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Spring, for Bounce10

Spring, for Bounce10 is a bi-monthly sharing of ideas, news, and coaching for families raising financially confident kids. Spring is a reference to resilience, a strength often enhanced in kids who develop financial fluency as they grow up.

Featured Posts

At What Age…? by Joline Godfrey, CEO, Bounce10™

Managing Children’s Money Curiosity.

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The Original Influencers: What Are Grandparents Good for Now? by Joline Godfrey, CEO, Bounce10™

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What I Learned from the Instant Camera by Joline Godfrey, CEO, Bounce10™

How to Spark Innovation in the Family

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In this podcast, we help parents meet the challenge of preparing children for the future. We do this by offering an expanded idea of wealth, embracing the family’s intellectual, social, and human capital as well as their financial capital, of F.I.S.H. assets as we think of them. Join us to explore financial education as Joline and her guests introduce ideas and strategies to empower, provoke, and support families preparing kids—from early childhood to young adulthood—for futures we can barely imagine.

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Want to have Joline as a guest on your podcast? Get in touch!

Video Library

Here’s a sampling of the videos found in our Parent Portal available to Bounce10 subscribers.
For full access, view our Annual Plans.

Are we raising happy children or cultivating resilient, financially responsible heirs who develop autonomy, mastery, and internal confidence rather than dependence on external rewards?

How can you command your financial life with greater autonomy and integrity by clarifying your core financial values so that every decision about capital, legacy, and exchange reflects who you truly are?

How can families with significant capital navigate privilege without guilt—deploying their resources with purpose, stewardship, and impact while staying aligned with their values and identity?

How do affluent families preserve generational wealth while instilling stewardship, responsibility, and grounded identity so heirs are known for their character, not just their inheritance?

Recommended Reading

In Raising Financially Fit Kids, Joline Godfrey shares knowledge gleaned from two decades of preparing children and families for financial independence and stewardship, philanthropic effectiveness, and meaningful economic lives.

3rd Edition coming soon!

Offering a bounty of practical advice, thoughtful insights, and probing questions, A Wealth of Possibilities provides commonsense approaches and profoundly meaningful solutions to many of the most vexing issues confronting wealthy families.


The Opposite of Spoiled is both a practical guidebook and a values-based philosophy. It identifies a set of traits and virtues that embody the opposite of spoiled, and shares how to embrace the topic of money to help parents raise kids who are more generous and less materialistic.


In The Big Disconnect Clinical psychologist Catherine Steiner-Adair takes an in-depth look at how the Internet and the digital revolution are profoundly changing childhood and family dynamics, and offers solutions parents can use to successfully shepherd their children through the technological wilderness.

Called “the sleeper hit of the publishing season” by The Boston Globe, Shop Class as Soulcraft is a radical (and timely) reappraisal of the merits of skilled manual labor. Using his own experience as an electrician and mechanic, Matthew B. Crawford presents a wonderfully articulated call for self-reliance and a moving reflection on how we can live concretely in an ever more abstract world.


Offering unparalleled foresight for leaders and innovators, they reveal how pervasive this trend will be. Proximity represents an entirely new way to serve customers, with critical implications for corporate strategy, investing, public policy, supply chain resilience, and sustainability. Incremental changes to existing business models won’t suffice.

Reeves looks at the structural challenges that face boys and men and offers fresh and innovative solutions that turn the page on the corrosive narrative that plagues this issue. Of Boys and Men argues that helping the other half of society does not mean giving up on the ideal of gender equality.


We’re all born Playful. But when we grow up, we learn to suppress this critical, hardwired instinct and our lives become ruled by “getting things done.” As world-famous designer Cas Holman explains, this disconnection from our playful selves is hazardous to everything from our emotional wellbeing to our ability to problem solve and innovate. The emerging science of play shows that it sparks joy, wonder, creativity, and insight at any age.

In Just Enough, top Harvard professors offer a revealing, research-based look at the true nature of professional success, helping people everywhere live more rewarding and satisfying lives. True professional and personal satisfaction seems more elusive every day, despite a proliferation of gurus and special methods that promise to make it easy. They conclude that many of the problems of success today can be traced back to unrealistic expectations and misconceptions about what success is and what constitutes it. The authors show where the happiest and most well-balanced among us are focusing their energy, and why, to help readers find more balance and satisfaction in their lives.