These 10 kids will probably put your lazy childhood to shame. From founding their own companies to becoming the youngest executive producer of all time, keep scrolling to find a little inspiration to follow your own dreams, whether you're 15 or 55.
Ryan, 7, of the Ryan ToysReview channel on YouTube, made $11 million in a single year.
Joelle Joanie "JoJo" Siwa has turned her name, and face, into a brand.
Wesley Hitt/Getty Images for Nickelodeon
Moziah Bridges launched a bow tie business when he was just 9 years old.
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Bridges, of Mo's Bows , is turning 17 this year, and still expanding his bow tie brand. Bridges is officially the President and Creative Director of his business, which sells bow ties, neckties, pocket squares, and other apparel.
Makenna Kelly, a 13-year-old YouTube superstar who goes by "Life With MaK," makes around $1,000 a day.
She also makes money through viewer requests : she was once paid $50 for a 10-minute video in which she chewed honeycombs.
At 14, Marsai Martin is the youngest executive producer ever.
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The teenager has big plans for her future. "This is the first movie I have in front of the camera and behind the camera," she told ET before the movie had been shot. "And it's not gonna be the last."
Ryan Kelly founded Rys Ruffery (formerly known as Ryans Barkery), a high-quality line of dog treats, when he was 10.
Randy Brooke/Getty Images for Tinkerbelle the Dog
Kelly, along with his mom, appeared on "Shark Tank" to pitch their idea for a higher quality dog treat . They secured funding from Barbara Corcoran, and are currently selling their treats online.
Mikaila Ulmer, 13, has her own line of organic lemonade sold at Whole Foods.
Ulmer started making lemonade to sell at her lemonade stand in Texas when she was only four years old. That product has since evolved into one containing honey and flaxseed, and into an entire company called Me & the Bees Lemonade.
Cory Nieves is living every kids dream by owning his own cookie business.
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And so, Mr. Cory's Cookies were born. Today, the 15-year-old's company sells four kinds of all-natural cookies, and has worked with brands like, Barney's, Bloomingdales, J. Crew, Macy's, Pottery Barn, Ralph Lauren, Whole Foods, and Williams-Sonoma, to name a few, per his website .
High-schooler Abby Kircher has an entire line of nut butters.
In 2017 alone, Abby's Better Nut Butter saw 400% growth thanks to its distribution in grocery stores around the nation, according to Forbes.
Now, she's a 19-year-old CEO with a brand that offers five distinct nut butters : date pecan, coconut cashew, coffee almond, strawberry cashew, and honey almond. The business has expanded to merch and snack bars, and made an estimated $80,000 in 2017.
Shubham Banerjee wasnt even a teenager when he invented a low-cost Braille printer that could "disrupt" the industry.
Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP Images
Arvind Sodhani, who heads the firm that will back Banerjee, said of the printer "It's designed to reduce the cost of braille printers from $2,000 to $400; that's disruption."
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