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What Is an Income Statement? A Simple Guide for Kid Entrepreneurs
Your 12-year-old just made $50 selling slime at school. They're thrilled. They're already planning how to spend it. But here's the question you should be asking: "Did you actually make $50?" If your kid spent $35 on glitter, glue, and containers, they didn't make $50. They made $15. And if they don't understand that difference, they're not running a business—they're running an expensive hobby. This is where an income statement comes in. And no, it's not too advanced for kids
mintroco
Dec 2, 20254 min read


The Franchise Model: Copy, Paste, Profit
Here's a weird thought: You can walk into a McDonald's in Tokyo, Toronto, or Tulsa, and get basically the exact same Big Mac. Same taste, same wrapper, same slightly-too-cold-but-somehow-still-soggy fries. That's not an accident. That's franchising, baby. The franchise model is basically business cloning. One company figures out a winning formula, then sells the right to copy that formula to other people who want to run their own business without starting from scratch. It's l
mintroco
Nov 13, 20255 min read


The Razor Blade Model: Cheap Hardware, Expensive Refills
Ever wonder why printers are suspiciously cheap but ink cartridges cost approximately one kidney? Or why your Keurig machine was affordable but those little K-cups add up to basically brewing liquid gold? Congratulations, you've been razor-bladed. This business model has a simple, slightly evil genius behind it: Sell you the main thing cheap (or even at a loss), then make all the real money on the refills, accessories, or consumables you'll need to keep buying forever. It's
mintroco
Nov 13, 20255 min read


The Bundling Model: Buy More, Save More (Supposedly)
Let us paint you a picture: You walk into a fast food place just wanting a burger. Just the burger. But then the cashier hits you with, "Would you like to make that a combo? It's only a dollar more and you get fries and a drink." And suddenly you're walking out with 1,200 calories instead of 500 because your brain did the math and decided it was a "deal." Congratulations, you just got bundled. What's Bundling, Anyway? Bundling is when companies package multiple products or se
mintroco
Nov 13, 20254 min read


The Fee-for-Service Model: Getting Paid for Your Skills & Time
Think about the last time you hired a lawyer, visited a doctor, or brought in a consultant to fix a business problem. Chances are, you paid them using one of the oldest and most straightforward business models in existence: fee-for-service. Unlike subscriptions where customers pay monthly whether they use the service or not, or product sales where you buy something once and it's yours forever, the fee-for-service model is elegantly simple: you provide a specific service, and
mintroco
Nov 12, 202513 min read


The Subscription Business Model: Why Retailers Love Your $9.99/Month
You know that feeling when you glance at your credit card statement and realize you're paying for five, maybe ten different subscriptions? Netflix, Spotify, that meal kit you swore you'd cancel, the razor blades that arrive like clockwork. It feels like a lot, right? Here's what most consumers don't realize: that $9.99 monthly charge you barely notice is worth far more to the company receiving it than you might imagine. In fact, subscription customers can be worth 1.5 to 5 t
mintroco
Nov 10, 20257 min read


The Manufacturer Model: Making What You Sell
Day 3 of Business Models Week! Yesterday we talked about retailers who BUY and resell. Today? We're talking about the companies that MAKE the stuff in the first place. What's a Manufacturer? A manufacturer is a company that creates products from scratch and sells them—either directly to customers or through retailers. They source raw materials, use machinery and labor to build something, and then get it into people's hands. Think: Ford (cars), LEGO (toys), Nike (shoes), Appl
mintroco
Nov 9, 20255 min read


The Retailer Model: The Last Stop Between Factory and You
Day 2 of Business Models Week! Today we're talking about the business model your kid interacts with most: retail. Spoiler alert—it's not as simple as "buy stuff, sell stuff." What's a Retailer, Actually? A retailer is the last stop on a product's journey from factory to your shopping cart. They don't make the products. They buy them from manufacturers or distributors, mark up the price, and sell them to you and me. Think: Target, Walmart, Best Buy, your local bookstore, Gam
mintroco
Nov 9, 20254 min read


Business Models 101: Your Company's Master Plan for Making Money
Welcome to Business Models Week(s)! Grab your coffee (or wine, no judgment) and let's talk about something your kid probably should understand before they're 25 and signing their life away to a gym membership. Okay, So What Even IS a Business Model? Here's the thing: Every company—from Apple to your neighborhood pizza place—has a master plan for how they make money. That plan? That's their business model. It's not just what they sell. It's how they sell it, who they sell i
mintroco
Nov 8, 20253 min read


The 10-Second Rule: Why Your Kid's Great Ideas Need Great Hooks
You know that feeling when your child bursts into the room, eyes wide with excitement, ready to tell you about their "amazing idea"? And then... they start explaining. And explaining. And somehow, five minutes in, you're not entirely sure what the idea actually is ? Here's the thing: your kid's idea might be brilliant. But if they can't communicate it clearly—and quickly—it won't get the traction it deserves. Not with you, not with teachers, not with friends, and definitely n
mintroco
Nov 5, 20253 min read


