Santa Fe New Mexican

Bakers cash in on cakes with Instagram

Social media chefs make money through online ordering, video content partnershi­ps

- By Polly Mosendz

In a cramped Manhattan apartment kitchen, Chelsey White painstakin­gly bakes, assembles, frosts and decorates an elaborate mermaid-themed cake. The entire four-hour process is videotaped, then edited down to a few brisk minutes and shared on social media. Its purpose served, the three-tiered, picture-perfect cake is chopped up and jammed into a Tupperware container. White brings all her leftovers to the office. She hates wasting cake.

With over a quarter-million followers and videos that regularly generate hundreds of thousands of views, White is an Instagram celebrity. She used to sell cakes to her fans, but now she makes money selling the concept of cake, in conjunctio­n with such partners as the Food Network and Awesomenes­sTV.

“I’m getting way more money from content creation than I was from cakes,” said White, 26. She declined to go into the details of her contracts but said she earns more than she did when she was accepting eight cake orders a week, at about $100 each.

Instagram’s baking community is as well-liked as cake itself. The baking channel in the app’s Explore section is among the most popular, based on time spent perusing it. The hashtag “cake” has generated over 45 million posts.

It’s a big business opportunit­y for these bakers. While profession­al pastry chefs use Instagram to advertise their brick-andmortar businesses, Cakestagra­m is driven by self-taught patissiers who work out of their homes and have no interest in opening up bakeries. Instead, they focus on online ordering, video content partnershi­ps and social media-personalit­y-driven workshops.

There’s no tutorial on how to be cake-famous. Instagramm­ers often fall into business and sponsorshi­p deals when companies reach out to them. Andrea Walters, a Wichita, Kan., homemaker who runs a custom cookie company, was approached by the Roundup Cookie Retreat to teach two baking workshops, at which attendees pay $250 for weekendlon­g tutorials. Another popular baker, Ksenia Penkina, makes her classes available online for about $150 a video.

Christina, of Christina’s Cupcakes, who declined for privacy reasons to have her last name published, has 181,000 followers but doesn’t work with any content companies or even sell her wares. She began a mutually beneficial relationsh­ip with Satin Ice fondant and Fancy Sprinkles after they offered free product in exchange for posts featuring their products.

“I’ve been approached to do content creation, but I don’t have a business plan,” she said. “I don’t know much about it.”

Despite their popularity, many bakers such as Christina choose not to pursue full-time careers based on their digital cake fame.

Ashley Shotwell, whose colorful cakes for Hella Vegan have found popularity among the e-vegan community, is still figuring out how to translate her 30,000 followers into a business beyond selling cakes. White insists on keeping her day job in finance, despite the money coming in from cake videos. Walters, who has over 17,000 followers, took years to go from selling cookies to teaching classes. “You get to a point where you’re finally confident in who you are as a baker, and you’re willing to take that next step,” she said.

Insta-bakers are sensitive to changes made by the app. White, for instance, finds that Instagram favors videos. For Walters, it took a considerab­le amount of time to determine which hashtags helped drive sales.

For each cake she bakes, White usually makes four short Instagram videos, a minute-long Facebook video, and a longer, more involved YouTube video. The editing process takes hours. “Cake decorating on social platforms has drasticall­y evolved,” White said. “To truly excel on different platforms, you have to make different kinds of content.”

Because of the complexity and time involved in selling content and classes, some Instagramm­ers prefer taking baked good orders, though it’s generally less profitable. Bakers usually recover the costs of ingredient­s but fail to properly charge for their labor. “The hardest part is undervalui­ng your time,” White said

Some Instagram bakers find the transition from local pastry whiz to social media star difficult. The social media platform has 700 million users, and popular bakers can quickly find themselves overwhelme­d with orders.

As a result, many Insta-bakers limit the amount of orders they take, creating lengthy waitlists in the process. Walters caps herself at 20-dozen cookie orders a week, and Penkina creates such limited edition items as chocolate eggs. Some bakers set expectatio­ns right in their profiles: “Booked til September,” Karlee’s Cupcakes tells her quarter-million followers. Deliberate or not, scarcity drives demand.

No matter how they choose to make money, these Insta-bakers all share a love of baked goods, though they can get a little sick of the sugar rush they profit from. Many choose not to eat their desserts. Others don’t make real baked goods at all; they just decorate styrofoam cake forms to save money and time.

Asked how much cake she eats, White laughed. “I have a lovehate relationsh­ip with my cakes.”

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 ?? CAITLIN OCHS/BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? Chelsey White, founder of Chelsweets and finance manager of consumer products at L’Oreal, with one of her cake creations in April at her apartment in New York.
CAITLIN OCHS/BLOOMBERG NEWS Chelsey White, founder of Chelsweets and finance manager of consumer products at L’Oreal, with one of her cake creations in April at her apartment in New York.

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