Entrepreneur Magazine recently saluted Meri Zeiff for starting a T-Shirt company that "allows kids to make a difference--while communicating positive images".
According to the story, Ms. Zeiff was frustrated over seeing the many negative messages presented on her first-grade students' T-shirts. With a bit of money from her mom, Ms. Zeiff created the verimeri T-shirt company. The new messages tested positively on her students and their parents and she went forward.
Early on Ms. Zeiff donated a portion of her profits to a program called Free Arts for Abused Children. Today, each winning designer (kids under 18 who submit a design that is voted on and wins and gets 3% of the profits from their design) chooses his or her favorite charity and another 3% of profits from the sales of a designer's shirts are donated to the child-selected organization.
Additionally, Ms. Zeiff's company runs school fundraisers where "the schools can create their own school spirit shirts, students vote for the winner, and 20% of that design's profits go back to the school."
Ms. Zeiff is indeed to be commended for her creativity in identifying an opportunity for youth to begin to learn through doing about philanthropy. These young philanthropists will be tomorrow's major donors.