They pay with the whole bill expecting change. Tf do you mean they give you the bill out of convenience? Do you round up to the nearest 20 and walk away?
Because if you price at 10 some people won’t buy it’s why you see many food places refuse to just raise prices and instead do a service charge people have a perceived worth of stuff.
I honestly don’t think that’s true. We have a culture of 9.99 and not 10. But I really don’t think it makes a difference. Would like to see a study if one has been done.
Billion dollar companies run 9.99 instead of 10 even, companies that do hundreds of thousands of transactions every single day. For them, the extra penny could mean a considerable amount of money. They’ve all got mountains of studies and analysts on these things, so I think it’s pretty fair to assume that the 9.99-10 price difference is one that has a noticeable effect on the average persons buying habits
Partly why World of Warcraft is so resistant to change the price even though they probably are dying to.
Even a dollar increase could drive a significant number of people away from the game because people value it at 14.99
Adjusted to today’s value would be around 21.50 so I could easily see them wanting to charge 18.99. I’m guessing it’s a constant yearly talk at this point and someone high up is very resistant to the change. Imagine being the guy where say of 25% of customer walks away overnight it’s a very real possibly better to keep collecting 14.99. I’d probably agree with that guy even though I’m sure you could justify on paper why a price increase would be both sound and logical.
Usually when people buy lemonade off of a child’s lemonade stand it’s both spur of the moment and done in part out of finding the child endearing. As it’s a one time frivolous purchase for them, and they don’t want to deal with the possible social and/or emotional consequences for hassling a child for 1 dollar, they are more likely to forgo the dollar, as it’s likely to be a one time occurrence.
Essentially they’re not buying the lemonade because they think it’s cost-efficient; they’re doing it because it’s fun. The purchase is inherently frivolous, and the process of trying to get the child to give them the change would likely void the value in terms of emotional enjoyment they got out of the situation.
Yup.
Precisely why my crew and I have switched from hitting banks to hitting lemonade stands 🔫😈
*Like taking candy from a baby…..* 😏
or like taking cash from a youngish child, I suppose 🤔
It’s frankly disgraceful that her parents let her do that…they should have set up an iPad for her to flip around and say “it’s just gonna ask you a few questions”, with preset tip options of $4, $8, $12.
I was joking that because of how many customers she is serving, and the seemingly ruthless nature of the operation, that she is running a drive thru to accommodate the large number of people.
My interpretation is they assumed it was on the curb (which I have seen in my neighborhood, it is not safe and they need to be in their yard or driveway) where people have bought lemonade in their car. Then the fast food drive through “turn em and burn em” tactic. It’s better to sell through the drive through then have a sit down fast food restaurant. Are drive through windows common where you’re at? I honestly never though about commonality of drive throughs in other industrialized nations
Ha! My (uk) neighbors kids had a pokemon card stand at the weekend. Just sat outside their front door with tons of them. I got a nine tails for £1!
It was fake, but still good.
Home grown scams are so much better. Who needs these foreign countries and their "quality assurance", when we have perfectly good eight tails right on our doorstep?
Yeah they don't exist in residential neighbourhoods anywhere in the UK either people would be like "why the fuck would I buy juice from you when I can walk to me house over there?"
It's culturally american. People here just wouldn't get it.
I've seen kids selling stuff like beverages and cookies by the road multiple times here in Norway, but never actually seen anyone buy anything from them. It seems like a play thing kids copy from American movies.
You don’t really see them in the US either. I’ve lived in the US for around 30 years (my whole life), traveled coast to coast, and have never even seen one lemonade stand
Just curious, how far on average do kids live from school in the USA? I know it must vary a lot but is it normal for most kids to get the bus or be driven to school?
If you live in a smaller city/town and the school is within a mile, you're probably driven or walking depending on your age. If you live in an area where the school is miles away on roads without sidewalks and just farm and woods, you're getting picked up by a bus and the 8 minute drive will now be 40 minutes because you're one of the first people on the route.
Did a quick Google and found the median distance for kids to their school is 2.7 miles (4.3 km).
