That’s it for this little series on couponing. I’ve been “talking” all week, so it’s your turn. What did you think of this departure from my usual posts? Did you play along? Do you have any questions? Are you already a couponer and have some tips to share? What’s the best deals you’ve found?
I got a couple of emails from people who had questions and also one from one of the ladies who runs The Grocery Game. She pointed out that The Grocery Game has a referral program where they give you 12 weeks of lists for free for every 3 people you refer who join The Grocery Game… cool huh? So if you heard about them here first and decide to join, you can put my email address in the referral field of your profile, it’s Stacey@ellebellebaby.com But more importantly, once your friends hear how much money you’re saving every week they’ll want to join too, so now you know to tell them to enter your email as their referral so you can get free weeks!
I thought I’d wrap this series up by giving you some specific deals you can use your coupons from the 7/11 paper on… you did your homework right?! Keep in mind, this is just a few of the deals, and as you save and file your coupons every month you'll accumulate what you need to get lots of deals each week. So here we go with my favorite deals with the 7/11 coupons in the Tampa Bay FL area... the rest of you non-floridians, just check out part 3 of this series to find some deals for your area:
Walgreens:
You can MAKE money buying Colgate Total Advanced Toothpaste starting 7/18! Use the $1/1 coupon from the 7/11 Smart Source and make a dollar with the register receipt
Kellogg’s Nutri-Grain Bars are 2 for $5 and you’ll get a $2 register receipt, so if you combine that purchase with two $1/1 coupons from the 7/11 Red Plum (some people may have gotten $0.75/1 in their Red Plum instead), you’ll be getting each box for $0.50.
Target:
Stack your coupons to get the Glade Fabric & Air Odor Eliminator for just $0.49. Use the $2/1 coupon from www.target.com with the $1/1 coupon from the 7/11 Smart Source.
Publix:
Another money maker: Bic Disposable Razors, Assorted Varieties, 3 to 8-ct pkg BOGO $5.49 - Use two $3/1 Bic Soleil Disposable Shavers from the 7/11 Smart Source to make $0.50 on razors!
General Mills Fiber One toaster pastry $2.29 ea B1G1 free use two $0.50/1 coupons from the 7/11 Smart Source to get them for just $0.65 each.
Select varieties of General Mills Cereals are on B1G1 free, use the $1/2 coupon from the 7/11 Smart Source to score some cereal for $1.65 a box.
Friday, July 16, 2010
Wrap Up to the Series on Couponing
Posted by
Stacey - Elle Belle
at
9:00 AM
0
comments
Labels: a series on couponing
Thursday, July 15, 2010
Couponing Part 4 of 4: Using Your Coupons
If you’ve been following along in this little series, you’ve already acquired and filed your coupons, found the deals and clipped your coupons, it’s finally time to use your coupons to save some money! Every store’s coupon policy is different and it will make your life easier (and the cashier’s and the people in line behind you at the checkout) if you’re familiar with the store’s policy before you show up with your cart full of stuff and a stack of coupons you’ve worked so diligently to collect. You would be surprised at just how many “rules” stores can have about coupons… things like the number of coupons can not exceed the number of items purchased, the coupon can not be worth more than the price of the item, the number of coupons a customer can use in a day, whether competitors coupons are accepted, what stores are considered competitors, limits on the number of items that can be purchased at the sale price… it varies so much by store, you’ll save yourself a ton of frustration if you know what you’re getting into ahead of time. If you decide to use TheGroceryGame.com there’s a document next to each list that outlines the store’s company policy on coupons, but sometimes the management at a specific store will have their own take on that policy, so it’s best to just ask the customer service desk at your store. You can also check out the store’s website to see if you can find their policy there. If you do find the "official" coupon policy, you may want to carry it with you to the store just so you have some back up if the cashier isn't familiar... you'd be surprised!
