Is this a future billionaire? At fifteen, Thomas creates himself apps for smartphones in Google Glass. That's what he's wearing by the way. Are you recording too? And that's how he's filming us, with these glasses. And Thomas has big plans for his summer. He wants to revolutionize 3D printing technology. Recently I applied for a patent on 3D printing trying to make 3D printing faster and more reliable. The key there is speed and we're trying to print ten times faster than current generation 3D printers. Thomas is self-taught when it comes to business encoding. This school is trying to create entrepreneur starting from age eleven. For advertising, we add advertise I use social media as a device and then we have up here this is my profit chart implement. At the incubator school, kids are encouraged to start companies on school time. Hi, my name is Armand Ismael I'm the CEO of I-supply. Hi, my name is Logan Fisher, I am the CFO and the director of marketing in I-supply. Hi, my name is Theo Trim and I'm the head of sales at I-supply. These twelve-year-ord captains of industry plan to sell school supplies to their classmates. They say kids have a big advantage when it comes to creating the next big thing. Kids are more creative because they haven't been boxed in by the world yet: you're gonna do this, you're gonna do that, you're gonna do this. Kids, you know, stuff that mind work. For example, I'm gonna be Superman when I grow up. How did you come up with the idea? I never liked band-aid and I didn't want people to see that I have something, because look at the board. This pint-size CEO is the youngest ever to dive into reality TV "Shark Tank". At seven, she considers herself a lifelong inventor. I feel like being an entrepreneur. You don't have to follow somebody else's orders. You can just be more free. Good girl! That peach was juicy, wasn't it? Kiowa's dream is to become a zoologist while making Boo Boo Brands into a household name. Kids are still kids, even if they are entrepreneurs. Sage advice for a new generation of business leaders. Regan Morris, BBC News, Los Angeles.