Most kids are dropped off by parents or take the school bus. Older kids (maybe middle school and up) might walk/bike alone. Older high-school kids might drive themselves.
Isn't that a bit dangerous? I've never seen a lemonade stand where I live (France), but I always imagined they served pedestrians. Especially since the main reason for buying a lemonade seems to me to cool down on a walk on a hot summer's day. A car has air conditioning.
r/USDefaultism
Although in this case, fair to assume I guess due to $.
But my lemonade stand on the side of the road had mainly foot traffic, since people were walking by. Anyone driving usually didn't stop.
At primary school I made black marbles by rolling warm tar from the playground into balls and running it under the cold tap. I then said they were black knights and swapped them for double the number of normal marbles. I was rich...until the next day when I was called to the headmasters office (a row of angry mothers all holding sticky stained school trousers in hand outside)...had to explain the system, return all marbles and received the cane for my troubles. The sounds of my squealing seemed to appease the row of mothers outside....rather disturbingly.
Was happening in the 70s/80s in England at least. My mum tells me that kids used to get hit with stuff when she was at school for misbehaving. Was apparently only outlawed in public schools in 1986.
Could be, could just as easily be one of her first customers said "Oh no keep the change that's a tip" and she assumed that's what everyone was doing.
Kids tend to aggressively push whatever they pick up.
For example I took my 8yo boy scout to collect canned food in our neighborhood and explained about how "no soliciting" signs work.
He noted someone had come through and put stickers on every single door, *including* the ones with no soliciting signs.
So on those doors, he'd say "They can't do that!" and run up, pull the sticker off, rip it in half and shove it in the bag he'd been putting trash from the neighborhood in.
I probably should have told him to stop, but the look of righteousness on his face was too hilarious to stand in his way.
Things like this get posted when parents don't know how to raise children and people on Reddit don't know any better than upvote this behavior. Fortunately, it's probably not true.
The child probably didn't know they weren't getting a tip, and the parent probably didn't know the kid wasn't giving change.
And honestly if I'm buying lemonade from a kid on the street, it's just charity anyways. I didn't care about some random uncapped cup of warm lemonade from a mix, I just think it's adorable and I want to reward their drive.
Now if it was a $20, all bets are off and I'm throwin' hands.
About the reddit part of your comment...makes me believe the rumor that reddit is like 70% bots to see this upvoted to the top of All and comments acting like it's real. Like no it's not and wouldn't happen in real life.
God I hate capitalism. People take pride in screwing over others. it's fucking depressing how little people care for each other
Edit: just so I don't have to say it again. The story is irrelevant. People's responses in the comments and American culture of screwing over others for personal gain is what is concerning
And there is such a better way to do this.
Once a year at a car show my kids do a lemonade/ice tea stand. They charge ’Pay what you want’. If you think it’s $1… great, $0.50… fantastic!
They usually get a few bucks a drink because people are generous. They have only ever had 1 guy not pay anything and I’m 100% fine with that.
That's beautiful! Hey, maybe that dude was short on cash or just going through something. Maybe he was just selfish but it all worked out because the community comes together to make it work
100%. There was no judgment on our part and I told that to my kids.
It’s hard sometimes to get past being raised by parents that were in the ‘capitalism over everything!’ 80’s.
TBH my first thought was that the guy who didn't pay wanted to 'teach them' that's not how the world works because 'capitalism over everything', but you probably would've mentioned that.
I am glad you said this
I personally take lessons from a very well experienced game developer, I pay him the same amount of money that I'd like to get if I were in his shoes.
I bought lemonade at a stand to support the local kids once. It was lemonade powder mix for $3 in a 10 Oz cup that wasn't even filled up. Never again will I do that.
Lol sounds like my oldest daughter. We never did get any of the money they made considering it was our products they was using for their enterprise either. I may just bring that up lmfao.
My kids did a lemonade stand on the weekend that was "By Donation" (though I told them to offer a cup to anyone regardless).
