Personal
finance addresses the ways in which individuals or families budget,
save and spend their money. Although this is a topic that everyone
should be educated on, there are only 17 states in America that require their high school students to take a course in personal finance. This means there’s a large population of adults who lack some measure of financial understanding.
In an effort to educate the public, one of Visa’s financial literacy programs, Practical Money Skills for Life,
focuses their efforts on “creating quality, engaging and innovative
materials that can bring interest and fun into financial education.”
“It’s
important to start financial literacy at an early age and to continue
often if we actually want to end up with adults who have good money
management skills,” says Hugh Norton, head of US Financial Education at
Visa.
The
idea of a personal finance comic book originated in 2012 when Visa
partnered with Marvel Custom Solutions for the very first time. “It
really just seemed like a natural winning combination to put together
our financial literacy expertise and their iconic characters,” says
Norton.
Marvel Custom Solutions,
Marvel’s in-house creative agency, is often approached to take on
educational projects. Editor and project manager at Custom Solutions,
Darren Sanchez, says educational comic books are a great way to teach
kids important lessons while still keeping them entertained.
With about half a million copies distributed in eight different languages in 42 countries, the first comic, “Avengers: Saving the Day,” was nothing short of a success.
Now, after four years, these big name companies worked together to create their latest comic, “Guardians of the Galaxy: Rocket’s Powerful Plan.”
Superhero characters from both “Avengers” and “Guardians” comic series
appeared in blockbuster movies, the most recent being “Guardians of the
Galaxy 2” scheduled for release in 2017.
The
months it took to create “Guardians of the Galaxy: Rocket’s powerful
plan” included endless approvals and a team of talented writers and
artists. But the challenge with these types of educational comics, says
Sanchez, is making sure the comic incorporates Visa’s main teaching
points, includes all of the characters and making sure kids engage with
its message.
For
this issue, Visa wanted to teach their readers about saving up for an
emergency and how to save up for big-ticket items that they need but
can’t normally buy.
“Rocket
and Groot are the stars of the comic. It’s called ‘Rocket’s Powerful
Plan’ and he’s the one that’s saving money,” says Sanchez. “He’s the
mastermind behind all of it. And Groot is the irresponsible side to show
what not to do.”
The
colorful 20-page issue is filled with action-packed fight scenes and
finds a way to seamlessly integrate the story with financial terms like
“investment,” “exchange rate,” “live within your means,” “savings
account” and “emergency fund.”
“We’ve
rationed out money for living expenses,” says Rocket in the comic,
“squirreled away cash for emergencies and now after all that time we
finally have enough for our new toy! The newest in stark tech.”
In
an effort to be more aggressive in spreading financial literacy, this
time around, Visa also partnered with the Public Library Association.
Norton
tells Yahoo Finance that they didn’t want to just hand the comic book
over to people in hopes they would use it. “We wanted to to be able to
put real learning materials in people’s hands and partnering with the
public library association allows us to put that comic into communities
across America in a much more accessible way than if it was only
available through our site.”
The
initial launch of “Guardians of the Galaxy: Rocket’s Powerful Plan,”
was translated into eight languages. But the May release was so
successful that it is now being translated into an additional eight
languages, including Turkish and Fijian.
“It’s
a myth that an ill-informed consumer is somehow better for business,”
says Norton. “In the long term an informed and educated consumer who
knows how to deal with their own finances is better for everyone. It’s
the right thing to do and we need to start financial education early.”
Culled from Yahoo
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