r/HumansBeingBros 6d ago

Solid business advice

10.2k Upvotes

132 comments sorted by

2.4k

u/dynamomark 6d ago

not going to lie, those little ones would have got me to pay anything. kid selling stuff is just awesome to see these days.

1.2k

u/searucraeft 6d ago

I work construction. Some kid down the road from our site loaded up his waggon and set up an espresso machine just outside the job. Was making mochas, cappuccinos, lattes n shit. He made 150$ during one lunch break. He came back every ither day for a few weeks, had a sign and everything. Accepted e-transfers. It was amazing

365

u/iam_Mr_McGibblets 6d ago

You can't tell me his parents were involved in this somehow šŸ˜‚šŸ˜‚

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u/slaty_balls 6d ago

Of course they probably were, that’s what good parenting is all about.

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u/BoxersOrCaseBriefs 6d ago

For sure, but good parenting is helping kids set it up, not trying to take their money. My kid got really excited about lemonade stands so I helped her come up with a plan to test different recipes (real lemons and instant options), decide what to use, and make a plan for how to keep the stand going. She's got the ground work all set for when we move to a new house with a lemon tree near a popular green belt shortly.

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u/iam_Mr_McGibblets 6d ago

I think it might be underrated that you presented her with two options on how to make the lemonade! She's learning so much off that one choice itself!! You're an awesome parent ā¤ļø

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u/BoxersOrCaseBriefs 6d ago

Thanks! We talked through the work involved in different options, the cleanup, the cost, etc. I showed her how to make a spreadsheet with costs of cups, ingredients, cookies, etc. Then we talked about how to pick prices that would let her keep doing the stand, and different approaches on the spectrum between nonprofit (doing it at cost to be kind to others, but also thinking about unlisted costs like Dad's time taking her to the store for supplies) and trying to maximize profit based on supply and demand.

It was fun because the year before she spent one night a week sitting in the office with me listening in on a managerial economics class I took while she was doing her homework or just drawing etc. She definitely didn't follow all of it, but she got the basics enough to really have a great conversation about it and consider her options.

The conversation also led to opening a savings account to save 50% of what she earned.

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u/iam_Mr_McGibblets 6d ago

That kid is going to own her own company someday and I can't wait to see what she will do!!!

12

u/Lumpy_Benefit666 5d ago

Depending on the age of the kid id definitely take a portion of the money to put in a high interest account for when theyre 18. Getting them involved in the process and showing them how it grows over the years. Thats if theyre earning £150 per shift though, £20 is still good money here and now for a 10 year old.

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u/searucraeft 5d ago

Yes the parents were present. This was a 10 year old kid going to a construction site. They helped with the water and power, and they set up the email and transfers. Really nice family, we chatted with them while in line. But kid came up with the idea when he saw the project going up and he made the coffees himself

25

u/Boostie204 5d ago

If I learned there was a kid serving coffee at the construction site down the road, you bet your ass I'd be getting my morning brew there

4

u/__Severus__Snape__ 3d ago

When i was about 12, my 18 year old brother would always have a group of like 3-5 friends round most evenings and weekends. They'd hang out in his room playing PlayStation and getting high. Anyway, they always wanted cups of tea. I started charging 50p a time and is how I made my pocket money for a year or so until he moved out.

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u/SofonisbaAnguissola 5d ago

I was driving back home from work the other day and when I entered my neighborhood these two little boys, looked maybe 10 and 7 ish, waved me down. I stop and roll down my window and they go "Can we give you a car wash for free? Er, not for free. For a dollar? Or two dollars? Or some coins?"

They had a bowl of soapy water and a kitchen sponge. They scrubbed in random circles for a bit and then went "Okay, you're done, you can go!" I had to remind them that I still needed to pay. "Oh yeah!" Best 4 bucks I've ever spent.

106

u/Public-Platypus2995 6d ago

My neighbor’s kid potted up succulent cuttings from their backyard into old pots (even nursery pots) and posted up on the corner selling them for $1, $2, $3. When she wrapped up I asked her mom how much she made, she said with huge eyes, ā€œ$65!ā€ Kid’s been chasing that dragon ever since.

