17-year-old entrepreneurs find financial, moral support for My Social Gain

June 7, 2018  |  Elyssa Bezner

My Social Gain

Entrepreneurship brought Jaden Evans and Benicio Baeza together, they said.

The two juniors at Truman High School in Independence, Missouri, started the social media marketing company My Social Gain in early 2018 after realizing the power of social media for companies.

Though the company is only a few months old, My Social Gain already has already inked its first client and is building case studies for more customers. In their first few months of operation, the duo landed Salon Ji, a hair salon in Lenexa, Kansas, helping to deliver promotions for haircuts and massages, as well as managing the salon’s social media.  

The co-founders’ early successes caught the eye of administrators and the athletics department at Truman, Baeza said. My Social Gain now helps manage the school’s social media, he added.

“It’s so cool,” Baeza said of communicating en masse to his school’s students and parents.

The teens were interested in entrepreneurship at young ages — Baeza selling used shoes in middle school. Evans couldn’t imagine any other future than being a founder, he said.

“I had no idea even what an entrepreneur was until I stumbled across a lot of people online and that’s when I decided that, since I already did it on accident, I might as well continue and scale,” Baeza added. The founders were inspired to launch a social media firm after research on its potential to help small businesses. After discussing a plan, the two sought help from their families to launch an LLC, which has been financially supported by their parents.

“We’re lucky to have parents who are willing to invest in us,” Baeza said “We’re very reliant on them.”

The company already has received offers from outside investors, they said, but Baeza and Evans saw no need since operational costs have been low so far.

The most challenging aspect of their work is balancing work and school, the co-founders agreed. Both students are active in extracurricular activities and found most clients are unwilling to schedule meetings later in the day to accommodate Evans’ baseball practices.

The pair credit My Social Gain’s early success to the many supporters at their school and around the Kansas City for their success and look forward to scaling throughout the year.

“There’s so many supportive people around here,” Evans said. “Whenever they hear a young person wants to become an entrepreneur, they immediately want to help them.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2018 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        PBS docuseries puts KC creator at the intersection food and ‘transformational travel’

        By Tommy Felts | December 28, 2023

        Food travel is about more than getting the most exotic or expensive social media-worthy photo of a meal to share for superficial clout, said Jim Kane, emphasizing the transformation power of connection when someone truly allows themselves to use food as a lens for understanding culture. “Before the pandemic, there were a lot of checklists…

        A misstep ended their ‘Squid Game’ run together; the business of their friendship keeps moving

        By Tommy Felts | December 28, 2023

        While not everything on reality TV is 100 percent … well, real, the bond between “Squid Game: The Challenge” competitors Stephen Lomas and Chase Higgins is anything but scripted, the Kansas City duo said. Longtime friends and business partners — the two previously co-founded Let’s Get Moving, a social media savvy moving company that gained…

        How Kauffman Scholars’ 20-year run reflected the value of representation for Black, Brown students

        By Tommy Felts | December 27, 2023

        Editor’s note: The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation is a financial supporter of Startland News. The legacy of Kauffman Scholars — an initiative of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation that sunset earlier in 2023 after 20 years — can be seen in the decades of students impacted and the passion fueling the effort from within, according to a…

        This hands-on video production workshop at DeLaSalle will put careers in focus

        By Tommy Felts | December 27, 2023

        A new partnership between a Kansas City video production company and a charter school serving teens along the Troost corridor is expected to give DeLaSalle High School students a stronger entry point into an emerging industry, said Jasmine Nastasi. “It’s a way to help with recruiting, to streamline the process, and to have an official…