Set the
VCRs: Find
out what time/what channel The Other Half airs in your
part of the world.
QUESTION: Club
Cards...Good, bad, do they save money?
ANSWER: Do
they save money? Yes...but for a price. You trade your
personal information about your buying habits for
reasonable--sometimes significant, savings.
Check
out a column I wrote about this very subject: Los
Angeles resident Bob Rivera learned, his personal buying habits
were used against him in a legitimate slip-and-fall lawsuit he
brought against Southern California food retailer Von’s.
Von’s attorneys tried to make him out to be a drunk because of
the quantities of alcohol he purchased, with the shopping
histories recorded through his loyal use of Von’s Frequent
Shopper Program card.
Are the savings worth the privacy trade-off? Sure...I
bought a 12-pack of Diet Cokes this afternoon at Ralph’s and,
because I refuse to use one of these loyalty cards but still want
to get the savings, so I circumvented the system. I told the
clerk that I didn’t have my card with me, but since I already
know how their system works, I gave them “my home phone
number” which their system also keys off of.
So I gave them the phone number of one of my friends...he and his
wife have one of the Ralph’s Club (Loyalty Cards) and collect
the assorted benefits from frequent usage; a listing of the
assorted benefits for using their card is listed
on their website. Wanna look at the information
they’ll ask you for when signing up for
one of these cards?
Frequent buyer/loyalty program payoffs vary from
chain-to-chain around the nation. Safeway’s
Texas-subsidiary, Tom Thumb gives their frequent shoppers [known
as Reward Card holders] American Airlines AAdvantage Miles as a
way of hooking consumers...one mile for every dollar you
spend...and it can add up quickly when you start making your
pharmaceutical purchases there. But look at the trade-off:
You’re giving up extremely private information for
#@$%(&*!@#@ frequent flier miles!
Payoff: Want the discounts but don’t
want to give up your privacy?
- Sign up for a card and give them phony
information. You can’t get in trouble for
this; you’re not applying for credit, so you’re not
breaking any laws. But you’ll get what you
want...discounts and other perks down the road.
- Don’t use a check or a credit card when you
purchase...Use Cash!!! Even if you don’t
have a Loyalty Card, you’d be amazed at the “data
mining” that goes on out there by the retail industry, in
the name of getting any edge, real or perceived, on the
competition in the marketplace. There’s plenty of
information on your checks, both printed or encoded at the
bottom of the check that can still track your purchases...and
that’s a no-brainer when it comes to that magnetic strip on
the back of a credit card.
- Use a friend or family member’s card with
their permission; you get the discounts, and they get the
long-term benefits: As described
earlier...you’ll get the discount at check out, and
whomever’s card you’re using/keying off of gets the perks
associated with additional dollar volume/use on their card.
Remember: Most of these retailer are
extremely accommodating to consumers that don’t have their
card or keychain barcode/tag and many of these systems will
key off of a home phone number of a Loyalty Card member as an
alternate way to “give you the discounts and benefits
you deserve.” We’ll just use their technology against
them! All’s fair in love, war and at the grocery
store!
QUESTION: Product
Placement...it’s a science, isn't it?
ANSWER: You’ll
love this link that I found about the subject; it’s got
some great information about cross-selling strategies that may
seem obvious on some levels, but are totally designed to make you
leave more of your $$$ inside their store. What’s
interesting about this link? It’s a strategy outlined on
the website of Enron’s accountants-under-siege, Arthur Andersen.
There’s some good, common-sense sort of ideas being promoted by
Andersen that are prevalent throughout the industry. A couple of
quickie examples of product placement; is it manipulative or just
good business? You decide:
Example #1: “For example, a supermarket may
have the bakery department in the back of the store and a separate
coffee concession, such as a free-standing Starbuck’s, may be in
the front of the store. But if you put the coffee next to the
bakery, then you have a successful cross-selling opportunity. Coffee
plus bakery equals breakfast!"
Exactly. That’s one approach. Solution selling is not just
merchandising, but rather it’s also store placement and design.
What departments are close to the front, such as the deli, bakery
and coffee, so that they appeal to “in and out” consumers? Do
these departments have their own cash registers, which will
encourage these “in and out” consumers? One of the goals of
solution selling is to capitalize on your customer traffic and
gain more of consumers’ share of food sales. Retailers want to
sell more, sell more profitable mixes and increase incremental
purchases.”
Example #2: “Customers don’t care
what department a product is traditionally sold from especially if
similar products are grouped conveniently together in order to
better meet their needs. One great example of this is a meal
department offering, such as what is found in many delis today.