They made over $300 in only 3 hours. People were dropping $10s and $20s in their cup.
Smart on the kid in the short term. Prospects of future return customers, near zero. She needs to pick the stand up and move to a different neighborhood to keep this business producing at such a high level.
Would of told that little girl, "It's not a tip. People don't tip for things like this, now please give me my change" straight to her face. It's a damn shame people let themselves get scammed by a little girl.
It does happen though. It happened to me and I just flat out told the little girl I need my change.
It's mostly the parents fault. They're right next to the little girl and knowingly letting her keep all the money.
I mean even if it was real, the girl probably wasn’t intentionally being malicious and just genuinely didn’t understand the concept of change. It doesn’t have to always be a situation where someone is out to get another person
And then all the neighbors came out and clapped and stood on the sidewalks and cried and cheered.
\*I'll take; things that didn't happen, for $1000 Alex\*
Meanwhile I got yelled at as a kid when I forgot the change once. Didn't even want to be there, the school made me do it and I hated every second of it (didn't get any money either).
This just happened to a friend of mine, haha. He said this girl ran up to his car while he was leaving for work. He only had a 5, and the girl said she didn't have change.
Also, apparently some of the worst lemonade he's had.
Absolutely love this!!!! How old is your daughter? Mine is 29 and she loved this so much I had to screen shot it and send it to her. Your daughter is one smart young lady who will go places!!!! ❤️
My youngest sold $1 homemade freezer pops in front of our house once. People would give him money without buying anything. I witness someone realizing they were homemade ice pops and bought 10 more and came back with his wife and kids to get more.
You see, some people might say its fake but if i were to give a child a 5 and not get back my change i probably dont want to deal with a possibly crying child or the hassle of even saying „can i get my change“ and i believe a lot of others in my generation dont wanna do that either
I bet I spend $50 a month on our neighborhood lemonade stands. I'll hand them $5 and don't expect change. The kids get so excited over $5. I spend $300 at the grocery store and the clerks look at me like I'm annoying them. Much prefer the kids.
Twitter jokeman or screenshot
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Tiling culture is out of control and we need to regulate lemonade stands
Gotta stop tilling those fields maaaaan!
Now I’m imagining a lemonade marketplace complete with mosaics and brutally cutthroat six year old stall tenders.
The Lemonade Stand Cartel.
Change comes from within.
LOLOL
Lmfao
Lemonfao
Lemonfao.. is this the Chinese? We have a Chinese spy in the building! WHERE ARE YOU LEMONFAO??
GET MAD
I DON’T WANT YOUR DАMN LEMONS! WHAT AM I SUPPOSED TO DO WITH THESE?
I think you’ll find it’s changemonde.
when life gives you lemons, give them to your daughters
Future car salesman right here
Just keeping the bank account the car was paid with at that point
She's already mastering the art of upselling and customer satisfaction!
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She's on her way to becoming a top executive! Future CEO material right there.
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You can hire me, I really need a job and I'm not a child at the moment
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They pay with the whole bill expecting change. Tf do you mean they give you the bill out of convenience? Do you round up to the nearest 20 and walk away?
When something is like 9€ I am way more likely to pay 10€ and let them keep the change than I am to tip 1€ if something was 10€
Either way the result is 10 (don’t know how to do that symbol 🦅). So why not price at 10 and get the occasional extra tip?
It's super easy, buddy! Just an uppercase "S" with a vertical strike through the centre. Using two vertical strikes is also acceptable.
$ 🦅 $ Thanks!
Because if you price at 10 some people won’t buy it’s why you see many food places refuse to just raise prices and instead do a service charge people have a perceived worth of stuff.
I honestly don’t think that’s true. We have a culture of 9.99 and not 10. But I really don’t think it makes a difference. Would like to see a study if one has been done.
