Will your kids be saying, “Mom! I just made more money!”
Summer is the perfect time to foster your children’s entrepreneurial spirits and help them start their own business. While a lemonade stand can certainly be profitable, many more opportunities are available both online and offline.
Kids’ Business Ideas and How-to Guides:
Kids’ Business Ideas is a 50-page ebook that lists at least seventy-five businesses that can be run by children. Some are generally known teen and pre-teen jobs like babysitting and dog walking, but there are many other unique and potentially lucrative ideas. The online business category contains some how-to information, but for the most part the ebook is a list of ideas, a brief description of what the work entails, the tools needed, suggested minimum age for each, and some notes to parents regarding safety. It’s well worth the $9.99 price.
Claim Your Copy of Kids’ Business Ideas.
Your Guide to Helping Your Child Start an Inexpensive & Fun Business Online, is a free report including tips on affiliate marketing and blogging. Click here for your complimentary copy.
Note: This is an updated version of a post originally made in March, 2007.














March 31st, 2009 at 11:27 AM
This is an excellent post and excellent topic. I have my first child due in around 5 1/2 weeks so am obviously very excited about that. I have bookmarked this post so I can purchase a copy of the e-book once I get some paypal funds as I think it’s extremely important to teach your children vital skills such as this. School and even university teaches very little about money skills and how to earn a living for yourself rather than working for a boss. Therefore I will be teaching my children all I can and resources like this are fantastic. Thanks for sharing!
April 3rd, 2009 at 6:15 AM
Congratulations on the baby! I think we’ll start seeing more and more kid entrepreneurs because there are so many more parents running home businesses and exposing their children to the possibilities. And like you, many of us want our kids to start out with knowledge we didn’t have when we started.