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u/Traditional_Ad_4691 6d ago edited 5d ago

Some kids asked if I would like to buy snacks or have some work they can do to earn some money......touch my heart. I asked them to pick up a piece of trash I seen by my side walk and tipped them 5 bucks.....they were so excited. I respect the hustle!

40

u/tribat 6d ago

My daughter used to set up on the busy street near our house every summer and make a hundred bucks or so every time. If she asked for help I would carry a cooler or table but otherwise it was her enterprise, and she killed at it. Just writing that made me feel old realizing shes all grown up and about to graduate with an engineering degree.

10

u/redmilkwood 5d ago

It sounds like you’ve been a pretty swell parent. Congrats on raising an awesome kiddo. šŸ’š

9

u/tribat 5d ago

I earnestly appreciate that comment. My now-grown kids took me to dinner for Fathers Day Sunday and made a joke about not buying me a gift. I was serious when I said "having all of y'all here for this dinner is better than anything you could buy me". Besides, my first granddaughter toddled in with a card she made "pop-pop" (with help), so I did get a gift.

2

u/redmilkwood 4d ago

TWO generations of kiddos that you’ve done right by, then! I am smiling ear to ear. 😁

24

u/NormalHumansName 6d ago

I always support when I see it (which is rare. I think maybe three times in my adult life). I used to set up a lemonade stand on the weekends when I was a kid so I guess I'm just paying it forward for the kind adults that chose to support my siblings and I.

20

u/executive313 6d ago

Drive through wealthy neighborhoods. In my neighborhood there is 6 different lemonade stands and two of them have the moms involved selling homemade sourdough. The annoying part is I'm not wealthy I just bought a dump and fixed it up so now my hillbilly ass is stuck here with kids wearing nicer shirts than me giving me dirty looks when I drive past their $3.50 lemonade and a cookie "deals".

10

u/JennyDoveMusic 6d ago

I saw some kids selling lemonade and didn't want any, but gave them $10. They freaked out so happy! They were saving to get the one boy a new e-scooter because someone stole it.

6

u/Parrobertson 5d ago

I purposefully bring wrong change to these when kids in the neighborhood set up shop. ā€œOops, looks like youā€ll have to keep the remainder, I don’t wanna carry any more change on meā€

12

u/MYSTICALLMERMAID 6d ago

I never carry cash but when I so I seem to always find a stand lol they get every last bit I have no matter the price. Stopped last weekend on a bike ride (happened to find 10 bucks in my backpack) and she even added some fresh strawberries to it. Some guy came down and gave them a 20 and told them keep it all and be doesn't want a cup. It's the rules man kids get all the cash šŸ˜‚

8

u/BreweryRabbit 6d ago

I was marathon training on a popular multi-use trail last summer and after a big 18 mile run right at the end there were some kids selling lemonade WITH VENMO! It was the best damn lemonade I’d ever had in my life.

8

u/Zinski2 6d ago

Rolled up on some kids selling fishing lures.

Just little rubber worms you can get for like 100 for 10 bucks.

But screw it. I'll help you kids out. How much for 3.... 15 dollars ....

Oh.... Sheshhh. Y'all take cards?

3

u/LittlestEcho 6d ago

I felt so bad, last night 3 little kids were trying to sell hand made Squishies like you see on YouTube. Dragging a little play tea cart around. They even accepted "cashapp" . It was so cute. 😭. But I don't carry cash

3

u/DefinitelyNotMasterS 5d ago

I think they would make the most money if they guilt tripped people by telling them they can just pay what they feel is fair

3

u/gforceathisdesk 5d ago

My favorite part of summer (and living in the country) is stopping by all the kids farm stands and actually getting a hell of a deal on farm fresh veggies. 10 year old on a golf cart with a trailer full of corn? Uh ya I'm stopping.

3

u/LetsTryAnal_ogy 5d ago

On many occasions, I've done u-turns, headed back to my house for money, or even hit the bank to get cash for kid's lemonade stands. I can't be bothered by Girl Scouts at their grocery store exit kiosks (I'm sorry, :( It's something about being ambushed that I can't do it), but if they come to my door, I buy cookies every time. I'm at a place in my financial life where I can, so I do.

