good fit, and the young person would have chosen it of their own volition, pressure to perform can leach the joy and self-expression out of what might otherwise have been a satisfying and fulfilling career.

Kids can feel this pressure in their business activities, as much as in their schooling.

If you are encouraging your kids to branch out into business, or they have started of their own accord and you are supporting them, it is vitally important that you, the parent, do not get focused on results and accomplishment.

The greatest value from running a business is not the income, or the accolades, or the value it adds to a resume. The greatest value from any business journey is the fabulous growth and learning opportunities which arise from the journey – and the confidence and self-reliance that result from making use of those learning opportunities.

Just as your child can benefit from a few years of ballet training, even if he or she doesn’t ever progress beyond the end-of-year concert at the local church hall, because of the habits of good posture, grace, and core strength it develops, your child can benefit from a few years of running a business, even if that business never makes more than nickels and dimes.

Focusing on the journey, and the lessons learned along the way, will free your child from the burden of parental expectations, and allow him or her to blossom according to their own design. It is this freedom which the children of helicopter parents do not have, and it is this freedom which we yearn for when we look back to the time when kids were left to be kids while parents got on with their lives.

Our kids can have the best of both worlds – interested, involved, protective parents and the freedom to make their own choices and learn from their own mistakes. As long as parents are aware of the downsides of anxious hovering, parents can curb their tendencies to overprotect and work on checking the training wheels and then letting go.

Photo: carf

Are You Programming Your Kids For Poverty?

June 25, 2008 By: Jenny Category: Mindset, Parenting No Comments →

Today we welcome back Amanda Van Der Gulik, Mompreneur and enthusiastic advocate of teaching kids good money habits from an early age.

“Money Doesn’t Grow on Trees!”

Does this saying sound familiar to you?

I bet you are probably one of many who heard this often growing up, right?

If not, you were lucky.

Let’s turn a new leaf and start raising our own children a little differently.

How about we change the way we answer our kids when they want something that requires money that we do not have or refuse to give.

For example:

Jonny wants a new pair of brand-name, high-endurance, running shoes.

“Dad, I really need a new pair of ‘brand-name’, running shoes. They are the coolest and all the kids have them. I want a pair too! If I don’t get a pair of them, then Shawn’s going to beat me at basket ball and you know, I’m 10 times better than him at basket ball!”

Here are two different replies:

Dad replies with,

“What do you think I’m made of?  Money doesn’t grow on trees you know!

or

Dad replies with,

“Well son, if those shoes mean that much to you and you truly feel that Shawn will have an unfair advantage over you in basket ball, then what is your plan? How do you plan to buy those shoes?

Can you think of something that you can do, or make, or service, that can raise you the money so you can buy your own pair?

If you really want those shoes, son, then you’re going to have to come up with a good way to buy them. I believe you can do it.

Come back to me when you have a plan and we’ll see if we can work it out together.

Good luck kiddo.”

In Dad’s first reply, Dad shuts Jonny’s hopes down but ALSO teaches him, although unintentionally, that life is all about ‘scarcity’. Jonny learns from these negative replies that money is hard to come by. That it is difficult to get what you want in life. That other people will always have more than you.

And the list goes on and on…

On the other hand in Dad’s second reply, you can see that Dad is turning on the creative juices in his son’s mind, “okay, so I want these new shoes,  how can I go about making the money to get them myself?”.

And as well as getting Jonny’s creative juices flowing on some easy ways for kids to make money, Dad is also teaching some other incredibly valuable life lessons.

Like: Abundance, Optimism, Faith in his son to find a way to fulfil his desire.

He is teaching him to be responsible for himself as well as encouraging him to come up with a plan and then to work together on making that plan come to action.

This alone will diminish any thoughts of theft as an option.

So how are you talking to your own kids when it comes to money?

See if you can pay attention to the next time your child asks you about money.

Listen to your own reply and then meditate on it for a minute or two.

How did that answer come across to your child?

Was your child turned off of money, or encouraged to take responsibility to come up with a creative way to attract their desired goods?

I hope you have enjoyed this thoughtful session, and I look forward to writing the next. If you have any specific topics that you would like me to talk about please just leave a message and I will do my best to answer your topics of interest where concerned with kids and money.

Cheers…Amanda van der Gulik…Excited Life Enthusiast!

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For 50 Free Money Making Ideas for Kids click here!
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Cash-Smart Kids YouTube Competition Update – June 23rd

June 23, 2008 By: Jenny Category: News No Comments →

We had a rush of people coming to look at the competition rules last week, so I am guessing that someone has been publicising the competition, or the press release – or maybe we have had some press coverage that I haven’t heard about yet.

If you happen to have seen a new story about the Cash-Smart Kids YouTube video competition somewhere, please drop me a line in a comment on this blog, or via the contact page and let me know!

We’re still waiting to hear from the publisher we like the best, after an initial warm response – who knows how long it might take them to come back with an offer?

In the meanwhile, though, keep the entries coming in – so far I have seen about one percent of the entries that people have spoken to me about actually materialise, so I know there are an awful lot of good intentions out there.

Let’s see those good intentions turning into some ACTION!

Parenting For Self-Reliance And Success

June 20, 2008 By: Jenny Category: Parenting 20 Comments →

Ben Casnocha posted an interesting link on his blog last week, to an essay by Joseph Epstein. Epstein is a university professor, and in his essay he was reflecting on the shift in parenting styles among middle-class parents, and the effect of that shift on the behaviour and attitudes of the “Millennials”, or Generation Y – the kids currently in high school, college, and up to about age 25.

Those kids have grown up with an unprecedented level of parental attention and involvement, and they continue to expect a high level of attention, praise and affirmation from other adults as they enter college and the workplace.

Epstein’s observations echoed those in that fabulous ode to the kids of the 50s, 60s, and 70s – the kids of yesteryear who had lead-based paint on their toys, rode in the back of station wagons without seat belts, and went out to play on the weekends – unsupervised – without a mobile phone or any expectation that they would be dropped off, picked up, or in communication between leaving home after breakfast and returning at sunset.

Epstein’s essay also evoked a longing for those simpler times, when parents were just parents, and weren’t expected to also be their kids’ chauffeur, best friend, counsellor, performance coach, careers advisor, and lender-of-first-resort. Back before the advent of encounter groups and “inner child work”, kids got on with their lives and adults got on with theirs.

I’m not advocating a return to that lifestyle – there were some major disadvantages to living in families which simply never discussed or acknowledged emotions.

One advantage of those times, however, could be reclaimed.

We could return to thinking of kids as capable.

The pendulum has swung so far in the direction of protecting and nurturing kids that there is a reasonably widespread phenomenon called “helicopter parenting”. This refers to the form of anxious hovering and over-helping which flowers, in the fullness of time, with parents phoning their college-aged kids who are living in dorms to wake them each morning so they are not late for class.

The message kids get from this type of parenting is not that they are loved and respected. The message they get is that they are incapable, and that the world is too much for them to handle on their own.

One of the greatest benefits to my kids from their business activity is the sense it gives them of being capable – of being able to do adult tasks in way that adults respect and acknowledge.

Business activity also breeds emotional resilience. Kids who have active businesses have all tried things that didn’t work out, processed the disappointment, and moved on to try something else. In most cases, they get accolades for trying, whether or not they ever make much money.

Who is better placed for a life of accomplishment – the child who has tackled adult challenges, and learned that failure and disappointment are part of life, and part of the process, or the child who believes they are incapable of getting out of bed without outside assistance?

Image: silver.and.gold