What has evolved today though, is a more complete offering than
just “deli” products, but now it includes salads [produce] and
chips [grocery] and a drink. Everything is right there for the
customer — simple and convenient! With solution selling,
supermarket retailers think less about how they buy their
products, but rather how they sell them and how the consumer uses
the products.”
QUESTION: Okay,
then what about Product Presentation: Is this deceptive or just
smart business?
ANSWER: You decide!
- Supermarkets often put fresh produce near the entrance of
the store and work extra hard to make it look fresh. They see
the food, and their eyes are telling them that it's fresh, so
all of those are good messages that they are sent to buy more. For
instance, in the meat section special lighting is
routinely used to make the meat look more pink and attractive
to shoppers. The light is an SP 35; it's making it look
fresher, it's making it look better.
- Eye level merchandising sells something like 85 percent of
all merchandise. Since three quarter of shoppers are
women, a sought after spot is their eye level. Eye level for a
woman is 5'6". In that band is the golden section inside
the store.
- Speaking of eye level merchandising: Another golden rule of
thumb is eye level for kids as they ride in the grocery cart.
This may be kids grabbing from the cart because it's colorful,
and it's kids orientated; it's kids height.
- “End caps” are the real money makers:
It's at the end of the aisles known as “end caps.”
End caps make more money for the retailer than any part of the
store. How? Supermarkets charge product
manufacturers for every shelf space, it's called slotting
allowances. Typically the retailer will earn more money from
Kellogg's slotting allowance than they will from selling the
actual merchandise itself! Wanna know more about
slotting? Here's
a four-page report from the FTC worth perusing.
- Do you take a list with you to the supermarket? They hate
you for it!!! Grocery stores hate people
who shop with lists. Research shows they are the least likely
to be lured in by the store's tactics to get you to buy on
impulse. If you want to save money, one way is to make that
list and stick to it. Another suggestion from the experts is
to eat before you go so you're not tempted to splurge.
- Aside from taking a list with you to counterattack the
strategies used by the supermarket industry, here’s some
other shopping tips that’ll keep more cash in your pocket
and keep you from impulse buying crap you’ll never use:
- If doing a lot of shopping, use a large shopping
cart, but if
only getting a few items, use a hand-held basket.
- Instead of taking the cart up and down every aisle, leave it
at the end and carry what you need back to the cart. Hand-carrying
items will discourage impulse buying.
- Shop the grocery store backwards. Most shoppers begin
in the produce section, allowing grocery-store planners to predict
the order in which they take the aisles. Therefore, they put the
items most often purchased on the left, while your eyes naturally
wander to the right.
The items on the right side of the aisle are those that produce a
higher profit margin. If you start on the opposite end of the
store, you will travel the aisles in the opposite direction than
anticipated and avoid the trap.
- Planners have found that if the sections of the store
containing freshly baked bread and packaged bread are separated,
many people will buy two loafs. Stick to your list and only buy
one.
- Stores often put the frozen-food section in the middle because
most want to shop it last. Having it in the middle requires
shoppers to go through half of the store again to get to it. This
increases the chances that they will impulse buy.
- Another reason to be careful about buying stuff off of those
dangerous End Caps? Items on the end of aisles because they are
not necessarily bargains. Many times they’re overstocked items
and are full price.
- Wholesale Clubs...like Sam’s or Costco pose
an ongoing question: Should you buy in bulk quantities?
- Before buying a large size of any product consider
whether it’s appropriate for the size of your household. Also
consider your available storage space at home.
- If a product is one that is likely to spoil before you use all
of it, you are better off buying a smaller size. You may not want
to eat acorn squash or turkey breast every night for a whole week.
- The good news is, you don’t have to. Be an assertive shopper
and ask the produce or meat market person to assist in wrapping a
smaller portion of meat or breaking apart a large bundle of
vegetables.
- Other strategies:
- Pick up refrigerated and frozen foods last and check for
expiration dates—especially on dairy products.
- Collect coupons. Buy the Sunday newspaper where coupons
abound. If you don’t want to clip coupons the Internet can help.
Check out www.webhouse.
com or www.priceline.com or www.valuepage.com or
www.coupons.com for
money-saving offers. If you have a familiar supermarket you
patronize on a regular basis, be friendly with the checker and ask
them something like: “What day is always double [or triple]
couple day again...isn’t that Saturday???” Of course
it’d never be Saturday, since that’s one of the big buying
days of the week...so they’re not gonna make it easy for you to
save money. Remember the old adage: "Ask and ye
shall receive.” What does the clerk care?
They’re not getting paid on the net profits of the store.
They’ll tell ya...but you've gotta ask.
- Finally: Purchase generic or store brands whenever possible to
save money...as much as 15-25% or more, depending on the item.
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