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Girl Scout cookies teach business skills

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Today, Girl Scouts of the USA reports about 65 percent of registered Girl Scouts choose to participate annually in the cookie program, which expanded this year to include snack bars.

The cookie program also has gone high-tech. Some troops are using a mobile app to accept credit card payments during booth sales, Wright said, and a cookie finder app is available for download.

Parental involvement in the Girl Scout Cookie Program is common, but girls are encouraged to sell the treats themselves or, if their parents sell the cookies at work, to at least deliver the cookies or write a thank you note to the customers, Wright said.

“The girl has some part of the process,” Wright said. “We don’t want it to be just a parent thing.”

By selling cookies, Wright said, the girls are learning skills such as goal setting, decision making, money management, people skills and business ethics.

“[They’re] learning how to be little businesswomen,” Wright said.

Members of Cadette Troop 4298 said while cuteness can be an advantage when selling cookies, going door to door also means encountering scary dogs, having doors slammed in your face and interacting with strangers – something that can be difficult when you’re young and shy.

“I was so shy,” Julianna Corrigan-Friedrichs said. “From this, I’ve gotten out of my shell more.”

“It does a lot for your confidence,” Lizzy Kramer added.

Now that they’re seventh-graders, it’s harder to find the time to sell door-to-door, the cadettes said. They still work booth sales and come up with creative ways to attract attention. Last year, members wore a cookie costume, tap danced and played instruments.

“I think it worked,” Lizzy said.

This year, the troop is brainstorming places where their cookie booth might be welcomed because the demand for booths at groceries and other retailers is so high, co-leader Christine Gerke said.

Each troop receives a portion of the Girl Scout Cookie Program proceeds as discretionary funds for troop activities. Troop 4298 has used cookie money to fund a trip to Willis Tower and pay for membership fees and other activities, members said, noting they want to go to a water park this year. Meanwhile, Troop 4106 decided half of this year’s cookie money will go back to the troop while the other half will go toward a community service project, Dee said.


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