Showing posts with label Coupons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Coupons. Show all posts

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Are Coupons Worth The Effort? I'm Still Not Sure (Updated)

This is not a rhetorical question.  I’d really like to know. 

I’ve worked hard to develop a lot of frugal habits over the years, but coupon clipping has never been one of them. I usually take my copy of the Sunday paper and lift all the ad supplements, chock full of coupons, and toss ‘em before I even start reading the front page.

I looked at the supplements last Sunday.  Didn’t examine them coupon by coupon, but saw enough to give me a good idea of what kinds of products those coupons will buy….nationally advertised name brands, usually quite a bit more expensive than the store brands I use.  So the question would be, does the coupon discount the name brand enough to really compete with the store brand price? 

Maybe I’m just lazy. It seems to me that by the time you cut out coupons and, I presume, figure out some way to sort them by product, expiration date, etc. you’ve spent more time trying to save 50 cents here or $1.00 there than it’s worth.  Spend five minutes to save 50 cents, and you’re spending the equivalent of an hour to save $6.  That’s not even minimum wage.

I do use one coupon regularly, and that’s a 50 cent off coupon that actually comes inside a brand of toilet paper that I use regularly. This TP is already an excellent bargain; 50 cents off, especially when it only takes a moment to peel the coupon off the roll and stick it in my wallet, strikes me as a pretty good deal.

But maybe I’m not giving coupons a fair shake.  Do you use them? Do they really save you enough money to make them worth the work and time spent searching them out, clipping and sorting them?

If you do—especially if you have a coupon-use system that maximizes savings while minimizing  processing time, please share that in a comment. 

I’ll try to have an open mind about this. After all, saving money is what this blog is all about, and no technique should be overlooked. 

So tell me how you do it. I’ve got my scissors sharpened and ready.

Update: 
I decided to buy a Sunday paper again ($2 in my area) and see if I could find any coupons that would actually save me money over the store brands I usually buy. Out of 12 coupons I selected, one would have saved me a few cents over it's store brand equivalent.  Hardly worth the cost of the newspaper yes?

However, I did find that coupons may be a good idea when you're trying something new. I've always liked the "Duke the Dog" commercials for Bush's Baked Beans, so when I found a coupon for  $1 off a 21-oz can of Black Bean Fiesta Grillin' Beans, I clipped it and took it to the grocery store.


The can was $2.08 retail,  $1.08 with my coupon.  While I was there, I also priced 15-oz cans of store brand black beans and corn, the main ingredients in the Black Bean Fiesta can.  The corn was 66 cents; the black beans were 88 cents. I calculated that n reasonable chunk of another ingredient, red pepper, would cost about 20 cents, and a little chipotle sauce would cost another 20 cents, for a total of $1.94 for a 3- oz batch of my own "fiesta" mix of black beans and corn.  That made it considerably cheaper per ounce than the Bush version...unless one had--aha!--a $1 off coupon. (And I didn't have to spend two whole minutes chopping red peppers and pouring out a tablespoon of chipolte sauce!)

I took the can home. I opened it and poured half the contents into a bowl.

Now, I like black beans. I put 'em on salads, I add them to my home-made burritos....and in my experience, black beans are black. 

What I saw in my bowl were red beans. I scooped some up in a spoon and washed off the sauce to make sure. Red-brown beans.  Where were the black beans? I'm not saying there weren't any in there, just that there had to be so few I couldn't see them.

There also wasn't much corn. I stirred the bowl and counted eight pieces of corn.  I counted six small bits of red pepper.  This in a bowl containing half of a 21-oz can.

Boy, I'm I glad I had that coupon. Especially after eating what was in that bowl, since what I tasted was basic beans with a little bit of hot sauce.

I'm going to try to make my own Fiesta beans.  One drained can of black beans. One drained can of corn. A little red pepper. A little chipolte sauce.  $1.94.

I'll let you know how it comes out.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Readers: Are Coupons Really Worth the Effort?

MoneyToSpare.net is now offering an 30-page e-booklet detailing a number of ways to save money on groceries. (See the sidebar for more info.)

One method that's not included is the use of coupons, for two reasons.

First, I've noticed that most coupons seem to be for highly marketed national brands that sell at premium prices compared to similar products. Getting a few cents off on something that's overpriced to begin with is not my idea of smart shopping.

Secondly, coupons seem to involve more time and effort than they're worth. First, you have to sift through the Sunday paper's avalanche of advertising; clip, if you can find them, coupons for items you actually want; then sort them somehow so when you go shopping, you can find the right coupon for a particular product. (Yes, I know that you can buy little sorting folders, I just wonder how much time they actually save.) Then you have to remember to use the coupons before they expire. (Do the little folders sort by date or alphabetically?)

It just seems to me that you'd end up putting in five minutes worth of work to save $.50 (on a product that's overpriced to begin with) which works out to paying yourself at the rate of $6 per hour, not exactly an exciting prospect.

Still, I may be wrong. (It happens!) So I'm asking those of you who use coupons to let me and the readers of this blog know what we're missing, by either sending me an email at csykes@syryn.com or leaving a comment.

Show me the error of my ways! Convince me and I'll collect the best coupon expert's tips and include it in an update of "8 Ways To Save Up To 40% On Your Groceries."

P.S. Yes, I do know about cashier coupons and other special coupons that offer "2 for 1" deals or "$1-off" deals. But these aren't that common. So let me know how you make out with "regular" coupons...and for a valid comparison, please calculate and include the time you spend clipping and sorting.