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Old 04-16-2008, 11:26 AM   #1 (permalink)
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3 kid CEOs making big bucks

3 kid CEOs making big bucks - MSN Money

Leanna Archer, an honor student in Islip, N.Y., was 8 when she first tried to make a batch of homemade, natural hair products just like her mom's. Soon she began selling them in the neighborhood and then to stores.

Today the 12-year-old Leanna is the owner and CEO of Leanna's Inc., which sells hair-oil treatments, shampoos, conditioners and deep conditioners. Her products are sold online and in stores across the country, and she expects 2008 revenues to reach $150,000 -- up from $45,000 in 2007. This kid is making $5,000 a month

But while Leanna is clearly a high achiever, she's hardly alone. Often inspired by their parents, an increasing number of kids are starting their first businesses while they're still doing homework.

"Generation Y entrepreneurs enjoy taking risks," says Sean C. Rush, president and chief executive of Junior Achievement, an organization dedicated to inspiring young people to become successful in business. "Younger would-be entrepreneurs, even as young as 8 years old, indicate an interest in starting their own businesses, in order to use their skills and abilities, to be their own boss and to build something for the future." Slide show: 10 entrepreneurs under 18

Leanna works seven days a week to keep her business going. On weekends, she makes and packages the products at home with her parents' help. During the week -- after completing her homework -- she packs boxes for the orders she receives daily on her Web site.

"I want to let kids know that if I can do it, they can too," Leanna says, adding that poet Maya Angelou is one of her role models. "I want to go to schools all over the U.S. and let kids know that they can become anything they want to be. They just have to believe."

Family and friends can be key to unlocking a child's inner entrepreneur. Real-estate developer Frank McKinney, for example, teaches his daughter that in order to succeed, you have to make work fun -- and think young. Everyday he shows her how: His office is in a tree house outside their Florida home. Go inside this millionaire's tree house

For Alexis Holmes it was her godfather, chef Tim Winn, who sparked her business interest. In 2005, Holmes attended a cooking school at McGavock High School in Nashville, Tenn., where Winn was teaching a continuing education class.

The class inspired Holmes to give back to the community. She began selling pies to local ministries and at various fundraisers to help raise money for the Oasis Center, an agency in her hometown that helps kids in crisis.

"Initially, I thought: 'How nice. She's using her Girl Scout skills,'" recalls her mother, Gemna Stringer Holmes.

But Holmes, now 16, was not just being a do-gooder.

Within two months, Alexis' Famous Pies had sold nearly $20,000 worth of goods (including wedding cakes). Holmes went on to open a full-time bakery, employing young people from the Oasis Center, and has done so well that her parents are now building her a restaurant/kitchen to keep up with the demand. (Clients include folks like Wynonna Judd, Faith Hill and some of the Tennessee Titans football team.)

Parents don't always realize just how much their own business and creative acumen rubs off on their kids. But it does.

"Being a business owner, I've always taught my children to be entrepreneurs," says Stringer Holmes, who owns an environmental pest-control company. "Her brothers have all had a gig while in school and college. But I never thought that my daughter would take this to the level she's at now. Whenever we're out, we're approached by individuals and clients and the comments are always the same: 'She is you.'"

The younger Holmes takes that as a great compliment. "I couldn't have done anything like this without my mother," she says. "She's my role model. She's shown me that with hard work you can get anywhere you want to be."

Ambitious teens have plenty of opportunities. If you can fill a need, there's a business waiting to be built. Even when, as sometimes happens, the need is your own.

Take Christina Pendleton of Columbus, Ohio. At 13, she needed to raise $3,000 for a mission trip to Australia and New Zealand. So she started a part-time business called Christina's Candy Creations, specializing in homemade candy bouquets, chocolate-dipped fruits and pretzels.

She ending up making $5,000 by whipping up batches of confections -- and when she returned home, she kept the sweets coming. Now 17 and a high school senior, she has earned around $20,000 since starting her business five years ago.

"When I came back, so many people wanted candy, and I figured it would help me pay for college," says Pendleton, who wants to study criminal justice -- but also to open her own candy store and bakery.
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Old 04-16-2008, 12:25 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Yep- anyone can do it. You just have to want to...
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Old 04-16-2008, 09:19 PM   #3 (permalink)
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No, there's more than that.
The common thread here is that all those kids had parents with enough money to help them scale up once they reached the barrier.

