The lady who said she used to do Mary Kay and had to order up front so the customer can take it right homw with them etc. She is wrong, she may have been coached by her recruiter that she HAD to do that, but according to the company's rules she did not.....thye try to make you do that in Mary kay, quite often - I was in it for 4 years too, I started out doing it the way you said, take orders+money, order products+ pay company their share, then keep your share and deliver products - MANY Avon reps do it this way, the right way as a business person. BUT many at home sales companies so try to talk their sales persons into buying inventory up front - I fell for it - it seems like you will sell so much more stuff if the customer can have it in their hot little hand right then and there - HOWEVER, hwo do you know what they will want before thye order it??? I ended up with over $10,000 in debt on a Mary Kay credit card, and $5000 of ( my cost) inventory sitting my my shelf now selling.....i did their buy-back program, and got $2500 back, and quit eventually.
Do Avon, it is great, as is Mary Kay, as long as you do it the way you said, take orders and money up front, make the orders and then deliver - don't do the inventory way....it is great for the higher-ups, but not great for you!!!
The cake making business sounds great too - I know Our local Michael's store offers Wilton's cake decorating classes regularly.
With either business make sure to check out who/where your local competition is - how many Avon ladies are there in your town; we live in a town of 1400 people, and when we moved here I was in the thick of Mary Kay - little did I know there were already 5 Mary Kay Ladies and various Avon Ldaies too in the town already - LOTS of tough, established competition. Check around and find out who else makes cakes locally and find out their prices, too!
That said, Good Luck in both businesses.
Jessie