10 people who were able to earn his first million by the age of 22.


1. Fraser Doherty.
At age 14, he started making jams in the kitchen of his parents in Edinburgh. The business started with that guy entertained neighbors and relatives. A short time later he began to receive orders. Already by the age of 16, he quit school to make jam full-time. In 2009 SuperJam income reached $ 1, 2 million. Now Doherty is the only full-time employee of the company, the cost of which, on the basis of revenue is $ 1.2 million.

2. Jason Brian.
In the summer of 2008, after finishing school, Jason, Brian began working in the marketing department company selling cars in Florida. He knew that the future of marketing - the internet. "I found that half the cost can double the result, buying online advertising and optimizing the search results," he recalls. Three years later, when he was 21, Brian has spent "less than $ 10,000" from their savings to create a site that would help consumers to search the car. Autocricket.com began to earn money by selling customer information to traders and producers machines. Six months after launching the site attracted the attention of investors who invested in business $ 250 000. Revenues in 2009 amounted to $ 1, 2 million in 2010 - already $ 6 million.

3. Ian Purkayastha.
Three years ago, at age 15, Jan Purkayastha began importing truffles and sell them at a price of up to $ 12 000 per kg in restaurants and stores of natural products. Purkayastha grew up in Houston, where a child was collecting mushrooms in the woods next to the house parents. Import truffles - hard work, it is controlled by four different federal agencies, and, in addition, you need all the time to try to overtake the time: truffles have a shelf life of only seven days. Purkayastha opens first US nursery truffles in Arkansas, and his company Sales approached $ 1 million.

4. Joshua Dzyabyak
In 2005, 18-year-old Joshua Dzyabyak sold his first hosting company Mediacatch a little more than $ 1 million. He bought a "Mercedes" and a flat-screen TV, and the remaining amount invested in new ventures. Including Showclix - Web site that allows cultural centers, colleges, concert halls and other venues to sell tickets online, by phone and at the box office. In 2009, it attracted about $ 1 million investment, and his company was valued at $ 2, 75 million. Charges tickets (Showclix takes from each sale 7-15%) earned him $ 9 million over the past year.

5. Adam Hildreth
In 1999, at age 14, an Englishman Adam Hildreth launched a new social network. Companies like Coca-Cola used the network participants in the focus groups, developing marketing strategies aimed at young people. Hildreth served as managing director of the agency Dubit Limited four years. When Hildreth was 19 years, BBC called it one of the 20 richest Adolescents UK with an estimated fortune of £ 2 million, which is about $ 3, 7 million.

6. Michael Furdyk
In 1996, Michael Furdyk, who was then 16 years old, started MyDesktop.com, a site about computers in the basement of his parents' home in a suburb of Toronto. On his site was full of tips that Furdyk sought out in chat rooms on the network. There he met his classmate Michael Heymenom from Australia. Hayman soon moved to Toronto to help build the business. Tightening the belt, comrades found (by barter) servers and office. Soon MyDesktop.com already brought $ 60 000 per month advertising revenue from customers such as Microsoft. In 1999 Furdyk, Hayman and the third partner sold the company's website Internet.com «more than $ 1 million," told us Furdyk in 2010.

7. Daniel Gomez Iñiguez
Twenty years Daniel Gomez Iñiguez - owner of the company Solben, developing and manufacturing presses pomace oils from plants to make diesel fuel. Iñiguez product development started back in school. The first sale brought $ 150 000: half immediately to build a press, a half after the delivery. Mexican company Monterrey has invested in the business Iñiguez "a little more than $ 1 million" for the first year of its existence. Today the company is constantly working 15 employees. Iñiguez went to college.

8. Catherine Cook
In 2005, 15-year-old Catherine Cook and her 17-year-old brother, Dave, leafed through the pages of his school's annual album, and they had the idea to create an online version of its free on the Internet. Soon Cookie combined their social network with Zenhex.com, living by advertising the site, where users publish homemade tests, doubling the number of visits to your site. By 2006 MyYearbook.com raised $ 4 1 million from the fund US Venture Partners and First Round Capital. Business has attracted advertisers such as Neutrogena, Disney and ABC, the number of participants reached 3 million worldwide and annual sales measured seven-digit numbers, telling the brother and sister Forbes Cook in 2008.

9. Raymond Lee
Raymond Lee took in high school practices in China in the company engaged in a web conference. Meetings with Chinese manufacturers useful to him California home: Lee began to order T-shirts for your tennis team directly from China. Sales began to grow, and they saved up $ 2,200 Lee opened online company selling t-shirts Ooshirts.com. Name, he explains that "Yahoo and Google and two O". At age 19, Lee gave up teaching at the University of California to work in their company. He now has three staff members, and he did not take a dime of foreign investment. According to Lee, sales in 2010 were between $ 600 000 and $ 900 000. This year, when Lee turns 20, the projected sales to reach $ 2 million.

10. Milan Teshovich
In 2002, when Milan Teshovichu was 16, he launched a music site where collected just for fun copies of their favorite songs. Two years later, he decided to turn it into a business. Today the database includes Metrolyrics.com 2 million songs, and the company of 20 employees earns by selling advertising. Revenues reached $ 1 million in 2007, when Teshovichu was 21 years old. Teshovich combines work with classes at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia, Canada, where he received a master's degree of business. "I get no education for a career - says it - it promotes personal growth."