By day, Louie Snider and Levi Reil are second-grade classmates in Amanda Jonker's classroom at Lee Elementary School in the Thornapple Kellogg district.
Outside the classroom, the 8-year-olds are budding entrepreneurs.
Louie makes and sells woven bracelets, while Levi makes cookies with his mother, Jillian, and sells them. He also sells eggs that come from his grandfather's farm.
They are among about 20 area kids who will advertise their products and services today at the Sesquicentennial Pavilion in Middleville as the village's downtown development authority hosts its first Youth Business Expo. The event runs from 1-4 p.m.
The idea for the event grew out of the Middleville Market that takes place Friday afternoons at the pavilion, DDA Director Nichole Lyke said.
“The idea was a result of several young entrepreneurs requesting to participate at the Middleville Market,” Lyke said. “There was interest from our young vendors and their parents to host a market just for the young vendors.”
The expo has two main goals: showcasing young entrepreneurs in the community and giving them an opportunity to sell their products and services, and to give them a sense of place and building pride in their community, Lyke said.
The daughter of Alex and Loni Snider, Louie Snider started her business in July as a way to find something to do and earn some money.
“I just started making bracelets,” she said.
She started by weaving bracelets out of embroidery thread, selling them for $1 apiece. She has since added beads to some of her bracelets.
Louie has reinvested some of the money she's made from selling the bracelets back into her business, but she's also had a little fun with spending her earnings. She's opened a bank account and purchased a remote-control bus and a swing, her parents said.
Louie's favorite subject in school is gym class, and she wants to become a zookeeper when she grows up. However, she also has an eye toward having her own business, as well.
Levi Reil, meanwhile, is just getting started with his business. He and his mother make cookies that have been dubbed “Momster” cookies.
“It's marshmallows, mini-chocolate chips, M&Ms and Reese's Pieces,” Levi said.
Levi is selling his goods, $1.50 for two cookies, and he plans to donate 50 cents from every sale toward Kids' Food Basket, a food bank in Grand Rapids that serves children and families struggling with hunger.
Levi also will be selling eggs from his grandfather's farm at the expo.
“Sometimes they're white, and sometimes they're brown,” he said.
Jillian Reil said giving kids an opportunity to start their own businesses has multiple benefits.
“One thing is to build their confidence, so they're out there talking to other people that they don't know,” she said. “Also, it teaches them about money, making change, how to save money like Lou's been doing … it also gets them involved in their local community, too, they'll see people they know.”
Levi's favorite subject in school is math. He is not sure what he wants to do for a career, yet.
Marian Gielincki, a freshman at Thornapple Kellogg High School, started her business, Earrings for Spain, in March.
“It was the second week of quarantine, and I was cleaning out my closet and found my old clay kit,” Gielincki said. “I started making little figures until someone in my family pointed out I could make earrings out of them. After I had made a few dozen pairs I realized I could sell them.”
Gielincki, who is 14, is saving up the earnings from her business to go on a class trip to Spain in 2022, she said.
Another TKHS student, Ben Hanson, is launching a business called Dirty Shovel Landscaping with his friend, Ryaan Podbevsek.
“My business is your basic landscaping business in terms of planting plants, ensuing garden beds, spreading dirt/mulch,” said Hanson, a 16-year-old junior.
The boys plan to do their landscaping work on weekends, and Hanson said they plan to use their earnings for their hobbies of dirt biking and car builds.
Lyke said the Youth Business Expo has the potential of growing into an annual event.
“The Youth Expo reinforces the DDA's plans to grow, support, and build pride in our downtown,” she said. “This is a unique event in our community that highlights the next generation of business owners and entrepreneurs in Middleville, and we are looking forward to growing this event in the future to provide additional tools and resources for our participants.”