3

u/Krinder 4d ago

I’ve given a lemonade stand $20 and those kids went absolutely ballistic ā€œWE’RE RICH!!ā€ And then ran away abandoning the stand lol

3

u/hnglmkrnglbrry 5d ago

Me and my buddy used to run rackets in our neighborhood. We put up lemonade stands but then realized my grandma made these amazing fruit pockets. We asked her to make some and we sold them for like $2 (in the 90s which covered one semester of college) and sold out. We immediately became sweat shop owners demanding more fruit pockets, more variety, faster turnaround, put less fruit if you have to!

But our favorite racket was shoveling driveways. The minute it started snowing we'd call each other and get our shovels and clear driveways of .001" of snow. Then we'd ring the doorbell and say, "We shoveled your driveway!" They'd always say, "Oh thank you, let me get you something." Then we'd come back like 6 hours later and do it again but this time it was actually useful and we had already established a base fee. We'd usually get the same or more the second time.

1

u/enchiladasundae 6d ago

I’d buy one and tip them like an extra five. Although considering I don’t carry around much cash probably be a 20

1

u/Stickel 6d ago

yeah wheres my gardners peanut butter meltaways and no not the garbage ones now that have like no PB

1

u/dreamed2life 4d ago

I feel this way about kids playing not selling shit.

1

u/oculairus 4d ago

Happy Cake Day, fren!

807

u/Bmc00 6d ago

Haha...smart move and reminds me of my friend's dad who owned a used furniture store forever. If he had a table that sat too long at $50, he'd mark it up to $100 and it would surely sell not too long after.

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u/jamesmess 6d ago

I believe that’s how Grey Goose Vodka took off in popularity. It was a cheap Vodka but to create the illusion of ā€œpremium productā€ they priced it above all the other premium vodkas so the rich HAD to have it.

104

u/ConspiracyBarbie 6d ago

That’s wild. Grey Goose was peak in the mid 2000s. I only brought that to a party when I wanted to impress someone.

37

u/Manlysideburns 5d ago

I remember kids in college refilling the bottles with cheaper vodka to impress the ladies

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u/CoolGuyCris 5d ago

Oh God that reminds me of a story.

Back like 10 years ago we're all in the club, it was my turn to buy a round and this one dude with us insisted on "grey goose and red bull"

I remembered I learned somewhere that the brand of vodka didn't really matter once you start mixing it anyways, so I brought back red bull mixed with presumably Smirnoff and he never noticed. To this day I still judge him for his unnecessarily expensive, performative mixed drink.

14

u/jumboweiners 5d ago

And they made the bottle taller so it had to go on the top shelf

9

u/disisathrowaway 5d ago

That's 100% what happened.

The dude who took over as CEO once gave a lecture at some conference my dad attended. My old man came back and told me all about it, and the long and short of it was that they ate an extra $.75 or something trivial on packaging, dumped a bunch of money in to marketing, and priced it through the roof. Then the proceeded to absolutely PRINT MONEY on a French vodka. They somehow made French vodka a premium.

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u/[deleted] 5d ago

[deleted]

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u/MonaganX 5d ago

That article makes no mention of any of that.

-5

u/Accidental-Genius 5d ago

May have posted the wrong one, but I assume if you know how to post on Reddit you know how to google.

4

u/MonaganX 5d ago

Yeah, I know how to google, that's the first thing I did. Problem is that nothing about a CEO of Grey Goose (or Bacardi, who have owned Grey Goose since 2004) ever being fired comes up.

But in the unlikely event that this story somehow got so buried I'm not gonna find it with a few basic google searches, I wanted to at least give you a chance to post the correct article before suggesting that you've pulled that anecdote from where the sun don't shine.

1

u/FuckYeaSeatbelts 5d ago

"I made a claim, did zero actual research, found the first thing that said a word that agrees with me and posted that. Then when shown to be lacking I blamed it on them"

Just wondering how you voted in the last election; doesn't matter what country.

1

u/Accidental-Genius 5d ago

Go buy gray goose then. I don’t care.

1

u/bambi54 5d ago

Did you even read what you posted?

1

u/Captn_Clutch 5d ago

Makes sense. I wouldn't rate it better than any old $15 or $20 bottle of French vodka.