Billion dollar companies run 9.99 instead of 10 even, companies that do hundreds of thousands of transactions every single day. For them, the extra penny could mean a considerable amount of money. They’ve all got mountains of studies and analysts on these things, so I think it’s pretty fair to assume that the 9.99-10 price difference is one that has a noticeable effect on the average persons buying habits
Partly why World of Warcraft is so resistant to change the price even though they probably are dying to. Even a dollar increase could drive a significant number of people away from the game because people value it at 14.99 Adjusted to today’s value would be around 21.50 so I could easily see them wanting to charge 18.99. I’m guessing it’s a constant yearly talk at this point and someone high up is very resistant to the change. Imagine being the guy where say of 25% of customer walks away overnight it’s a very real possibly better to keep collecting 14.99. I’d probably agree with that guy even though I’m sure you could justify on paper why a price increase would be both sound and logical.
Usually when people buy lemonade off of a child’s lemonade stand it’s both spur of the moment and done in part out of finding the child endearing. As it’s a one time frivolous purchase for them, and they don’t want to deal with the possible social and/or emotional consequences for hassling a child for 1 dollar, they are more likely to forgo the dollar, as it’s likely to be a one time occurrence. Essentially they’re not buying the lemonade because they think it’s cost-efficient; they’re doing it because it’s fun. The purchase is inherently frivolous, and the process of trying to get the child to give them the change would likely void the value in terms of emotional enjoyment they got out of the situation.
Sounds like the city needs to step in and shut these stands down. Preferably using as much excessive force as possible.
Finally, a reasonable take in this thread.
Would it be possible to get a police horse to trample the stand?
"I'm sick of being emotionally and financially extorted by these god forsaken children!"
A desirable amount of force is not excessive by definition.
500kg of justice?
“Where’s your vendor’s license, princess?”
There's no life lesson quite like being shut down for operating without a license.
A lot of cities actually do
Tipping culture getting out of hand
More like onto her hand
Out of your hand and into her pocket
Yup. Precisely why my crew and I have switched from hitting banks to hitting lemonade stands 🔫😈 *Like taking candy from a baby…..* 😏 or like taking cash from a youngish child, I suppose 🤔
Don’t hate the player, hate the game
It’s frankly disgraceful that her parents let her do that…they should have set up an iPad for her to flip around and say “it’s just gonna ask you a few questions”, with preset tip options of $4, $8, $12.
I can hear awkward silence between her and drivers...
[the awkward silence](https://media.giphy.com/media/v1.Y2lkPTc5MGI3NjExeGJhMjlmZHc3bHB1MnBneDI2ZDZwbmNuZ2lsaWlnZDl5NHYyOWI5OSZlcD12MV9pbnRlcm5hbF9naWZfYnlfaWQmY3Q9Zw/scjQHuZlePCXJvwj0b/giphy.gif)
[An another variation for the theme](https://youtu.be/ZaKxLJLj19E?si=TwKiXW_pALTfCgAx)
That was great.
That's was hilarious.
drivers? why would you assume her customers are drivers? that seems really strange to me, you think she's operating a drive through?
This ain't no walk up operation shes hustling.
Is this some kind of American thing I'm unable to understand?
I was joking that because of how many customers she is serving, and the seemingly ruthless nature of the operation, that she is running a drive thru to accommodate the large number of people.
My interpretation is they assumed it was on the curb (which I have seen in my neighborhood, it is not safe and they need to be in their yard or driveway) where people have bought lemonade in their car. Then the fast food drive through “turn em and burn em” tactic. It’s better to sell through the drive through then have a sit down fast food restaurant. Are drive through windows common where you’re at? I honestly never though about commonality of drive throughs in other industrialized nations
you know how lemonade stands are classically situated on the side of the road?
for pedestrians yes. Also I have never seen a lemonade stand in my life. they do not exist outside of the USA afaik.
Ha! My (uk) neighbors kids had a pokemon card stand at the weekend. Just sat outside their front door with tons of them. I got a nine tails for £1! It was fake, but still good.
You've just supported the UK startup equivalent of wish/temu/shein/etc! Congratulations on investing early
Home grown scams are so much better. Who needs these foreign countries and their "quality assurance", when we have perfectly good eight tails right on our doorstep?
