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App links kids’ chores, allowance to investing in stocks

What if we could help instill a feeling of confidence, or even a semblance of confidence, by teaching our kids how to present themselves as confident even when they may feel a little bit nervous?(Thinkstock)(Getty Images/iStockphoto/shironosov)

WASHINGTON 鈥 Your children probably do chores to earn their allowance and now, there is a new app for that.

In the BusyKid app, parents can assign chores and kids can check them off when done. (Courtesy BusyKid)

Launched some five months ago, is like your child’s first job that has direct deposit. It is an app where parents can assign chores and children can check them off when done.

鈥淧arents give their kids chores. They do the chores. And then, our system sends the parent a text message on a Thursday and says 鈥楬ey, tomorrow is Friday. It鈥檚 payday. Do you want to pay Johnny his $14 that he earned?鈥欌 founder Gregg Murset told 草莓传媒.

鈥淚f the parent replies 鈥榶es,鈥 then we move the money directly from a linked bank account of the parent and it automatically allocates that money into three different buckets: save, share and spend,鈥 he said.

Parents can set up their own list of chores for their children or use preset, age-appropriate chores that BusyKid lists.

BusyKid, which costs $12 a year for an unlimited number of family members but comes with a 30-day free trial, makes one of the 鈥渟ave鈥 options the ability for the child to buy stocks through a custodial brokerage account.

BusyKid partnered with a company called , which allows the children to buy into stocks on a fractional-share basis, meaning they don鈥檛 have to buy entire shares of any company to start investing.

鈥淚f a kid wants to invest $25 and invest it in Netflix, they can do that on this platform. It can teach kids at an early age about stock investing and equities and how all that stuff works,鈥 Murset said.

At an early age, BusyKid starts enforcing two things Murset thinks are important. 鈥淥ne is get your work ethic on. Get off the couch and quit messing around with Instagram and earn some money. And then we made it really easy to invest that money in real stock,鈥 he said.

Tools that introduce children to what real money is may be important at an early age because they are growing up in an age where they don鈥檛 see money. The day of the piggy bank is gone. Children are growing up in a world where money is invisible. It鈥檚 on a card or a tap of a phone, but they never see it.

鈥淚t鈥檚 super important to start teaching them in that context, so they can start making good decisions for the rest of their life,鈥 Murset said.

Here鈥檚 a video demonstrating how BusyKid works:

Jeff Clabaugh

Jeff Clabaugh has spent 20 years covering the Washington region's economy and financial markets for 草莓传媒 as part of a partnership with the Washington Business Journal, and officially joined the 草莓传媒 newsroom staff in January 2016.

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