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166 Comments

  1. Such a detailed post. I love your take on pricing. I know what you mean about pricing properly. Sometimes I feel like I overcharged but then when I go calculate it kinda feels just right.

    1. Thank you, Karina. So happy you hear you found this articles helpful. Thank you so much for coming back to write this feedback. Appreciate it very much. Have a wonderful week.

  2. Thank you so much for this detailed post. I love how simple and easy you make it sound. I think your explanation of getting the price organically rather than copying others is priceless. I’m going to try it.

    1. Thank you, Ashley. Yes, I do love making things simple for myself and then sharing it on the blog too! Glad to hear you found this article useful. Thanks for such a lovely comment. Have a wonderful day.

  3. Veena, You are my cake angel and your blog is my cake heaven. Every time I need any cake information whether it’s a recipe or a tutorial I come to see if your blog has it first. Because your recipes are 100% they always work and your tutorials make it seem so easy that it gives me the confidence to try. I’m now venturing into taking orders, so this post again is priceless. Thank you.

    1. Aww, thank you so much, Carley. What a lovely thing to say. Thank you! I am so happy to hear that you love my blog and find my recipes and tutorials helpful. It’s sentiments like these that make all the efforts worth it. Thank you for such a lovely comment. Wish you a wonderful day. Happy Baking/caking.

  4. Thank you so much for taking the trouble to write this post. I definitely needed this so much.

  5. Hello,

    I’m having a sort of dilemma and wanted to ask you a question after reading this blog post.

    I decided to try a local small pastry shop in my city and the cakes were good but the slice size is tiny or smaller than my perception. I wrote a review on Facebook that the place is great but portions are tiny and the owner decided to invite me so I can share my opinion about there cakes in person.
    All is good but I wanted to ask are there any standard weight or size measurements for cake slices?

    I only find info for cutting cakes. 8″ cake – 8-10 or 12 slices. But what if the slice is just too small or too light as of weight?
    Is there any industry standard that a cheesecake slice must be “x” inches tall or must weight some precise value as 140-180 grams?

    I want to give them the best feedback and since I’m going to say their cake slices are small I want to know if there is any standard I can base my opinion on?
    Everyone cuts cakes differently but we chatted a bit on Facebook about the appointment date and time and they mentioned that they did research and feel that the devil chocolate cake slice for example must be 140 grams. Is there any standard?

    Thanks for your time and sorry for the broad question. After the blog post it seemed like you could give me some direction. 😀

    1. Mirobg – There are industry standards for everything these days. Dessert cakes have their own size charts and wedding cakes have a different chart. Here we price per serving but in some places they price per weight. Not sure what the guidelines for these weights are in India. Perhaps check with a cake shop close to you, one that has cake slices with a size that you like. Ask them how much the weight is and what is the guideline. Sorry I’m not much help on the weight part.

  6. Hi Veena

    Thank you very much for such a wonderful and detailed article on pricing of cakes. This is something i was really looking for.

    Veena, could you please tell me how to weigh a cake. Is a cake weighed by adding up the weight of all ingredients or is it done post baking. Could you please enlighten me about the same.

    Thank You

    1. Thank you Marina. Happy to hear that this post has been useful to you. Here I don’t sell cakes by weight but by servings.
      I think in India and some other places they sell by weight so I’m not very familiar with that. I know you have to weigh it after it’s baked so you can sell based on that cake weight.
      For example an 8′ inch cake weighs between 1 to 1.3 kgs depending on what cake it is. A chocolate cake is lighter but a vanilla pound is heavier and a fruit cake is every heavier so I think it would be difficult to set a standard price based on just weight.
      I highly recommend calling a local cake shop and checking their prices, size guide and weights. Sorry could not help much

  7. Fallen Stein says:

    Thank you for this detailed post. It really answered all my questions. I still have to figure out how to do my own pricing but at least now I know how to go about it. I love your blog and have learned so much from you. God Bless

    1. Thank you Fellen. Yes this post is so you can figure out how to use it for your own business. Happy to hear that my blog is helpful and that it has helped you learn. Enjoy cake decorating.

  8. Thank you for explaining it all so well in detail Veena. I really love the way you write your blog tutorials and recipes. It really is helpful for newbies like me.

    1. You are very welcome Mable. Happy to hear you found this infor useful. Have fun decorating.

  9. Thank you so much for this article. I love how detailed it is. You really have addressed it for a beginner. Thank you so much.

  10. Amparo Small says:

    Thank you for this wonderful post. This so helpful to new cake decorators who have no clue where to start. Thank you. Appreciate you sharing your knowledge