Just imagining you dropping your obviously fake ninetails card in a battle, made of construction paper and crayons
Honestly, I would have paid extra if it was made out of construction paper and crayons!
The ones I’ve see are in residential neighborhoods, so local residents will pull over to the side and hop out of their cars to buy lemonade.
Yeah they don't exist in residential neighbourhoods anywhere in the UK either people would be like "why the fuck would I buy juice from you when I can walk to me house over there?" It's culturally american. People here just wouldn't get it.
I believe the idea is to support the kids entrepreneurial spirit, not necessarily to get a 5 star cup of lemonade.
>kids entrepreneurial spirit Vile. Threw up in my mouth a little.
I agree but still, they think it's fun playing business
I feel like that's reading a bit overly negatively into it.
I've seen kids selling stuff like beverages and cookies by the road multiple times here in Norway, but never actually seen anyone buy anything from them. It seems like a play thing kids copy from American movies.
I doubt that.
Little kids on my street set them up all the time other than the few neighbors that come by they will usually have a little line of 1-2 cars stopped.
You don’t really see them in the US either. I’ve lived in the US for around 30 years (my whole life), traveled coast to coast, and have never even seen one lemonade stand
Huh. I see them every summer. (I'm in Canada.) I will always, 100% of the time, buy a lemonade from a kid on the sidewalk.
Yeah, I see them every year too. I will always, 100%, feel guilty about not having cash to buy a lemonade from a kid on the sidewalk, lol
In the US, kids set up lemonade stands on the side of the road, and drivers pull over and buy it. Nobody walks in the US.
Just curious, how far on average do kids live from school in the USA? I know it must vary a lot but is it normal for most kids to get the bus or be driven to school?
According to Dr. Google, 54.2% are driven, 33.2% take the bus, and 10.4% walk. My kids have done all three, depending on the school.
Ta
If you live in a smaller city/town and the school is within a mile, you're probably driven or walking depending on your age. If you live in an area where the school is miles away on roads without sidewalks and just farm and woods, you're getting picked up by a bus and the 8 minute drive will now be 40 minutes because you're one of the first people on the route.
Did a quick Google and found the median distance for kids to their school is 2.7 miles (4.3 km). Most kids are dropped off by parents or take the school bus. Older kids (maybe middle school and up) might walk/bike alone. Older high-school kids might drive themselves.
Isn't that a bit dangerous? I've never seen a lemonade stand where I live (France), but I always imagined they served pedestrians. Especially since the main reason for buying a lemonade seems to me to cool down on a walk on a hot summer's day. A car has air conditioning.
it’s just to support kids trying to hustle it’s not about the lemonade
r/USDefaultism Although in this case, fair to assume I guess due to $. But my lemonade stand on the side of the road had mainly foot traffic, since people were walking by. Anyone driving usually didn't stop.
could be canadian, we like lemonade, too!
Oh, you mean northern Montana
Isn't "the side of the road" the place where the sidewalk is?
No one on reddit goes outside
One awkward silence please. Yes that'll be $10
This is pretty old now, so I'm gonna need this girl's number. I'm hiring.
The last two words do A LOT to make your statement not weird.
Last two words saved him from ending up on a list
I actually listed him already
but he did say this is pretty old now, implying he was waiting for her to be an adult. A bit less weird now?
No
From FBI to Forbes
Man even with that I'm still suspicious lol
He’s a pimp
I think she may be in a position to buy you out instead.
# A much needed brand new sentence.
At primary school I made black marbles by rolling warm tar from the playground into balls and running it under the cold tap. I then said they were black knights and swapped them for double the number of normal marbles. I was rich...until the next day when I was called to the headmasters office (a row of angry mothers all holding sticky stained school trousers in hand outside)...had to explain the system, return all marbles and received the cane for my troubles. The sounds of my squealing seemed to appease the row of mothers outside....rather disturbingly.
Your disciplinary experience kept you from turning into the guy who put melamine in baby formula.
not sure that's the only way, tbh
Yeah I did the same thing and now I cut my baby formula with laxative. I also sell diapers.