Business Pitch Template - FREE DOWNLOAD
Does your child have a great idea but they're not sure how to explain it? That’s where a business pitch comes in! A pitch is just a short, clear way to show people what your idea is, why it matters, and how it works. To help you get started, we created a free business pitch template for kids . It guides you through the four key parts of every pitch: Hook – Grab attention fast. Problem – Show the challenge your idea solves. Solution – Explain how your idea fixes the proble
mintroco
Nov 3, 20251 min read


The 10-Second Spark: How to Hook Your Audience Before They Zone Out
You have ten seconds. That's it. Ten seconds before your audience decides whether you're worth listening to or just another person wasting their time. It doesn't matter how brilliant your business model is. It doesn't matter how much research you've done or how big your market opportunity is. If you lose them in the first ten seconds, you've lost them forever. Welcome to Day 3 of Pitch Perfect Week, where we're mastering the art of the opening hook—the 10-second spark that ig
mintroco
Oct 24, 20258 min read


Confidence is Contagious: How to Pitch Like You've Already Won
You walk into the room. Your slides are perfect. Your numbers are solid. Your story is compelling. But the moment you open your mouth, doubt creeps into your voice. Your hands shake slightly. You apologize for taking their time. And just like that, you've lost them. Here's the truth nobody tells young entrepreneurs: the quality of your idea matters less than the confidence with which you present it. People don't invest in perfect businesses—they invest in founders who make th
mintroco
Oct 24, 20257 min read


Storytelling Superpowers: Why Every Great Pitch Starts With a Story
You've got 60 seconds to convince someone your business idea matters. Do you start with statistics? Market size? Revenue projections? Wrong. You start with a story. The most successful entrepreneurs—from Steve Jobs to Sara Blakely—don't win investors, customers, or partners with data alone. They win with stories that make people feel something. Stories that make their idea unforgettable. Welcome to Day 1 of Pitch Perfect Week, where we're unlocking your storytelling superpow
mintroco
Oct 24, 20256 min read


What One Sale Actually Puts in Your Kid's Pocket
You just made a $100 sale. Congratulations! Time to celebrate, right? Maybe take the family out to dinner, or finally buy those new shoes your kid has been asking for? Not so fast. That $100 isn't really $100. And understanding what it actually becomes—what really makes it into your pocket, into your family's future—is one of the most important financial lessons any business owner can learn. Let's break down what one sale actually means for your bottom line and your family's
mintroco
Oct 24, 20254 min read


The Hidden Cost of Every Sale (And Why It Matters)
Every sale rings up as revenue in your books, but behind that satisfying number lies a story most businesses don't tell themselves: the real cost of making that sale happen. These hidden expenses quietly erode profit margins, derail growth projections, and explain why some companies with impressive sales figures still struggle to stay afloat. Understanding the true cost of every sale isn't just accounting—it's the difference between building a sustainable business and running
mintroco
Oct 24, 20254 min read


Why One Loyal Customer Is Worth More Than Ten One-Time Buyers
In the race to grow revenue, businesses often focus on attracting new customers—but what if the real goldmine is sitting right in your existing customer base? The truth is, one loyal customer can deliver more value to your business than ten one-time buyers. Here's why customer loyalty isn't just good business—it's essential for sustainable growth. The Economics of Loyalty: Numbers Don't Lie According to Harvard Business Review, acquiring a new customer costs 5-25x more than r
mintroco
Oct 24, 20253 min read


Is Your Kid's Business Worth Their Time? Let's Do the Math
Your kid spent all Saturday working on their business. They made $15. They're thrilled. But here's the question nobody's asking: How many hours did that take? If they worked for 2 hours, that's $7.50 per hour—not bad for a kid. But if they worked for 6 hours? That's $2.50 per hour. Suddenly that $15 doesn't look so impressive. This is the hourly rate reality check. And it's one of the most important numbers a young entrepreneur can learn to calculate. Because here's the truth
mintroco
Oct 23, 202510 min read


The One Number That Shows If Your Kid's Business Idea Is Actually Smart
Your kid comes to you with a business idea. They're excited. They've done some planning. They even know how much they'll charge. But here's the question nobody's asking: Is this actually a smart use of their money? Not "Will they make money?"—that's easy to figure out. The harder, more important question is: "Will they make enough money to justify what they're spending?" That's what ROI tells you. Return on Investment. And it's possibly the most powerful number your kid will
mintroco
Oct 23, 20259 min read


Showtime! How to Share Your Ideas with Confidence
Your kid has a brilliant idea. Maybe it's a business concept. Maybe it's a solution to a problem they noticed at school. Maybe it's just something they think would be cool and want to share with the world. But here's where most kids get stuck: they have the idea, but they don't know how to share it. Or worse, they're too nervous to even try. They worry they'll sound dumb. That people will laugh. That they'll mess up their words or forget what they wanted to say. So they keep
mintroco
Oct 23, 202510 min read
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