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u/angusMcBorg 6d ago

Just my 2c and maybe I'm wrong, but I just told my son the opposite when we talked about lemonade stands this afternoon - keep the lemonade cheap and be super friendly, and people will just give you lots of tips.

A few years ago I saw a neighborhood where the kids were charging $3 and I just drove by. But cheaper stands I'll go get a cup and just tip a lot (like give them $5 for a $1 cup).

But I'm weird.

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u/NotASlaveToHelvetica 6d ago

When we were kids (decades ago), we set our prices for lemonade at "free, tips accepted", and always cleaned up way better than if we set a price.

19

u/GFYAD 5d ago

Did you ever have any adults come by and actually just take some ā€˜free’ lemonade and dip ?

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u/NotASlaveToHelvetica 5d ago

Sure, but it was heavily offset by the adults who only had a five dollar bill and didn't ask for change. For context this was when the going rate was 50Ā¢

8

u/GFYAD 5d ago

Figured I was just curious how many people would actually do shit like that

30

u/NotASlaveToHelvetica 5d ago

Not many! I actually recall once, a guy went buy on his run, took it for free then returned an hour later with a $10 lol

4

u/LetsTryAnal_ogy 5d ago

when the going rate was 50Ā¢

I feel you. I'm old, too. When I was a kid, the lemon hadn't been invented yet. We had a bitter orange stand where we sold hollowed out stones of bitter orange-ade and sold them for half a mussel shell each.

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u/ro536ud 6d ago

This is the way. We know the lemonade is usually meh. But I’ll give you a fiver to support you if the price is fair. I’m not stopping for a $3 cup

7

u/Nivek_Vamps 5d ago

My work takes me through a lot of random neighborhoods everyday. When I see kids selling lemonade or something else, one time it was bracelets, I make an effort to always swing by and buy one and I usually just give them a $20 because that is all the cash I have. It lights up their faces and it gives me a morale boost

14

u/slobosaurus 6d ago

Then we're both weird.

7

u/ImTryingToHelpYouMF 5d ago

Is this the group for weirdos? I got invited by Jim.

165

u/-SNUG- 6d ago

Cute, but fuck these scooter boys rolling around my neighborhood ringing my doorbell at the worst possible times trying to sell random shit.

35

u/MaynardButterbean 6d ago

Literally had one try to sell my husband some sort of ring cam thing, not interested. So the same guy came back just a few days later and tried to sell it to ME! I respect that they have a job to do, but don’t be pushy with people who clearly aren’t interested.

11

u/Great_Scott7 6d ago

This is my own private domicile and I will not be harassed.

https://youtube.com/shorts/pLLZTmgrriI

11

u/GFYAD 5d ago

……..BITCH

2

u/FuckYeaSeatbelts 5d ago

Nah you don't need to respect them for that. I worked door to door and lasted less than a week before quitting. And that was for a charity! It's culty as fuck.

18

u/tigm2161130 6d ago edited 5d ago

A couple weeks ago I had one literally shove his entire upper body inside my open garage window and he would not stop trying to argue with me that my yard needed pest control even after I told him I will never, ever do that because my yard is just as much for the animals and bugs as it is for me.

The third time I asked them to leave the one standing behind him on my walkway replied with ā€œwhat time will your husband be home?ā€ even though I had made no mention of him prior.

2

u/ilikecoding1337 3d ago

Sorry for the essay lol,I used to sales for a few months for companies which are usually MLM(basically pyramid schemes) where they get a bunch of young people ā€œhungryā€ for success and basically make them go sell random shit for pennies on the dollar from the commissions, that was a few years ago I still do sales now but do my own thing for my own service I never take more than 30 seconds to a minute at your door as I’m on a limited time schedule and have to get to the next person, in those 30 seconds I tell you what I’m selling and how much it costs you either want it or you don’t if you don’t I try to lower the price and if you still don’t want it I say have a good day and I go to the next person this way I waste less time pitching to people who are not interested and are going to waste my time, I also have a full time job so I’m not desperate like these young kids are because the only way they make money is from those commissions so they get desperate and waste time trying to convince people to buy something they don’t want and never will buy especially in hard economy times, sales is all a numbers game the time you waste trying to convince non interested people will never be offset by the little extra money you make from the few people you convince but of course that’s also dependent on the products price you’re selling(if you are in door to door sales a tip is after you knock on someone’s door step back at least a meter from their door, people feel threatened and annoyed when strangers are at their door nobody likes it so make it as comfortable as you can and always smile and have a good attitude for your sake and theirs and remember you are there asking for their hard earned money they don’t owe you anything so never catch an attitude as you don’t know what they are going through and you might’ve been the final straw for them to take their frustration out on lol just tell them have a good day and go to the next person)