Take Leanna. There's no way she could go from making this stuff at home and selling to local stores, to starting a company that makes that kind of money.
a) Incorporation is a process that cannot be undertaken by a minor
b) Incorporation is an expensive process, which means she must have been fronted the money from somewhere, and banks don't lend to minors. Nor would a bank lend to people that don't already have decent money/assets, especially during the current economic crisis (which has been ongoing for about 2 years now)
c) Even if she magically didn't have to worry about the money, an 8-12 year old girl does not have the labour-hours required to make that much product, which means getting in employees, and all the associated stuff, as well as the bulk purchases required for branded packaging, etc...
Once again, without parents financial backing, how could she have upscaled like that?

So what really needs to be said is that anyone can do it, provided they have the want to, and are able to get financial backing...

Christinia sort of breaks that mold in that she's selling a home made luxury good, where she can charge exhorbitant prices and create the financial backing on her own, simply because people are a) suckers for candy and b) suckers for candy that's for a "charity".

I'm sure I could make huge amounts of money selling something if I got the backing of a Children's Hospital.
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Old 04-27-2008, 09:54 PM   #4 (permalink)
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harvey makes good points, i'm a bit skeptical of them as well.
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Old 04-27-2008, 11:30 PM   #5 (permalink)
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Its great to start young eh cos there's nothing to lose.
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Old 04-28-2008, 04:14 AM   #6 (permalink)
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Harvey had a point. But it's possible anyway.
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Old 04-28-2008, 09:53 PM   #7 (permalink)
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I DO know of a number of young people that have made fortunes on their own with nothing more than the computer that they had at home... But even that was a couple of thousand that their parents had managed to pony up in the first place, and a couple of their practices, whilst legal, were definitely ethically 'grey'
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Old 04-28-2008, 10:28 PM   #8 (permalink)
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What about Ashley Qualls, who turned Myspace page layouts into a corporation clearing $1 million a year? She spent $8 to buy the domain name. On the other side are the con artists, like the 13 year old English kid who ran internet scams and stayed one step ahead of the law for three years. Eventually though so many people got so mad at him that they all ganged up on him and brought him down. Three years of fun and 80 years to pay it back. That isn't counting the prison time or being raped in the butt by Big Tyrone while in prison. They'll be garnishing his old age pension, whatever it's called in the UK, for this-if it still exists by the time he's old. It was fun while it lasted, though, like shopping for a private jet and having the sales staff cater to a 15 year old.
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Old 04-29-2008, 03:49 AM   #9 (permalink)
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Old 04-29-2008, 09:22 PM   #10 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by byzantium View Post
What about Ashley Qualls, who turned Myspace page layouts into a corporation clearing $1 million a year? She spent $8 to buy the domain name.
Yeah, but where'd the money for a decent computer come from in the first place? You can't do graphic design without a decent setup.

I'm not saying these kids aren't entrepreneurial. They certainly are.
I'm saying that we glorify them and say "oh you can do anything if you have the drive for it", but cleanly ignore that they're not providing their own start up capital for the physical assets or resources required.

Once again, I'm not ripping on the kids. It's great that they're making money like this.
I'm just saying we need to remember they didn't actually do it on their own.
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Old 04-30-2008, 12:42 AM   #11 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by HarveyJ View Post
Yeah, but where'd the money for a decent computer come from in the first place? You can't do graphic design without a decent setup.

I'm not saying these kids aren't entrepreneurial. They certainly are.
I'm saying that we glorify them and say "oh you can do anything if you have the drive for it", but cleanly ignore that they're not providing their own start up capital for the physical assets or resources required.

Once again, I'm not ripping on the kids. It's great that they're making money like this.
I'm just saying we need to remember they didn't actually do it on their own.

I think you're over analyzing this way too much, and very negative also. Any point that you say, I can think of a way around it. Also, you have no idea what they actually did to achieve where they are at now, and yet you are saying their parents had money to back them. Makes me laugh reading your posts.
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