Balance It Right with Avery's Insight!
Balance It Right with Avery’s Insight
Financial Literacy for Kids (Ages 4–8)
A kid-friendly introduction to assets, liabilities, and balance sheets
By Tiffany Thomas
If your child doesn’t understand what they own or owe, they’re already falling behind.
Most adults don’t know how to read a balance sheet.
That confusion starts in childhood, not adulthood.
Balance It Right with Avery’s Insight teaches children how to understand ownership, responsibility, and value early, using a story they’ll remember.
What this story is about
Milo trades his scooter for a hover ball.
Fun? Yes.
Smart? Not quite.
Now he’s broke, disappointed, and walking everywhere.
Enter Avery curious, calm, and always thinking ahead.
Using his Money Boss Journal, Avery shows Milo how to look at what he owns, what he owes, and what’s truly his, by introducing one powerful tool: the balance sheet.
No pressure.
No heavy math.
Just smart thinking made simple.
What your child will learn (in a way that sticks)
✔ What an asset is and why it matters
✔ What a liability is and how it holds you back
✔ What equity really means (what’s truly yours)
✔ A simple, kid-friendly way to balance it all
These are the same concepts businesses use, explained at a child’s level.
Why parents choose this book
• Builds financial awareness early
• Helps kids think before trading or spending
• Encourages responsibility and confidence
• Makes a “grown-up” concept fun and relatable
• Supports meaningful money conversations at home
This book doesn’t overwhelm.
It empowers.
A truth worth knowing
Children who don’t understand ownership and debt grow up reacting to money.
Children who do:
• Make smarter decisions
• Feel confident managing resources
• Understand value, not just price
• Think ahead instead of catching up
Give your child a head start that lasts
Balance It Right with Avery’s Insight helps children think clearly about money, choices, and responsibility, long before it becomes stressful.
👉 Get the book today and help your child start thinking like a leader, because if they can balance a bike, they can balance a sheet.