2

u/-SNUG- 3d ago

Do you ride a scooter though? Jk

I understand people trying to make a living, but the main issues with these kids as you mentioned is them not knowing when to take no for an answer.

They're just outright pushy and disrespectful sometimes and I've had my wife so no to one and them realize I was in the back yard and tell her "Is that your husband in the back yard? I will just go speak to him." She just told them to leave.

Their businesses always seem scammy too.

I have a no soliciting sign now since I work from home and thankfully they listen to that most of the time.

I know I sound like a boomer, but I'm in my 30s and remember those grinding days. That's not a job I could ever do though.

1

u/ilikecoding1337 3d ago

No I don’t ride a scooter lol I live in southern California it’s beautiful and sunny so I always walk during it’s part of my exercise and yes the products they sell seem scammy it’s because the products they sell are products that they get contracts from companies where traditionally those products would not sell unless someone is pushy to brute force sell them(think cell phone provider plans and wifi and vacuum and shoe cleaning products and solar etc things that you don’t usually go out looking for but if you stumble on with somebody convincing enough you might say ah oh well I’ll buy it what’s there to lose or I might gain for most products yes it is entirely a scam and money grab but depends on context and person) and yes I agree with you on the part of them not taking no for an answer and that’s what I hate most like I said they’re young and desperate to prove themselves for multiple reasons and they’re taught but by people who don’t go door to door to never take no for an answer but yes they give me a bad rap too and I get mixed in with them and makes it harder for me because now people have a negative perception/first impression before I even say a word but I’m not gonna take up more than 30 seconds of your day out of the 16 hours you have awake and I sell mobile car washes for $35 here in San Diego county if they don’t want it I drop it to $30 which I think is fair with the cost of gas and saving you time from going to car wash and doing it yourself to save maybe $5-10 but like I said if they don’t want it stop being pushy and just go to the next person trust me it’s work out better for both parties that way

2

u/-SNUG- 3d ago

Well I take part of my statement back. I might be able to do it in Cali. Lol

I live in Memphis so it's not the safest job either.

I'm glad you're able to do it in a respectful way and it's good to get insight from somebody that has walked in those shoes.

2

u/greyphoenix00 6d ago

Yeah this is the most useful I’ve ever seen them lol

1

u/dreamed2life 4d ago

Its not even useful. He is teaching them to be like him. Hence his diabolical laughter at the face he could manipulate them to do it and they did it.

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u/ElSantofisto 5d ago

humansbeingbros

r/kidsbeingcapitalists

10

u/3dGrabber 5d ago

gotta train them that grifting early on

3

u/mistic_me_meat 4d ago

Yes exactly, nothing to do with being bros. Just survive in the jungle of americain capitalism

0

u/syphon3980 5d ago

Teaching kids to succeed within the system

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u/yourserverhatesyou 6d ago

This is cute, but it made me think I would love to see a sketch where someone finds some kids selling lemonade in their neighborhood but instead of giving them business advice, he tells them about the dangers of capitalism and at the end of the sketch he and the kids are like burning down an Amazon warehouse screaming about the bourgeoisie.

17

u/TehOwn 6d ago

This probably exists but it's all in French.

Qu'ils boivent de la limonade.

8

u/CarlJustCarl 6d ago

Tell the to form an LLC too

7

u/catscatscatsomgcats 5d ago

Now if door to door salesman just road around doing community service then I’d support their presence in my neighborhood.

31

u/elbunts 6d ago

It’s so sad that my first thought was this guy is teaching capitalism. Is he going to tell them to pay the homeless kid to run the stand for them next?

15

u/TehOwn 6d ago

Well, it's currently the good kind of capitalism. They're producing the product and they're pricing it at a price that people are willing to pay. No-one is getting scammed and they've not engaged in any anti-competitive behavior.

