Sprout
Exploring the rise of kid-built businesses and the future world that they are building
Lemonade Lab announced the launch of its integrated entrepreneurship platform, defining a new category of youth led commerce. Through secure creator infrastructure designed specifically for minors, Lemonade Lab gives kids
Kids do not just have ideas. They have energy, creativity, curiosity, and the kind of boldness most adults lose over time. The problem is not imagination. The problem is
Starting your first shop can feel like a huge idea when you are a kid. You might picture a complicated website, a long list of things to set up,
When children build businesses online, safety and privacy cannot be side features. They need to be part of the infrastructure itself. That is the difference at Lemonade Lab. We
Teachers are being asked to do something difficult right now. They need to prepare students for a fast changing world, hold attention in the classroom, and deliver learning that
Everyone keeps asking the same question about the future. Will AI take jobs? It’s the wrong question. The real question is this: What still earns a premium when thinking
One of the quiet assumptions underneath every conversation about AI, automation, and UBI is that humans will somehow figure out purpose once work is no longer central. That assumption
The conversation around AI and Universal Basic Income usually starts with compassion and ends with economics. What it almost never addresses is the generational divide it creates. Because in
Want to make real money babysitting but actually look legit to parents? Start in Lemonade Lab. It is like building your own mini business website plus a booking system
Because your child’s creativity should always feel safe In a world where kids are creating, learning, and connecting online more than ever, the question every parent faces is simple:
In the latest season of The Neighborhood, there is a quiet moment that hits harder than any punchline. Dave Johnson, the well-meaning and always positive dad next door, loses
It was early. The house was still quiet. My oldest was at the kitchen table, building something out of cardboard and tape. It made no practical sense, but it
When Jennifer was nine, she knew exactly what she wanted to be — a lawyer. It started when she watched a courtroom scene on TV. The lawyer stood tall,
When I think back to the advice most of us were given as kids, it always sounded the same. Do well in school. Go to university. Get a good
It’s a hard truth, but here it is: most of the careers we’re pushing our kids toward today won’t be around when they grow up. Not because they’ll vanish
Imagine this: it’s Saturday morning, your homework is done (okay, almost done), and instead of just watching cartoons, you launch a business. Not someday, not when you’re older —













