Some of my earliest memories of baking are helping my Granny with birthday cakes (she made me and my siblings elaborate homemade birthday cakes throughout our childhood) and licking cream cheese frosting off of beaters as my dad made cinnamon rolls for the next morning (it was usually a Saturday night, making a pre-church treat for the following morning). My mom made our family so many chocolate chip cookies she had the Nestle Tollhouse recipe memorized! (She also had a thing for Ghirardelli boxed brownie mix, and she’s not wrong there). And Christmas wasn’t Christmas until I had my Nana’s spritz cookies. So many of my core childhood memories were framed around a dessert or time in the kitchen with loved ones.
I remember thinking specifically about all those delicious cakes my Granny made and wanting to have the skills to one day make my own kids their birthday cakes. I even took a cake decorating class at Michael’s in 2011 when I was in graduate school! Over the years I made birthday cakes for friends and family, treats for neighbors, and various desserts for co-workers.
I didn’t start selling any desserts until December 2020
It took me several years to finally bite the bullet and try selling baked goods (hello, imposter syndrome – but more about that in a different post). Christmas of 2020 was such a weird holiday season. The world was overwhelmed with the COVID-19 pandemic, and I wanted to do something small to bring joy to an otherwise stressful and sad season in our lives. I decided to make and sell cookie decorating kits and told my husband I would be so excited if I sold 10 kits. I sold 117!
I received such positive feedback about my sugar cookie cutouts that I ended up making Valentine’s & Easter cookie kits too! I sold cookie kids for the next three years. But in 2023 things changed.
In 2023 I started a new job that was five days a week (this may sound totally normal for most of America but this 3 shifts per week nurse was struggling a bit!) Christmas of 2023 I was working Monday – Friday, with three school-aged kids, in the midst of a very busy holiday season, looking at a list of about 80 cookie orders. I knew this wasn’t sustainable and I had to do something different.
In May 2024 I started making some of my favorite recipes and writing them all up to share with the world. I wasn’t sure if anyone would actually read this little blog of mine or trust my recipes, but I knew I had to give it a try. I also knew that going digital would be the most efficient way to log all of these recipes I created so my children could use and enjoy them one day!
But you guys! I soon found out this wasn’t as easy as it sounded. I loved the baking part of all of this, but the blogging part was very difficult for me. I am not tech savvy! I ended up starting a blog on the completely wrong platform and having to transition it over to WordPress 2 months in. This was a huge hurdle. I was such a novice, and I quickly realized I was going to have to invest a LOT of time into the digital side of things.
Digital work meaning: taking and editing photos, writing blog posts, editing for maximum SEO (search engine optimization), creating pins for Pinterest, and creating posts for social media. I eventually found a balance and I got the hang of this blogging thing. I stayed consisted, my content slowly improved, and my traffic is increasing every week!
One thing I had to decide as a blogger was whether or not to monetize my blog with ads. On one hand, ads can be super annoying, disrupt the reader experience, and make your blog seem a little scammy. On the other hand, ads are one of the few ways bloggers are compensated for their creative work. For me – my main goals were to keep all my recipes in one place and share those with the world, not necessarily create and additional stream of income. BUT the idea of having a small passive stream of income was definitely enticing. I decided to monetize my blog with ads.
At first, this meant using Google Adsense to place ads on my blog. Unfortunately this meant that the ads were miscellaneous ads, often paired with unappealing images or companies. It wasn’t ideal, but it was what I did until I had enough consistent traffic to apply for Journey by Mediavine. Everyone in the blogging world knows about Mediavine- a premier ad management company – but it requires that you have 60k+ page views per month. I was nowhere near this! However, their Journey program for smaller bloggers has a lower page view requirement (around 10K). It took 6 months, but I was finally accepted to the Journey program!
Yes! Yes, you can. You can get just as much out as you’re willing to put in. Stay consistent, and you will reap the rewards. I haven’t worked on this blog every day since I’ve started, but I’ve worked on it most days. I want to continue doing that in 2025! While I’m by no means an expert in blogging or digital marketing, I hope hearing my story comes as an encouragement if you’re just getting started. You won’t go anywhere until you take the first step – if this encourages just one person to take that first step then I will count this post as a win!
Rating Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links, and I may receive a small commission should…
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