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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

WWYD - teen running their own tuck shop in school

504 replies

PinkPansies · 08/02/2022 16:06

We've realised recently that ds1 aged 14 has become quite flush with cash (more so than his pocket money would allow anyway!).

On questioning we've discovered that he's quite the entrepreneur and has set up his own tuck shop in school on breaks and lunches. In short, he's been stopping at the local Coop on the way to school and buying sweets and chocolates then selling them to the kids in his year for double the price. Who are more than willing to pay.

From making the odd quid here and there his 'business' has expanded rapidly in the last 3 weeks and he's got quite a following in school - and he's currently making about ten quid A DAY in profit. I can't quite believe the amounts.

He's taking specific requests from kids that get the bus to school so don't have the opportunity to visit a shop and has a price/order list to show his customers and a book with a record of his sales and profits each day 🙈

He's taking it very seriously and is incredibly organised. He's explained to his parents that his profit is limited only by how much stuff he can physically fit in his bag - so he's currently looking at smaller, higher value sweets and sounding our his customers for interest levels.

Parent A and Parent B have different opinions.

Parent A is thrilled, has congratulated their son for his driven, entrepreneurial spirit and told him to crack on...but that he needs to be aware the school will probably give him a detention if he's caught. It's a risk ds is happy to take.

Parent B is amused and a bit impressed but thinks he should stop as obviously the school would frown on this. Haven't seen any specific school rules about this but obviously the school would probably want it stopped!

WWYD?

OP posts:
Sandinmyknickers · 11/02/2022 17:01

There was a young girl in my primary school was used to charge the boys to visit her in one of the playground huts for a kiss....
(Of course this is absolutely not the same thing and I would be parent A in the OP scenario)

CelestiaNoctis · 12/02/2022 02:17

Tell him to invest in cookies like freshly baked ones. Used to love buying a big sainsburys smartie cookie from this girl in the year below 🤣🤣. She used to sell them individually when the pack itself was quite cheap and got like 5 in there.

Angelil · 12/02/2022 13:23

Is the OP even coming back?

Wandamakesporridge · 13/02/2022 12:12

Thread got on Facebook and OP has disappeared Grin
Anyway, I agree it’s entrepreneurial, but in the schools I know it’s against the rules and he would be asked to stop if found out. He wouldn’t get an exclusion for a first offence but if he carried on would get in trouble.
The school couldn’t be seen to be condoning it - firstly because the in-house caterers wouldn’t like it, secondly because there are too many risks (allergies, food safety, theft, cash getting lost etc).

I know that might seem over the top, but schools have to be so careful now. You might think it’s an over reaction but then when you get letters from parents threatening to sue every member of staff for psychological abuse if they so much as suggest a child should wear a face mask, you can kind of see why the schools get nervy, and everything they do has to have a risk assessment.

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