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This Florissant Girl Is Baking Up A Career, Says Kids Can Be Their Own Boss

Carolina Hidalgo | St. Louis Public Radio
Tamia Coleman-Hawkins mixes batter for her signature chocolate chip cookies.

When 12-year-old Tamia Coleman-Hawkins is not in school or participating in extracurriculars, she’s baking batches of sweet treats for her customers.

Tamia is the founder and CEO of Mia’s Treats Delight. The Florissant native bakes brownies and cupcakes. However, her customer-requested cookies were a “game-changer” for her business. So far, Tamia’s customers have ordered 10 unique flavors, and she’s open to customizing more orders. 

“That's where my chocolate chip pecan and cranberry cookie came from,” Tamia said. “Me and mom were like, 'Chocolate chip pecan cranberry — uh, OK. A little weird, but OK.'”

Credit Carolina Hidalgo | St. Louis Public Radio
Tamia Coleman-Hawkins puts her chocolate chip cookies in the oven.

She still makes fan favorites like chocolate chip and cookies 'n' creme cookies. Her base recipe incorporates classic ingredients like flour, sugar and lots of butter that leave the cookies with a glazed finish. But she is keeping her secret ingredient under lock and key.

Tamia got her baking chops from her grandmother when she was just 4, but she got an itch to start her business when she was 8.

"My mom has always been telling me to be my own boss and own my own business when I became an adult,” Tamia said.

Then in the third grade, Tamia took an economics class at her school where she learned the basics about having a business and dealing with money.

"I walked up to my mom that night and told her that I didn't want to wait until I was an adult to start my own business, and I wanted to start it then," she said.

Tamia and her mother, Tamishio Hawkins, went to the store that night and purchased ingredients for chocolate cupcakes. She sold the cupcakes the same night, her first official sale. 

Tamishio said she was eager to support her daughter. She said that growing up, things like financial literacy and the idea of being an entrepreneur were never suggested to her. 

"It was go to school, graduate, get a job, retire,” Tamishio said. “That's what I thought life was. So when she came to me, of course, I didn't want to tell her, 'No, you're too young.' Because I had always told her you can do whatever you put your mind to. So that kind of put me in the mode of, 'OK, I don't really know what I'm doing, but we're going to figure this out together.'” 

Credit Carolina Hidalgo | St. Louis Public Radio
Tamia's freshly baked chocolate chip cookies cool off before she puts them in the box.

The mother-daughter duo delivers the treats to her customers. Tamia buys all of her ingredients with the money she makes from Mia’s Treats Delight. She stashes 30% from every sale into her savings account, and she gets to choose how to use the remainder of her money.

Tamia doesn’t have an exact figure for the dough she’s bringing in. 

“But I can say it's enough to pay for a whole Paris trip with spending money,” she said. “And that's money saved up."

When Tamia isn’t running her business, she’s a leader in her community. Earlier this year, she was chosen to serve on theKids Board of Directors for the national online retailer Kidbox and even traveled to New York City for her first board meeting and a charity event. Kidbox donates new clothes to children in need for each box that purchasers keep.

“If you buy a box from Kidbox, then they will give you a list of four charities for you to pick from, and that's the charity that they will donate to,” Tamia said.

Tamia said kids should not let their age stop them from pursuing their dreams and being their own boss.

“Usually it's just, ‘These are the careers that you can do,'” she said. “ And all of them are just jobs that are controlled by other people. That's never entrepreneurship. So I say, 'You're a kid. You can do it. Don't wait if you don't want to.'”

However, being a 12-year-old boss is not easy without support from parents. That’s why her mother said it’s important to support your children and their goals.

"Help them cultivate their dreams and their aspirations,” Tamishio said. “If you notice that they have certain hobbies, see how maybe you can turn that into a business. Because if they're doing something that they love, it'll never seem like work. And you never know what it's going to turn into." 

Tamia primarily runs her business from her kitchen at home. She said her next move is to work from a commercial kitchen and eventually for Mia’s Treats Delight to have its own brick-and-mortar location.

Follow Marissanne on Twitter: @Marissanne2011

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Marissanne is the afternoon newscaster at St. Louis Public Radio.