Young entrepreneurs often learn best through real projects, real products and real customers. Flynn’s honey business became one of those practical childhood ventures that taught far more than we expected.
This is Part 3 of Flynn’s honey business story, where the raw honey was poured, labelled, priced, sold and finally turned into real profit.

Young Entrepreneurs: Flynn’s Honey Turns to Gold
This family enterprise story shares how Flynn turned 90kg of raw honey into his first small enterprise. From filling jars and creating labels to pricing, selling and solving problems, his honey business became a real-life lesson in initiative, confidence, money, marketing and responsibility.
For young entrepreneurs, these are the lessons that often matter most. They are not just reading about business or talking about ideas. They are doing the work, making decisions, dealing with problems and seeing what happens when an idea becomes real.
A Real Business Project for Young Entrepreneurs
Flynn’s honey enterprise became one of those practical childhood projects that taught far more than we expected. It gave him the chance to handle a real product, work with others, think about presentation, understand pricing, serve customers and solve problems along the way.
If you have been following the honey story, you will know this was not the beginning. Flynn’s honey venture started with Honey Pot of Gold, where he first shared his business idea, and continued in Flynn’s Honey Investment Continued, where he harvested honey with his Grandad and made his first serious investment.
The Opportunity: 90kg of Raw Honey
When we last visited Flynn and his honey enterprise, he had just acquired 90kg of quality raw honey from his Grandad’s beehives in Geraldton. Flynn had also placed a bulk order for plastic honey pots.
He was now ready to fill them up and make his first sale.
Preparing the Honey for Pouring
His honey was held in buckets that weighed over 10kg. Getting the honey from the buckets into the 400g honey pots was not going to be easy.
Firstly, the honey was very thick, making it tedious to decant into the pots. Secondly, it required strength to hold the honey bucket while pouring.
Flynn called on his mates to help. He poured the buckets into a large pot and heated the honey to 50 degrees Celsius. This temperature was not high enough to destroy the enzymes that make raw honey so beneficial, but it was high enough to make the honey more fluid and easier to pour.
Setting Up the Production Line
The kitchen table was wiped down and set up for the honey pot production line. The team were excited about finally seeing the product in the pots. I helped pour, while Flynn and his gang filled and capped jars.
The jars were washed on the outside to ensure there was no stickiness, then labelled with Flynn’s “Howitt’s Honey” labels.
This was one of the first times Flynn could see how much work sits behind a product before it is ready for customers. It is one of the practical lessons young entrepreneurs only really understand when they have to prepare a product themselves.
Packaging and Branding the Honey
Flynn’s product looked clean, pure and professional. He understood that to get a market edge and sell his honey for a premium, his first-class product needed to be well packaged and hygienic.
Flynn carefully drew up a poster pointing out the benefits of his product. This was attached to the boxes containing the honey pots.
He was not just selling honey; he was learning about presentation, trust, product quality and brand identity. These are powerful money lessons for kids, especially when they are connected to a real product and real customers.
Selling the Honey: A Kids Business Idea in Action
Flynn researched what honey was selling for in shops and online. He worked out what he could sell his honey for and still make a decent return. To provide an incentive to customers, he offered a special price if they bought more than one pot at a time.
Marketing his honey required little effort at first. Visitors to our home took an interest in his honey, and his honey began to sell.
He gained permission from his school principal and left a box in the staffroom. He organised with a teacher friend of ours from another school to place a box in their staffroom, and he approached the local general store, where he was allowed to sell his pots of honey for a small commission.
This is where kids business ideas become more than ideas. Flynn had to think about pricing, placement, presentation, customer trust and repeat sales.
A Real Business Problem: Crystallised Honey
His honey was selling well, and it was not long before he needed to restock all his boxes. As word got out about his product, people even began placing small orders by telephone.
Flynn’s “Howitt’s Honey” business went very well, except for one problem.
Raw honey has many benefits that you would be hard pressed to find with heavily processed honey. However, a downside with raw honey is that, over time, it can candy, or begin to solidify. This occurs especially when the room temperature drops, such as during winter.
Flynn’s honey that had been waiting to be sold began to candy in the honey pots. People do not generally want to buy honey that has hardened, which is why commercial honey producers often process honey using heat to reduce crystallisation.
Luckily, this problem only happened to the last remaining pots that had been waiting for sale. He brought these home, opened them up, scraped the honey into a pot and heated it back to 50 degrees Celsius. This liquefied the honey again, and he returned it to the pots. We bought those last pots for our family.
The lesson learned was that Flynn needed to sell his raw honey product before it showed signs of candying. He also needed to inform customers about what to do if their honey began to crystallise.
That is the sort of problem-solving young entrepreneurs remember, because the lesson comes from experience rather than a worksheet.
Profit, Pride and What Flynn Learned
Flynn’s net profit from his honey enterprise was outstanding. He achieved the goal he set before he began, plus much more. He learned many lessons along the way and recognised that it was a lot of work, but satisfying work.
Flynn became an expert in his own honey business and gained enormous skills and understandings of how to run an enterprise.
This is one of the real family enterprise stories that helped shape how we think about raising entrepreneurial kids through everyday experience.
Flynn may now be ready to take his honey enterprise to another level. We hope to guide Flynn to move from being a small business owner to thinking more like an entrepreneur. How we do that will be shared in another Enterprise for Kids blog.
As a story about young entrepreneurs, Flynn’s honey enterprise shows how a simple family opportunity can become a real lesson in money, initiative, marketing and responsibility.
Flynn’s Honey Business Series
This post is Part 3 of Flynn’s honey business story. You can follow the full series here:
- Part 1: Honey Pot of Gold — Flynn’s honey business idea begins.
- Part 2: Flynn’s Honey Investment Continued — Flynn harvests honey, makes a deal and invests in his product.
- Part 3: Flynn’s Honey Turns to Gold — Flynn bottles, brands, sells and learns from the experience.
For Families Interested in Honey Enterprise
For those interested in having your own honey enterprise, or keeping a beehive for a regular supply of raw honey for family and friends, you could seek out an expert, such as Flynn or his Grandad, or do a course.
For readers interested in honey handling and food safety, the Australian Honey Bee Industry Council provides information about Australian honey and beekeeping.
Key Takeaway: Young Entrepreneurs Learn by Doing
Key takeaway: Young entrepreneurs do not need perfect conditions to begin. Flynn’s honey business started with a family opportunity, a quality product and the courage to take action. Through the process, he learned about pricing, branding, selling, customer trust, problem-solving and profit.
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