1. Teach your teens to “protect Monday Me”
Teens make money decisions without thinking about the consequences because the future seems abstract. Today is real to youngsters. They can feel it. And on most “todays,” they want to buy something.
So here’s a lesson to share with your children: when you spend frivolously today, you’re borrowing (even stealing) from a future today — and a future version of you. If you spend on Friday out of boredom, what happens Monday when you need that money for something important? "Friday Me" will have cheated "Monday Me."
In other words, when you spend foolishly, you create problems for yourself.
Your kids will remember this novel phrase, “Monday Me,” which in turn will help them remember the message. They’ll intuitively understand that four days from now they’ll still be “Me” — and they won’t want to take money from that person.
2. Teach your teens to “dodge the ad barrage”
Growing up in the digital age, teens are exposed to 4,500 advertising messages every day. And while in many ways they may be savvy about the messages that marketers throw at them, the ads are still helping to shape their spending habits.
Educate them about how advertising works so that they can learn how to separate entertainment from the sales messages. For example, show them how celebrity interviews on TV talk shows are often ads for their upcoming concerts or movies, or how designers will often give the outfits worn in magazines and at award shows to attract publicity.