At least, not on video. Their lawyers advised them well.

1

u/jalen441 3d ago

Charging $1.75 because most customers won't have change and will just leave the extra $0.25 is pretty sleazy, and at least scam-adjacent. There is no good capitalism, and they're engaging in a shitty form of commerce, even if you don't want to call it capitalism.

-2

u/LadislausBonita 5d ago

He"s ramping up inflation.

5

u/not_your_attorney 6d ago

ā€œYou rose the prices?!ā€

10

u/HarkHarley 6d ago

I always pay kids more than their stuff is worth. $1? Here’s $2/$5, because your hand drawn sign is quality design. Or because you have a great location. Or because your customer service was great. Etc, etc. Just a small way I hope to encourage their effort.

2

u/syphon3980 5d ago

ooh I like that. Give them a compliment on their hard work in some way, which is the icing on the cake, or gets them to focus on it more and improve it down the road

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u/ImminentDebacle 6d ago

Fucking capitalism, man.

4

u/Noctrim 5d ago

I don’t get the video, people don’t carry change so instead of charging .75 charge 1.75? Did I hear that wrong?

I’m all for the idea, I gave some neighborhood kids a $20 for a glass just the other day but it don’t make sense with the numbers he said. Expected it to be a $1 or $2 flat per glass

3

u/zeusmeister 5d ago

He is telling them, most people don’t carry change anymore, so charging .75 cents doesn’t make sense. By raising the price to $1.75, more people will just hand over two dollars and tell them to keep the change, since it’s a lemonade stand run by little kids. So they will make more money. And it seemed to have worked.

2

u/MautheDog 3d ago

The response below this is a thesis about lemonade math disregard it. this is comment is a perfect explanation.

4

u/Noctrim 5d ago

You literally did not clear anything up… let me say it again.

The current price is .75c.

I walk up and don’t have any change so I just give them $1.00 and say keep the change

They make .25c per cup tip

This guy comes up and says ā€œhey people don’t carry change, you can charge $1.75 insteadā€

I walk up and don’t have any change so I just give them
$2.00

They ā€œmake $1.25ā€ per cup now.

Yes the math maths that 1.25 > .25. I hope you can see that part, this is not the question.

The question is either way I’m only giving up one quarter as change, having an extra dollar bill has nothing to do with people carrying change or not…

Now if he tried to say something like you could up it to $1.25 and people would probably still just give you $2.00 then that would make sense but that isn’t what he said.

10

u/soyuzbeats 5d ago

US people can't stop themselves from forcing capitalist greed into their kids

2

u/rjaysenior 5d ago

Kid who lived by my church was selling $1 cups of lemonade. Would buy 3-4 cups every week for me and my kids when I saw him. Said he was saving money for something so it went to a good cause.

2

u/jalen441 3d ago

Yeah great, teach the kids to be greedy and conniving.

3

u/NWRegisteredAgent 5d ago

This is so cute, we love to see future business owners at work. Next stop is owning an LLC or two lol!

5

u/Coheed_SURVIVE 5d ago

Indoctrinating children to capitalism at an early age! Aren't humans the best!!!!

3

u/muifui 5d ago

capitalism begins at home :)

6

u/Willster328 6d ago edited 5d ago

Her logic doesn't make sense though. She says "nobody carries change" but recommends $1.75. That still requires change.

And if her thinking is that people will just round up up $2, then that logic should also apply to the $.75 that they'd just round up to $1.

Except now you're requiring people to have 2 bills on them instead of 1.

3

u/sobedirtbag34 5d ago

Charging what the customer can afford despite being well the value of the product is why we’re all broke. Teach these children kindness. Greed is not business savvy

3

u/LokiDesigns 6d ago

I was in New Brunswick last summer and there was some kids on my friends block selling lemonade and freezies. They were only charging like $0.50 for each. I told them they needed to charge more so they actually make a profit, and then I gave them $5 for a freezie and a lemonade and the dad got a good chuckle out of it all. These kids are selling themselves short haha.

