Manufacturer's or store coupons for food
#1
Posted 10 April 2011 - 08:33 PM
Mostly, though, I don't like coupons because I really hate being stuck in line at the grocery store behind someone who has a couple dozen coupons for the clerk to process. It's bad enough when they all scan properly, but invariably the customer has gotten the wrong size item for the coupon, or something else happens to make a long process even longer. I wish coupons would just go away.
But I know people who collect coupons and use them regularly, and claim they save a lot of money that way. So there must be another side to coupons, and at any rate they seem to be with us for good. So what's the deal? Do you use them, and if so, how? Do you only use them if they're for something you would buy otherwise? Do you try new products? Do you actively scout out coupons, or is it just an opportunistic fluke if you come across one that you think you might use?
Janet A. Zimmerman, aka "JAZ"
Manager
jzimmerman@eGullet.org
eG Ethics signatory
About.com guide, Cooking for Two
Ten ways you can help the Society for Culinary Arts & Letters
#2
Posted 10 April 2011 - 08:50 PM
I love this part of coupons: the ability to try a new product basically risk-free. I must admit to refusing to deal with the things, but they amuse my wife (an accountant, go figure...). I see no more reason to be annoyed by someone with coupons than to be annoyed by someone with a full cart. I'm sure I piss off anyone in line behind me with my cart full of exotic produce, half of which the cashier has to look up on the sheet having not memorized the codes. Oh well, I don't stop buying epazote just because it takes a little longer to check out.Do you try new products?
Chris Hennes
Director of Operations
chennes@egullet.org
#3
Posted 10 April 2011 - 08:56 PM
THAT all changed when the SoCal grocery workers went on strike in about 2003 or so. The chains dropped the multiple value deals for manufacturer's coupons like a hot potato, and never brought them back once the strike settled. In addition, it seemed to me like the majority of manufacturer's stopped OFFERING coupons. The last few coupon inserts in the Sunday papers have been about a quarter the size they once were, and it's all for processed food like Velveeta, fruit juices, Pillsbury products, box mixes and jarred pasta sauces. In other words, stuff I don't use.
Very, very rarely these days, I will use a coupon I get handed to me at checkout, or if one of the inserts has a coupon for dog food. But not so much even that anymore.
And I'm completely insulted when a manufacturer offers me $0.25 off a $5 box of Cascade (I'm lookin' at you Proctor & Gamble.....). That's barely worth my time to find it, cut it out, schlep it to the store, and redeem it.
"Let's slip out of these wet clothes, and into a dry Martini" - Robert Benchley
Pierogi's eG Foodblog
My *outside* blog, "A Pound Of Yeast"
#4
Posted 10 April 2011 - 09:23 PM
Dave Scantland
Executive director
dscantland@eGstaff.org
eG Ethics signatory
Eat more chicken skin.
#5
Posted 10 April 2011 - 09:32 PM
I buy that there is a strong correlation there. But do remember that not ALL "couponers" are bat-shiat insane. And I still think it's unfair to think that couponers are any more annoying at checkout that those of us with a dozen bags of unidentifiable produce (of which I am one, though I have at least learned to memorize the SKU for the epazote!) And my wife wouldn't be caught dead writing a check.Coupon obsession, in my experience, is correlated with last-minute haggling, flyer-lawyering, and check writing.
Chris Hennes
Director of Operations
chennes@egullet.org
#6
Posted 11 April 2011 - 12:55 AM
I think most supermarket chains have replaced store coupons with loyalty discounts you get by scanning your card before checking out. That I do. These discounts are more likely to apply to fresh foods that I actually do buy.
#7
Posted 11 April 2011 - 05:24 AM
#9
Posted 11 April 2011 - 06:23 AM
#10
Posted 11 April 2011 - 07:25 AM
MelissaH
Oswego, NY
Chemist, writer, hired gun
Say this five times fast: "A big blue bucket of blue blueberries."
foodblog1 | kitchen reno | foodblog2
#11
Posted 11 April 2011 - 08:16 AM
However, I do save coupons for things I certainly do not use (Pampers, for instance) and once a month donate them to a local food bank to be given out to their clients.
There are a lot of people, especially families with children, and especially the military families around here, who could not subsist as well as they do if it were not for coupons.
I print out online coupons from online coupon services, mostly couponbug.com both for the food bank and for people who don't have internet service or a printer.
I don't mind standing in line behind people who use a lot of coupons because times are hard and this is how some people have to survive. There were times in my earlier life when I had to scrimp and save and use every coupon and I don't remember anyone criticizing me.
Edited by andiesenji, 11 April 2011 - 08:17 AM.
