Posts Tagged ‘montana’

Planning wedding cakes from a distance. A look behind the scenes.

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

In Montana, most things are far apart. It’s a big state, and long distances are a fact of life, even in the cake business. Whether couples come across the country to get married here, or just up from Twodot, many of our wedding cake clients live away from Bozeman all or part of the time. So how to plan a dream cake from 200 or even 2000 miles away? Here is a great example from a Sweet Pea Bakery wedding in the works for later this summer.

Visual references sent from an out-of-state bride to aid in cake design.

Visual references sent from an out-of-state bride to aid in cake design.

In one envelope we have color, line, texture, style and context. There are many more details in the emails and notes from phone conversations added to their file in our database. This couple even sent in some relatives to do the cake tasting. We posted pictures of their taster cakes to the web to save them translation over the phone while they talked about their favorites. So, with two months to go we know quite a bit about what this couple, who we’ve met only briefly, hopes for in their wedding cake. And we have a system in place to get them what they want without fuss or compromise.

This next example is from a bride who is close enough to home that we’ve actually had a couple chances to sit down and talk design. She brought the invitations, too, but took the extra step of bringing her graphic designer to meet us!

Cake design ideas come in many forms

Cake design ideas come in many forms

The designer is forwarding us the vector art used in the invitations. That complex pattern is built from only two repeating shapes, Carrie can scale these up to use as stencils for perfectly coordinated cakes. The printed samples will be used to match their colors, even the random sketches on a napkin help us better understand the couple’s wishes.

Our best trick for designing the best cake for each bride is no trick at all. We have developed a database to track event planning progress from the first e-mail until the cake is on the table.

Picture 2

From one simple worksheet we can link to all our correspondence, find contact info for all your vendors, get ingredient lists and allergens for any recipe, and print turn-by-turn directions to the venue. If you choose to decorate with ribbon, it tells us how much to buy so we don’t run short. It makes our pricing easy to predict and explain in clear terms. All these little details that can get overlooked during the planning process are there for us with the click of a mouse. You can confidently check cake planning off that long to-do list, and we can focus on what we do best. It’s more fun for all of us this way.

Carrie is currently available for weddings after Labor Day weekend this year through the holidays. Booking for the 2011 season will begin January 1st, but we are happy to schedule a consultation any time. Call the bakery at (406) 586-8200 or visit http://www.sweetpeabakery.net/weddings

Introducing 3-click online ordering: Schedule your next treat directly from the website!

Saturday, November 28th, 2009

We are happy to announce online ordering from Sweet Pea Bakery! Place your orders for local pick-up or delivery directly from our full cake and dessert menus at www.sweetpeabakery.net in only 3 clicks. It’s true.  Unlike phone ordering this function, powered by Schedulicity, is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Order your next Sweet Pea treat from the comfort of your computer; no hassle, no credit card, no voice mail.

Why Schedulicity?

Our website has become the main interface for our customers to access our menus, as well as pictures and information about our products and services. We find that most people who pick up the phone to call us are either looking at the website during our conversation, or have visited recently to aid their ordering.

It seems like a natural extension of that interaction that some of these customers would prefer to save the phone call and order directly from that menu. But, to date we have been unsatisfied with Point of Sale options available to us. It turns out Carrie’s desserts, made to order by request, don’t work that well with Amazon-style order systems, based on depleting a pre-built stock of inventory.

Enter Schedulicity, a Bozeman-based online scheduling service that has gotten national attention by making life easier for service providers (such as stylists and massage therapists) and their clients. Their approach lets us divide up our work day into specific services based on our menu items, and allow customers to schedule our “services” directly from our own online menus. You can automatically add your dessert “reservation” to your calendar, and get e-mail reminders about your pick-up

How does it work?
Great question. Schedulicity makes the process easy as 1, 2, 3. You can literally go from viewing our menus to a booked order in 3 clicks, all without leaving our site.

Step 1: Find your favorite dessert and click Order Now

Step 1: Find your favorite dessert and click "Order Now"

Step 1) Visit the Cake or Dessert pages on sweetpeabakery.net. See an image of any item by hovering your mouse over it’s name. When you find your favorite, choose the right size to serve your crowd and click “Order Now”.

Step 2: Choose a date & time from the calendar

Step 2: Choose a date & time from the calendar

Step 2) A calendar view will load in place of the menu. Click on the date you want to order your dessert, then choose the time from options listed below the calendar. Pick the time that represents the earliest you  might pick-up the order.

Step 3: Confirm your order

Step 3: Confirm your order

Step 3) A confirmation page will load, specifying the dessert you have chosen, and your preferred pick-up time. Make corrections if necessary, or click the green “Book It Now” button to complete your order.

If you are logged into an existing Schedulicity account, that’s all you have to do until it’s time to pick up your dessert! Otherwise you will be prompted to log in, or create a Schedulicity account, which is free, easy, and can also be done without leaving our site. Once you use the service, we think it will become your preferred method for booking all kinds of appointments.

Of course if you have questions, or need to relay more details about your order, we will be available, as always by calling (406) 586-8200. Online ordering is just another way of making our customer service more responsive and flexible, giving you options that fit the way you plan and shop.

We will be adding items and services as we get the hang of things, and we would love your feedback. We’re Sweet Pea Bakery, at your service. Let us know how we can work for you.

Local food: now more than ever. A baker’s view on Monsanto in Montana

Friday, September 25th, 2009

If you follow local news, you’ve heard that Monsanto recently purchased WestBred of Bozeman with the intent of furthering their pursuit of GMO (aka RoundUp Ready) wheat right in our back yard. As bakers who buy, use and consume lots of local flour this is an issue of great interest to us. We can’t think of anything more important within a community than being free to feed ourselves food of our choosing.

Our letter to the editor on the subject was published in the Sunday Chronicle and, since it’s not available online, we are re-posting it here in order to further the conversation in broader circles. Let us know what you think, and also be sure to read the Farmers’ Blog from the Bozeman Food Co-op for a producer’s point of view. It’s important we’re all well informed, and that we keep talking about challenges to a safe food supply.

Here’s the letter:

After reading Monsanto has come to Bozeman to build us better wheat, we wonder what is wrong with the wheat simply grown here. Why, when we have locally-produced GMO-free grains, would we “upgrade” to a strain that requires gene-splicing to tolerate a heavy pesticide bath?
We are not scientists or farmers; we can’t speak to the benefits or pitfalls of GMO wheat. As bakers engaged in the purchase and use of local agricultural products it is clear that big business is hindering the ability of Montanans to feed ourselves.
The struggles of producers to compete against feedlot beef and subsidized corn syrup are well known. A recent article detailed the consolidation of the dairy industry fueling the loss of 126 local producers since 1994. Recently we lost access to local cooking oil after Montola of Culbertson was bankrupted by a corporate parent more interested in profiting from biofuels than in our food security.

In contrast, witness the purchase of the Sacajawea Inn by the owners of Wheat Montana. They have found success with a a business model that doesn’t require any funny stuff: providing quality foods at fair prices. As successful local businesses often do, they have invested in the community that supports them.

The new Sacajawea will return jobs to Three Forks. It gives small businesses an outlet for products and services absent for two years. If we book two events there this season, those sales will cover our flour budget for a year, completing one cycle of a positive feedback loop in the economic health of our community. We are confident in drawing a literal connection between buying local flour and the outcomes described above, because the two endpoints are just 30 miles apart.

So, Monsanto, welcome to town. We hope your intentions are good. But given the choice, we will support local options which have clearly demonstrated they share our interests.

Seth and Carrie Ward, owners
Sweet Pea Bakery