Chapter 3

After Piper and Charlie left, I went up to my room and flopped on my bed with a notebook.

Six hundred dollars. How hard could it be?

I started making a list of ideas:

Walk dogs: $5 per walk

Wash cars: $10 per car

Sell lemonade: $1 per cup

I did some quick math. If I walked dogs every day for three months, that was… I counted on my fingers… ninety days times five dollars… four hundred and fifty dollars. Still not enough.

What if I walked TWO dogs at the same time? That would be nine hundred dollars! But wait, did I know anyone with two dogs who needed walking every single day?

I chewed on my pencil and stared at the ceiling.

Maybe I could start a cat-walking business. Did people walk cats? I’d never seen anyone walking a cat, but that didn’t mean it was impossible. I could be the first professional cat-walker in town. I’d charge twenty dollars per cat because it would be so unique.

I wrote it down: Cat-walking: $20

Or what about renting out stuff? My little brother Jake had a million toys he never played with anymore. I could rent them to other families for parties. Like, five dollars to rent his old superhero costumes for a weekend. Ten dollars for his remote control car.

Toy rental: $5

I was getting excited now. The ideas were flowing.

What about selling things that didn’t cost anything to make? Like… invisible hats! I could tell people they were the latest fashion trend. Very exclusive. Fifty dollars each.

Invisible hats: $50

I giggled. A silly idea, but I wrote it down anyway.

I was on a roll now. I could teach other kids how to ride bikes. Or start a homework-doing service for lazy kids. Or sell my autograph to people who wanted to say they knew me before I became famous. I could even rent myself out as a professional little sister to families who only had boys.

Bike lessons: $15

Homework help: $25

Autographs: $5

Professional little sister: $10/hour

Wait, what about a business where I’d follow people around and remind them of things they forgot? Like a human sticky note!

Human reminder service: $20

I looked at my list. It was getting pretty long. And pretty weird.

The problem was, most of these ideas required me to actually know people who wanted these services. And I wasn’t sure anyone in my neighborhood needed their cats walked or wanted to buy invisible hats.

I flopped back on my pillow and groaned.

What I really needed was an idea that lots of people would want. Something that didn’t require special skills or equipment I didn’t have. Something that actually made sense.

I stared at my ridiculous list again. Cat-walking? Invisible hats? What was I thinking?

I crumpled up the paper and threw it across the room.

“I need an actual idea.”


Discover more from StartupKid

Subscribe to be notified when the next book is released.

You can unsubscribe anytime.

Discover more from StartupKid

Subscribe to be notified when the next book is released.

Continue reading