My blog:Books,Cooks,Gadgets&Gardening
#12
Posted 11 April 2011 - 09:04 AM
Today, I'm in the store-discount-card and use-a-coupon-if-I-happen-on-to-one-for-something-I-use category. More typically, I'll get one in the mail for something I might conceivably use, stick it up on the fridge with a magnet, and forget about it until after it's expired.
The only exceptions are the PetSmart coupons for dog food and grooming services. I covet those, and use them faithfully.
www.kayatthekeyboard.wordpress.com
#13
Posted 12 April 2011 - 04:00 AM
#14
Posted 12 April 2011 - 08:09 AM
They seem mainly to be for processed foods that I don't buy, so I tend not to bother.
I think most supermarket chains have replaced store coupons with loyalty discounts you get by scanning your card before checking out. That I do. These discounts are more likely to apply to fresh foods that I actually do buy.
Same here, except that the local supermarket does not seem to actually require the card; the cashiers will enter one for you if you don't have one. I don't like them, because I don't like having my purchases tracked. It's so rare for there to be a coupon for something I want that it's not worth the bother of looking for them. And most of my food comes from local produce markets, ethnic specialty shops, or the CSA anyway.
Edited by Moopheus, 12 April 2011 - 08:09 AM.
blog: The Institute for Impure Science
#15
Posted 12 April 2011 - 08:22 AM
The one exception is my local "Smith's" store, which does in-store coupons for flour, butter and orange juice. I use those whenever I can. The best is when they send me coupons for "$5 off your $20 grocery bill." That's ideal -- no muss, no fuss.
That being said, I much prefer shopping at the Asian and Mexican markets -- 10 pounds of potatoes for $1, 4 pounds of onions for $1, etc. With prices like that, who needs coupons?
And don't even get me started about people who pronounce it "Q-pon."
#16
Posted 12 April 2011 - 09:07 AM
Instead of swiping a card, you can sometimes just enter a phone number in the device at checkout to receive the store's member benefits. The trick is not to use your own phone number. That way they can't track your purchases.I don't like them, because I don't like having my purchases tracked.
You will find that usually someone will have already created a dummy membership phone number of XXX (the area code of your area) 867-5309. That phone number was the title of a Top 40 song "867-5309/Jenny" by Tommy Tutone in 1982. It works in my area code at my local grocery store.
edited for clarity
Edited by Toliver, 12 April 2011 - 09:08 AM.
“Peter: Oh my god, Brian, there's a message in my Alphabits. It says, 'Oooooo.'
Brian: Peter, those are Cheerios.”
– From Fox TV’s “Family Guy”
#17
Posted 12 April 2011 - 03:10 PM
I use coupons for things that I am going to buy anyway. I occasionally try something new if I get a coupon for a free product or for a significant savings.
However, I do save coupons for things I certainly do not use (Pampers, for instance) and once a month donate them to a local food bank to be given out to their clients.
There are a lot of people, especially families with children, and especially the military families around here, who could not subsist as well as they do if it were not for coupons.
I print out online coupons from online coupon services, mostly couponbug.com both for the food bank and for people who don't have internet service or a printer.
I don't mind standing in line behind people who use a lot of coupons because times are hard and this is how some people have to survive. There were times in my earlier life when I had to scrimp and save and use every coupon and I don't remember anyone criticizing me.
I agree, I certainly am not detained if folks in line use a bunch of coupons. I salute people who stretch their dollars to be able to feed their families. I just do not understand on any level the hatred for coupons and for people who use them. Perhaps they are just peasants. I use them too so find another line when you see me. I'd feel awfully guilty if I held you up.
Any day now, Any day now, I shall be released
Dogs are never gratutious
My Blog
#18
Posted 12 April 2011 - 03:46 PM
As others have noted, I rarely use them because I almost never see anything of use. The store card does get use as it includes fresh produce and meat. Then again I am in Southern California and a product of that strike that was noted above so coupons are not much seen in these parts.
#19
Posted 12 April 2011 - 04:55 PM
I do use the safeway card, couldn't care less if they track what I buy (and do get the occasional free sandwich or $10 off). If they track it with my safeway card or with my credit card, what's the difference? it's not like I'm stocking up on illegal weapons or drugs or anything like that, at least not at Safeway, LOL.
(I actually like advertisement targeted to me. Ads are a necessity, I'd rather see some I find interesting, than some I could not care less for)
Costco is nice, they send out the coupon book which I immediately throw away, but once there they have all the coupons at the register and swipe them anyway :-)
But the piles of ads and coupons in the mail and the paper go immediately into the recycling, I wish I could turn that flood of paper off.
