I got a printable coupon for a free Digiorno pizza the other day from a Facebook promotion. I was at my local Kroger and attempted to use it. I used self checkout as I always do and I was informed that they could not accept the coupon. I questioned it and the clerk brought over the manager.
He proceeded to tell me that they are no longer accepting printable coupons due to the amount of fraud. I was surprised and told him that I will most likely have to take my business to Publix (big competitor down here in Atlanta) since they do accept them. He seemed unphased by it.
This upsets me as I am an honest person and I have truly legitimate coupons that I print from coupons.com all the time. In order to save money on groceries I may now have to go to a store further away in order to use my online coupons.
At the end of the day I don't really care where my food comes from. Publix and Kroger carry more or less the same products so that is not the issue. I am just annoyed that I have to change because of a few bad apples out there. Such is life!
Showing posts with label bad deals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bad deals. Show all posts
Kroger: No Longer Accepting Printable Coupons?
Labels: bad deals, coupons 0 commentsby Frugal Backpacker on Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Dubli.com: Gambling for products?
Labels: bad deals, scams, websites 0 commentsI have looked at and tried out dubli.com. It is a new site where you buy credits to see the price of an item. Every time you click "show price" it takes away 1 credit and drops the price by 25 cents. The idea is to find a good deal where you get something, such as a gift card or ipod, at less than it's face value. It sounds good on the surface but they actually make a fortune.
Here is how it works:
- Credits: Each one costs 80 cents. Each click of "show price" only drops it by 25 cents. If you buy the item they still make 65 cents off you. If not then they keep it all!
- Pricing: Each item starts at full value. You have to get lucky to get one that is low and not bought by someone else yet.
- Shipping: Starts at $6.95 even for gift cards. To break even you need the item to be at least 8 dollars below face value.
- Auction: The price gets bid down by clicking "Show Price." It costs you 80 cents (1 credit) to do this. The price drops 25 cents each time. If you like the price you can buy the item on the spot.
- Zer0: Same as auction but you only get the item if you are the person who bids it down to zero. With them making 65 cent per bid that means they make a 65% markup!
- Unique Bid: Who ever bids the lowest and is the only bidder at that price gets the item. It is time limited.
Don't fall into this trap! You will lose more than you stand to gain from a site like this. You are much better off on eBay or craigslist if you are looking for a deal on something. Let's be smart with our money!
by Frugal Backpacker on Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
