
Real Estate Firm Marks 40 Years With Kids' Money Book
A Mumbai real estate company is celebrating four decades in business by teaching children financial literacy through a free storybook. The book introduces saving, investing, and goal-setting concepts through simple stories kids can understand.
Chandak Group is marking its 40th anniversary by giving children something that might matter more than buildings: money smarts.
The Mumbai-based real estate firm just launched "Little Steps to Big Dreams," a children's storybook designed to teach financial literacy through simple, relatable stories. Instead of a traditional corporate celebration, the company chose to invest in the next generation's financial education.
The book breaks down concepts like saving, investing, goal-setting, and responsible spending into language young readers can grasp. Through storytelling rather than lectures, children learn money habits that could shape their futures.
The launch event brought together families, parenting influencers, and dozens of children for an interactive experience. Kids participated in storytelling sessions where financial concepts came alive through characters and narratives they could connect with.
Special engagement zones turned abstract ideas into games. Children played activities centered on saving money, setting goals, and making smart choices, reinforcing the book's lessons through hands-on fun.

The Ripple Effect
What makes this initiative noteworthy isn't just the financial education component. It's a company recognizing that building communities means more than constructing homes.
A Chandak Group spokesperson explained their thinking: teaching children about saving and investing early can empower them to build secure, confident futures. The initiative reflects values of responsibility and trust that extend beyond business transactions.
The timing matters too. Financial literacy remains surprisingly absent from most school curriculums in India, leaving many young people unprepared for real-world money decisions. By stepping into this gap, Chandak Group is addressing a genuine need.
The book's approach is refreshingly practical. Rather than overwhelming children with complex economic theories, it focuses on foundational habits: understanding wants versus needs, celebrating small savings victories, and thinking ahead.
When companies mark major milestones, the celebration often looks inward. Chandak Group's choice to look outward, to invest in children's life skills rather than promotional campaigns, suggests a different definition of legacy.
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Based on reporting by Google News - Education Milestone
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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