The Money Conversation Your Family Needs
Most teenagers leave school without understanding basic budgeting, saving, or investing. We're changing that—one family at a time.
Why This Matters Now
Emily was seventeen when she got her first credit card. Nobody had explained interest rates, minimum payments, or compound debt. Within six months, she owed £847 and had no idea how it happened.
Marcus saved £2,300 from his part-time job. He kept it in a current account earning nothing while inflation quietly eroded its value by 6.8% that year. He didn't know there were better options.
These aren't isolated stories. They're patterns we see repeatedly—intelligent young people making avoidable mistakes because nobody taught them differently.
Ready to Give Your Child a Financial Advantage?
Explore Our ProgramsWhat We Actually Teach
Forget boring lectures about compound interest. We start with real situations your child faces today: managing allowance, understanding why some friends always seem to have money while others don't, making smart choices about that first job.
From there, we build practical skills they'll use immediately. How to track spending without feeling restricted. How to set goals that actually motivate action. How to spot financial traps before stepping into them.
For older teens, we go deeper: investing fundamentals, understanding credit, entrepreneurial thinking, preparing for financial independence. Everything connects to their actual lives, not abstract examples from textbooks.
Real Result: "My daughter actually asked if we could sit down and review her spending together. That's never happened before." — Parent feedback from our March programme
How We Work With Families
We offer several ways to engage, depending on where your child is in their financial learning journey.
One-on-One Teen Coaching
Personalised sessions tailored to your teenager's specific situation and goals. We cover everything from first bank accounts to investment basics, at their pace.
Parent & Child Money Workshop
Learn together in this interactive half-day experience. Parents gain frameworks for ongoing conversations, while children practice real financial decisions in guided scenarios.
Youth Investment Fundamentals
For 15-18 year olds ready to understand how money grows. We demystify stocks, funds, risk, and long-term thinking through practical examples and simulations.
Allowance Management Programme
Perfect for 10-14 year olds. We teach budgeting, saving strategies, and goal-setting through a structured four-week challenge with weekly check-ins.
Teen Entrepreneurship Mentoring
For young people with business ideas. We help them think through costs, pricing, marketing basics, and financial planning—turning ideas into viable projects.
School Financial Literacy Programme
We bring age-appropriate financial education directly to schools. Engaging assemblies and classroom sessions covering essential money skills for groups of 20-120 students.
Why Our Approach Works
We don't lecture. We facilitate discovery.
Young people learn best when they're solving problems that matter to them. So we create scenarios based on their real world: gaming economics, social media spending patterns, the actual cost of lifestyle choices they're considering.
They make decisions, see consequences, adjust their thinking. Parents are often surprised how engaged their children become when money concepts connect to their actual lives rather than hypothetical futures.
We also adapt to different learning styles. Some teenagers respond to data and analysis. Others need stories and emotional connection. Many benefit from hands-on simulations. We read the room and adjust accordingly.
What Parents Notice
"Three weeks after the workshop, my son came to me with a spreadsheet. He'd tracked his spending and identified where his money was going. I'd been trying to get him to do this for months." — Sarah M., London
"My daughter started her first job at 16 and immediately began allocating portions to different goals—something we discussed in the coaching sessions. She's already saved £450 towards driving lessons." — David P., Manchester
"The investment course gave my teenager a framework he actually uses. He regularly asks questions about the news and economy now, connecting it back to concepts from the programme." — Michelle T., Birmingham
The Cost of Waiting
Financial mistakes made in the late teens and early twenties can take years to correct. A poorly chosen credit card, a loan that wasn't necessary, a missed opportunity to start saving early—these compound over time.
But so do good habits.
A teenager who understands budgeting avoids debt traps. One who grasps compound growth starts investing earlier. One who's learned to evaluate financial decisions makes better choices about education, careers, and major purchases.
The difference between starting this education at 14 versus 24 is measured in decades of financial outcomes.
Give Them Skills That Last
Choose the programme that fits your family's needs and get started this month.
Select Your Programme BelowBook Your Programme
Select the service that's right for your family and we'll be in touch within 24 hours to arrange your first session.
Common Questions
What age range do you work with?
Our programmes span ages 10-18, with content tailored to developmental stages. Younger children (10-13) focus on foundational concepts and habit formation. Teenagers (14-18) engage with more complex topics including investing and financial planning.
Do you need to be good at maths?
Not at all. We teach the maths as we go, and it's simpler than most people expect. If your child can add, subtract, and work with percentages at a basic level, they have everything they need.
Is this online or in person?
We offer both. Individual coaching and school programmes can be delivered in person (London and surrounding areas) or via video call. Workshops are typically in person, while the investment course is delivered online.
What if my child isn't interested in money topics?
That's completely normal and exactly why we don't start with traditional finance content. We begin with situations they care about—whether that's games, hobbies, social activities, or future goals—and connect money concepts to those interests. Most children surprise themselves with how engaged they become.