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Oh sweetie... it doesn't matter how long you have been doing this. Iif you can decorate you should be paid like anyone else. If you think you charge too much just think of me okay? I charge $100 for an 8" round cake... and I make no applogies for it.
You have to think of it differently. You are thinking like a customer, and you will set yourself up for failure that way. You can't think of what you would want to pay... you have to think how much do I need to charge to pay the bills. Cost times 3 is a joke of a pricing plan. I say that because you are not just providing ingredients. You are providing the service of making a cake for someone who either can't do it themselves, or doesn't WANT to. This includes... time spent thinking up ideas and talking with the client, time spent shopping for the ingredients, time spent mixing and baking, time spent decorating, time spent CLEANING UP THE MESS, the box and the boards and the piping bags, the lost sleep trying to squeeze it all in between kids and family. It is *SO* much more than just flour and eggs and sugar and a little magic.
Now I'm not saying that everyone needs to charge what I do. BUT... you do need to make sure that you are compensated for the blood, sweat, and tears that goes into your work. I live in a little town in NH... not a big city. I have a $100.00 minimum order and that is final. Just because someone wants Walmart prices doesn't mean they get them. You are not Walmart. You can't buy thousands of pounds of flour at once so your costs are much higher AND you do better work. You're not Elisa Strauss (not yet anyway), but you need to value your work. If you don't... no one will. =]
OK, Im askin the pros!!! I have been makin cakes for years, but in the last year have decided to jump in and pursue this as a business. As with everyone, i have pricing concerns. I am in a small town and Publix cakes are all the rage!! LOL. My husband and I are arguing about pricing for a client comin up. So I'm askin suggestions for pricing for a spongebob cake like the one in this link http://jirehcakes.com/index.htm it will be a lemon cake w/ vanilla BC, fondant covered and decorated to serve aboout 20 people ( I am planning about a 9x13, cut to shape)....Thanx for any advice!! :D
Jeanne said:Oh sweetie... it doesn't matter how long you have been doing this. Iif you can decorate you should be paid like anyone else. If you think you charge too much just think of me okay? I charge $100 for an 8" round cake... and I make no applogies for it.
You have to think of it differently. You are thinking like a customer, and you will set yourself up for failure that way. You can't think of what you would want to pay... you have to think how much do I need to charge to pay the bills. Cost times 3 is a joke of a pricing plan. I say that because you are not just providing ingredients. You are providing the service of making a cake for someone who either can't do it themselves, or doesn't WANT to. This includes... time spent thinking up ideas and talking with the client, time spent shopping for the ingredients, time spent mixing and baking, time spent decorating, time spent CLEANING UP THE MESS, the box and the boards and the piping bags, the lost sleep trying to squeeze it all in between kids and family. It is *SO* much more than just flour and eggs and sugar and a little magic.
Now I'm not saying that everyone needs to charge what I do. BUT... you do need to make sure that you are compensated for the blood, sweat, and tears that goes into your work. I live in a little town in NH... not a big city. I have a $100.00 minimum order and that is final. Just because someone wants Walmart prices doesn't mean they get them. You are not Walmart. You can't buy thousands of pounds of flour at once so your costs are much higher AND you do better work. You're not Elisa Strauss (not yet anyway), but you need to value your work. If you don't... no one will. =]
Jeanne- I base mine off a 2 inch deep pan /two layers.
Jeanne said:I agree with the PP on everything but price. You have to sit and figure out what it takes for you to make a cake. How much for your vanilla cake recipe to fill a 9x13 pan. Also, a single layer 9x13 will not serve 40 party servings... it will serve about 25 2x2 squares, so if you aren't going to make this a 4" tall cake then you will have to make sure you adjust your servings.
I would charge no less than $5/serving, so my price would be $125. BUT... you need to be sure that you can make a profit like Denise said. If you are using more expensive ingredients, that might not be a big enough profit margin for you. You absolutely cannot compare yourself to Publix and you can't even consider their prices when you are thinking about your own. You can call around to other custom cake businesses if there are some in your area to get a feel for pricing, but the chain stores and the run-of-the-mill bakeries that just do simple cakes aren't the same as what you are looking to offer.
Michelle Galloway said:OK, Im askin the pros!!! I have been makin cakes for years, but in the last year have decided to jump in and pursue this as a business. As with everyone, i have pricing concerns. I am in a small town and Publix cakes are all the rage!! LOL. My husband and I are arguing about pricing for a client comin up. So I'm askin suggestions for pricing for a spongebob cake like the one in this link http://jirehcakes.com/index.htm it will be a lemon cake w/ vanilla BC, fondant covered and decorated to serve aboout 20 people ( I am planning about a 9x13, cut to shape)....Thanx for any advice!! :D
Jeanne said:Oh sweetie... it doesn't matter how long you have been doing this. Iif you can decorate you should be paid like anyone else. If you think you charge too much just think of me okay? I charge $100 for an 8" round cake... and I make no applogies for it.
You have to think of it differently. You are thinking like a customer, and you will set yourself up for failure that way. You can't think of what you would want to pay... you have to think how much do I need to charge to pay the bills. Cost times 3 is a joke of a pricing plan. I say that because you are not just providing ingredients. You are providing the service of making a cake for someone who either can't do it themselves, or doesn't WANT to. This includes... time spent thinking up ideas and talking with the client, time spent shopping for the ingredients, time spent mixing and baking, time spent decorating, time spent CLEANING UP THE MESS, the box and the boards and the piping bags, the lost sleep trying to squeeze it all in between kids and family. It is *SO* much more than just flour and eggs and sugar and a little magic.
Now I'm not saying that everyone needs to charge what I do. BUT... you do need to make sure that you are compensated for the blood, sweat, and tears that goes into your work. I live in a little town in NH... not a big city. I have a $100.00 minimum order and that is final. Just because someone wants Walmart prices doesn't mean they get them. You are not Walmart. You can't buy thousands of pounds of flour at once so your costs are much higher AND you do better work. You're not Elisa Strauss (not yet anyway), but you need to value your work. If you don't... no one will. =]
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