- Thomas Keller
Diablo Kitchen, my food blog
#20
Posted 12 April 2011 - 05:20 PM
Edited by David A. Goldfarb, 12 April 2011 - 05:21 PM.
#21
Posted 12 April 2011 - 06:44 PM
#22
Posted 12 April 2011 - 08:04 PM
I have no hatred for people who use coupons. I don't mind standing in line behind people who have coupons for the items they're purchasing (anymore than I mind standing in line for anyone else, that is). I completely understand and sympathize with people who want or need to save money. I just think that people who use coupons should know what their coupons are actually for.
I don't mind standing in line behind people who use a lot of coupons because times are hard and this is how some people have to survive. There were times in my earlier life when I had to scrimp and save and use every coupon and I don't remember anyone criticizing me.
I agree, I certainly am not detained if folks in line use a bunch of coupons. I salute people who stretch their dollars to be able to feed their families. I just do not understand on any level the hatred for coupons and for people who use them.
My experience is probably not typical, because I have abysmal grocery store line karma. But here are three of my recent experiences behind people with coupons. And I swear I am not making this up.
#1. I get in line behind a guy who has a big cart of groceries, but almost all of his purchases are already rung up. He hands the clerk a very thick stack of coupons -- I don't know how many, but the stack was easily an inch thick. The clerk starts scanning them. Several of them don't scan -- or, rather, they're for items he hasn't actually purchased. He points out the items the coupons are supposed to be for, but they're the wrong size or brand or whatever. So then he doesn't want the items that the coupons are not for. The clerk has to figure out what those items are for, find them (they've already been bagged) and return them.
#2. I get in a line that appears to have one person in it. Oh, except that there's actually a person whose order is halfway done, but who has left to go get more items. She comes back with a cart full of more stuff and gets back in line to finish her transaction. One of her items is baby formula, and she has a coupon. It's not for the size she has. She argues. The clerk calls a manager. The coupon is still not for the size she has. She doesn't really want the larger size, which the coupon is good for, so she takes time to decide. She does decide she wants the coupon size, so the clerk leaves to go get it. Oh, did I mention that this was at 5:30 on a Friday evening, and the store was packed?
#3. I get in a line where it appears the woman ahead of me is completely done -- all her bags are in the cart. She pulls out a binder (I am not making this up) and starts pulling out coupons. In stacks. Big stacks. I honestly can't believe that even with a full cart, she's bought enough items for all these coupons to be redeemable. Apparently, they aren't. It's like some kind of coupon lottery for her -- as if she must have something in her stack for the items she's bought. Having learned something from my previous experiences, I wait for a couple of minutes while she pulls out more stacks. I put my items back in my cart, move to another line behind two people and still get done while she is pulling out coupons.
I know these people are not typical. I know that most people who use coupons are organized and only use coupons for the items they're buying. But I'm sorry, I see coupons in someone's hand and I make a beeline to another cashier.
Janet A. Zimmerman, aka "JAZ"
Manager
jzimmerman@eGullet.org
eG Ethics signatory
About.com guide, Cooking for Two
Ten ways you can help the Society for Culinary Arts & Letters
#23
Posted 12 April 2011 - 09:44 PM
Margaret McArthur
"Take it easy, but take it."
Studs Terkel
1912-2008
A sensational tennis blog from freakyfrites
margaretmcarthur.com
#24
Posted 13 April 2011 - 04:08 AM
TLC just started airing a show called Extreme Couponing and I wonder if this will spur people on.
http://tlc.com/extremecouponing
Stores fear and cash registers cringe when my friends wife hits the aisles. I get the impression that she has somehow parlayed 1 purchase of toothpaste, razors, etc into a coupon fueled closet busting lifetime supply.
#25
Posted 13 April 2011 - 09:35 AM
Manufacturers pay up front for shelf sites - that is, to get their products in a prime location.
Often this is based not only on sales of the product but when these products are purchased with a manufacturer's coupon.
When these factors are considered, the statistics don't show if the sales are to one person with 100 coupons or 100 persons with one coupon each. They just show a positive response for a particular product and if the manufacturer wants to push that product, the store (or chain) will receive a bonus or premium for product placement in a prime location.
Unfortunately, small manufactures can't compete with the big boys, which is why their products are on the lowest or highest shelves, not near the eye-level slots that come at a premium price and that is why you seldom see coupons for these products.
Many small companies have a semi-annual coupon promotion so don't expect to see them monthly, and usually they are much less than those offered by the big companies.
That's one of the reasons I buy products from small manufacturers, when they have a superior product. I don't want to see these things disappear from my store shelves.
My blog:Books,Cooks,Gadgets&Gardening