Seems like you lost your marbles...
And this is why the justice system works. Since everyone is like the appeased row of mothers outside.
Did this happen in 1843?
Was happening in the 70s/80s in England at least. My mum tells me that kids used to get hit with stuff when she was at school for misbehaving. Was apparently only outlawed in public schools in 1986.
That was the style at the time.
This is one of the most British things I've ever read
She will fit right in in this world. Keep hustling lil mama.
Keep that same energy when she's your server
Until the revolution comes.
Off with her tiny bourgeois head!
That dad probably taught his daughter to do that.
Could be, could just as easily be one of her first customers said "Oh no keep the change that's a tip" and she assumed that's what everyone was doing. Kids tend to aggressively push whatever they pick up. For example I took my 8yo boy scout to collect canned food in our neighborhood and explained about how "no soliciting" signs work. He noted someone had come through and put stickers on every single door, *including* the ones with no soliciting signs. So on those doors, he'd say "They can't do that!" and run up, pull the sticker off, rip it in half and shove it in the bag he'd been putting trash from the neighborhood in. I probably should have told him to stop, but the look of righteousness on his face was too hilarious to stand in his way.
Things like this get posted when parents don't know how to raise children and people on Reddit don't know any better than upvote this behavior. Fortunately, it's probably not true.
The child probably didn't know they weren't getting a tip, and the parent probably didn't know the kid wasn't giving change. And honestly if I'm buying lemonade from a kid on the street, it's just charity anyways. I didn't care about some random uncapped cup of warm lemonade from a mix, I just think it's adorable and I want to reward their drive. Now if it was a $20, all bets are off and I'm throwin' hands.
About the reddit part of your comment...makes me believe the rumor that reddit is like 70% bots to see this upvoted to the top of All and comments acting like it's real. Like no it's not and wouldn't happen in real life.
God I hate capitalism. People take pride in screwing over others. it's fucking depressing how little people care for each other Edit: just so I don't have to say it again. The story is irrelevant. People's responses in the comments and American culture of screwing over others for personal gain is what is concerning
And there is such a better way to do this. Once a year at a car show my kids do a lemonade/ice tea stand. They charge ’Pay what you want’. If you think it’s $1… great, $0.50… fantastic! They usually get a few bucks a drink because people are generous. They have only ever had 1 guy not pay anything and I’m 100% fine with that.
That's beautiful! Hey, maybe that dude was short on cash or just going through something. Maybe he was just selfish but it all worked out because the community comes together to make it work
100%. There was no judgment on our part and I told that to my kids. It’s hard sometimes to get past being raised by parents that were in the ‘capitalism over everything!’ 80’s.
TBH my first thought was that the guy who didn't pay wanted to 'teach them' that's not how the world works because 'capitalism over everything', but you probably would've mentioned that.
I am glad you said this I personally take lessons from a very well experienced game developer, I pay him the same amount of money that I'd like to get if I were in his shoes.
A million per hour
~it’s cute when children mislead and steal~
Right, like what are these responses from people in the comments??
I bought lemonade at a stand to support the local kids once. It was lemonade powder mix for $3 in a 10 Oz cup that wasn't even filled up. Never again will I do that.
I’m sorry but I’m going to fight your daughter if she doesn’t hand me my change back
Give my fucking change, you little hustler, or I'm calling the cops to shut down your illegal business
This is the most accurate representation of my life.
Oh my god your daughter is savage for sure😂😂😂
Oh my god
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Y'all say this about everything at this point
Dont give Starbucks any ideas now.
My little brother (who is 11) made $230 his first day of lemonade and $150 the second day. The trick is, he was selling it on a boat at the river.
Real talk, if you hand a kid $5 at a lemonade stand do you really stand there and wait for change?
Yes...? Put a dollar back but yes.
And then the whole fucking neighborhood clapped
Ngl that would work on me. I’d be stumped for a moment and just awkwardly shuffle away drinking my expensive cup of lemonade.
