Comparison
Honesty box vs click and collect for cake sheds.
A practical comparison of traditional cake shed honesty boxes, QR payment sheds and online click and collect for home bakers.
01
The three common models.
Most cake sheds sit somewhere between an unattended honesty box and a planned online-order business.
Honesty box
Simple for customers, but the sale usually happens at the shed and stock/payment records can be weak.
QR payment shed
Payment can be digital, but the customer may still browse, choose and buy at the shed.
Click and collect
The customer orders and pays online before collection, giving the baker clearer records and more control.
02
Operational comparison.
The best model depends on size, council view, risk appetite and how much control the baker needs.
Stock control
Click and collect makes it easier to cap products and avoid disappointed visitors.
Payment control
Online payment reduces missing cash, wrong amounts and manual reconciliation.
Customer volume
Collection slots help avoid sudden queues after a social media post.
Compliance discussion
A pre-paid collection flow can be clearer to explain than uncontrolled walk-up buying, but councils can still require checks.
03
When honesty box still makes sense.
For very small, occasional surplus-style sales, an honesty box may be enough if the council and food registration position is clear. The problem starts when the setup becomes a regular public shop window with meaningful volume.
04
When to move to Membber.
Move to Membber when the baker wants an online menu, payment before collection, better records, repeat customer passes, product drops and a way to bring first-time buyers back without forcing an app download.
Start the cleaner version
Keep the shed. Move the sale online.
Launch a paid collection flow with a menu, collection times, order records and a pass that brings buyers back for the next bake drop.