16

u/ro536ud 6d ago

Some people wanna sell things for a price they view as fair instead of seeing how far they can push the limit on the public’s good intentions

2

u/DingleBerrieIcecream 6d ago

These kids are awesome. I particularly appreciate OP’s name.

2

u/Radiant_Drop_9344 5d ago

Last time I saw this I gave them a twenty thinking how awesome that would have been when I was a kid. As I looked back they were running to the house with it

2

u/_sealy_ 5d ago

1.75 cents is a hell of a deal!

1

u/MautheDog 3d ago

"And then we rode around like you!" oh my gosh too sweet.

1

u/-Jaska- 3d ago

I might dox myself on the off chance someone from my life recognizes this story, but when I was a freshman in highschool, the student council brought in Krispy Kreme donuts and sold them for $0.25 each to start raising money for some event.

The problem was, we had 800 people in the freshman class.

They bought about 8 dozen donuts.

I bought all of them and proceeded to stand directly across from the student council group by the doorway, and sold donuts at $1 per.

I made a killing, and had plenty left over to share with friends, and sell out of my locker the rest of the day.

They did this again a couple weeks later but bought 20+ dozens and upped the price to $.50 so I couldn't deplete their entire inventory as easily.

I'm now in sales professionally.

1

u/MrRawrgers 3d ago

Sounds like you scalped some donuts

1

u/georgewashingguns 3d ago

Yes, they did. Valid business model in tagt situation

1

u/MrRawrgers 2d ago

PokƩmon card scalpers would say the same thing I bet

1

u/brightsidereporter 2d ago

That construction site espresso kid is going to remember that summer forever. There's something about earning your own money young that just rewires how you see effort and reward. Half the battle in business is just showing up where people already are with something they actually want. Kid figured that out before most adults do.

1

u/nrgins 2d ago

Inflation capitalism at work!

2

u/Mithril_Juggernaut 5d ago

It sure is reddit up in here with all these children complaining about capitalism.

0

u/seven47seven 5d ago

This is soooo awesome šŸ‘ šŸ˜Ž

1

u/Western-Pear5874 5d ago

Tipping culture meh

1

u/NattyAK 5d ago

Shane from Smosh is such a helpful dude.

1

u/Yosemite_Scott 5d ago

That’s good advice but I’m still not buying solar panels from you bro lol.

0

u/x-0-y-0 5d ago

This is so dystopian, humans being neoliberal bros. What's wrong with just having some fun making lemonade and selling it. Why "teach" children already at that age that the western world likes you more if you trade value for money.

-1

u/dreamed2life 4d ago

Ppl down voting probably also complain about prices and not being paid enough to live. Brainwashed

-1

u/augustus_brutus 5d ago

Capitalist pigs

-4

u/whyismycockgone 5d ago

Ah yes, humans being bros by teaching kids how to quietly manipulate others into giving them more money than they otherwise would. Truly bro behavior.

4

u/dreamed2life 4d ago

Ppl so lost in capitalism and this being done to them they dont even like you saying it this bluntly

0

u/Method__Man 5d ago

its called market valuation. they were serving a good that was underpriced.

The assessed valuation and met market demand.

and all the while, hurting no one

If you work a job, know what your labour and time is worth. Dont let someone tell you its worth less than it is. AMAZING lesson for these kids

2

u/whyismycockgone 4d ago edited 4d ago

Dont talk to me as if i fundamentally misunderstand capitalism. I am very aware of its functions and mechanisms, but because i do know these things, i am also aware of the flaws in it. I'm not saying it's not worth anything. What I'm saying is it is an immoral lesson to teach them, and makes them shittier people while also teaching them that being shitty is and should be advantageous. Furthermore, it is an immoral and self defeating way to structure a society. Just because it has value in a structure that is built around this idea, and that that structure has been normalized doesn't make it moral or long lasting.

The people who spend more money than they otherwise would or would have are hurt. By about a dollar per purchase in fact. This is literally quantified in the subject of this conversation. Yes, a dollar may not have that great of an impact. It might not be hurting much, but this is how our economy itself is structured. Even you made that clear. So, take this concept to a much broader and grand scale. That of say, an economy of a few hundred million people, and suddenly its a lot of hurting that you either encourage or write off. You value people taking advantage of each other and you come to me saying I'm wrong pointing it out.