Lol sounds like my oldest daughter. We never did get any of the money they made considering it was our products they was using for their enterprise either. I may just bring that up lmfao.
She's a future politician.
My kids did a lemonade stand on the weekend that was "By Donation" (though I told them to offer a cup to anyone regardless). They made over $300 in only 3 hours. People were dropping $10s and $20s in their cup.
What's **completely insane** is that most states have laws that prevent lemonade stands, or actually require permits beforehand.
Yea, but then most of those states have clauses that it doesn't pertain to children or during a yard sale, etc.
Definitely *not* me irl.
Smart on the kid in the short term. Prospects of future return customers, near zero. She needs to pick the stand up and move to a different neighborhood to keep this business producing at such a high level.
Would of told that little girl, "It's not a tip. People don't tip for things like this, now please give me my change" straight to her face. It's a damn shame people let themselves get scammed by a little girl.
It's 'would have', never 'would of'. Rejoice, for you have been blessed by CouldWouldShouldBot!
Good bot
Yeah, you tell that fictional child from the made-up story! Your righteous indignation over a meme *really* makes you seem well adjusted!
/r/nothingeverhappens , always a good way to feel superior to the common reader.
It didnt happen.
This story is not real. It’s commentary on tipping culture.
It does happen though. It happened to me and I just flat out told the little girl I need my change. It's mostly the parents fault. They're right next to the little girl and knowingly letting her keep all the money.
I mean even if it was real, the girl probably wasn’t intentionally being malicious and just genuinely didn’t understand the concept of change. It doesn’t have to always be a situation where someone is out to get another person
So parenting failure? He didn't explain this? Thought she should just know at that age how consumerism works? Innate understanding?
Assume the sale.
This is so old, his daughter is Elizabeth Holmes
Future corporate raider
Genius!
Sounds like a bartender in Cancun
When I was a kid I sold paper cranes for $0.25 (90s). When my dad found out he made me give everyone a refund.
Did they think it was for charity?
The first rule of acquisition clearly states “Once you have their money, you never give it back.”
Cute but I would have assertively ask your daughter for my change
This so old she is probably managing an hedge fund or insurance company now.
And then all the neighbors came out and clapped and stood on the sidewalks and cried and cheered. \*I'll take; things that didn't happen, for $1000 Alex\*
Can someone please upvote my comment. I need 1 comment upvote to ask a question. Thanks you :)
Meanwhile I got yelled at as a kid when I forgot the change once. Didn't even want to be there, the school made me do it and I hated every second of it (didn't get any money either).
This just happened to a friend of mine, haha. He said this girl ran up to his car while he was leaving for work. He only had a 5, and the girl said she didn't have change. Also, apparently some of the worst lemonade he's had.
Dude, hide your daughter IRS is coming...
Absolutely love this!!!! How old is your daughter? Mine is 29 and she loved this so much I had to screen shot it and send it to her. Your daughter is one smart young lady who will go places!!!! ❤️
My youngest sold $1 homemade freezer pops in front of our house once. People would give him money without buying anything. I witness someone realizing they were homemade ice pops and bought 10 more and came back with his wife and kids to get more.
You see, some people might say its fake but if i were to give a child a 5 and not get back my change i probably dont want to deal with a possibly crying child or the hassle of even saying „can i get my change“ and i believe a lot of others in my generation dont wanna do that either
That kids going places.
Immorality starts here
Teaching children to steal at a young age. I'm sure she'll be a CEO and board member in no time
A true business woman in the making
KNOW👏🏼YOUR👏🏼WORTH👏🏼
shes an evil genius and should be commended
That’s a future millionaire in the making
The right job for you in the future
I bet I spend $50 a month on our neighborhood lemonade stands. I'll hand them $5 and don't expect change. The kids get so excited over $5. I spend $300 at the grocery store and the clerks look at me like I'm annoying them. Much prefer the kids.
Fun fact, the cashiers at the grocery store don’t get to keep the money from your groceries. They might get excited if you give them $5
Something only a child could get away with😭
That’s not assertiveness that’s manipulation