Once you know what the store will and will not accept, here are my favorite ways to take the most advantage of using coupons:
Stacking Coupons– Use a store’s coupon (i.e. the ones that they print in their flyers) in combination with a manufacturer’s coupon (i.e. the ones that come in the flyers in the newspaper) on one item. Example: Deodorant is $4.95, the store coupon from their Sunday flyer brings it down to $1.99 and you have a manufacturers coupon from the Red Plum insert in the paper for $1, so you pay .99 for your deodorant.
Buy One Get One Free Deals– This is why I LOVE Publix! Publix runs BOGOs on several items each week and they’ll accept coupons for not only the item you buy, but also the item you get for free. Example: Rice is BOGO and one rice costs 2.00. If you have two $1 off 1 coupons for rice, you can get 2 boxes of rice for free.
Register Receipts/Extra Care Bucks/the coupons that print out at the register at certain stores – Walgreens and CVS both do this type of deal. Check out the weekly flyer and you’ll see that coupons for a dollar amount you can spend on pretty much anything in the store (like a gift certificate) will print out when you purchase a specific item. You can use those register coupons on your next transaction, so make sure to buy all the deals that will give you those types of coupons first, and then buy the rest of your items as a second separate transaction so you can use the coupons from the first transaction. Example: You need to buy toothpaste and cereal. Toothpaste is $4 and you get a $2 register receipt when you buy it, you also have a $3 off coupon for that brand of toothpaste. You have the cashier ring up just the toothpaste, use your $3 off coupon, pay $1 out of pocket, and get the $2 register receipt, which means the store paid you a dollar to buy the toothpaste. The cereal is $2.25, have the cashier ring it up as a separate second transaction, and use the $2 register receipt from the toothpaste to purchase the cereal for .25
Okay, that's it for the series on couponing... any questions? I'll wrap it all up for you tomorrow & then I'll be back to my usual posts, starting with a product review and giveaway!
Posted by
Stacey - Elle Belle
at
5:31 AM
0
comments
Labels: a series on couponing, extra care bucks, how to use coupons, register receipts, stacking coupons, using coupons with BOGO
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
Couponing Part 3 of 4: Finding the Deals
So you've got your coupons, they're filed in a way that you can actually find them, now you just have to figure out where to use them.
One of the absolute best sources for finding deals is free – Blogs! I started out on this whole couponing journey because I met the lovely Heather, master mind behind mysweetsavings.com If you live in the Tampa Bay area, lucky lucky you, Heather’s blog is a God send! She posts, usually several times a day, about where to find deals, includes links to online coupons, sneak peaks of up coming sale flyers, and her favorite deals each week at 3 local stores. I think it’s practically imperative to your couponing success that you find a blog, preferably one that’s local to you… or at least local enough to have the same stores as you do in your area… and follow along. If you don’t live near me, don’t worry, this whole couponing thing is huge, there are tons and tons of bloggers sharing and talking about their finds everywhere. Spend a few minutes with Google and I’m sure you’ll stumble across your own little bit of blogging genius! I will forewarn you however, there is an entire couponing language and these bloggers are fluent in it, so if you expect to understand what they're talking about, you'll have to do just a bit of studying to sort it all out. Another Google search for "coupon lingo" will yield plenty of reading material, you can also check out My Sweet Savings' post about that very topic here.
While we’re on the subject of free ways to find deals, there are other free sites like coupontom.com where you can type in the product you want to buy and it’ll tell you where to find a coupon for that product if there is one. So here’s an example of how you can use sites like that: get the flyer from your local grocery store and check out what’s on sale. When you find something you’d like to buy, enter the product name into coupontom.com and see if you've got any coupons in your newspaper flyers that you could use to sweeten the deal. Sites like these are great, but I just don’t have time to sort through every product, so I don’t use them very often.
Okay, so you can navigate the sea of couponing using one or both of the methods above, especially if you find a really great blog to follow. I did that for a while, but I found myself spending hours combing through various blogs, only to find that my store wasn’t having the same sale as the one they referenced, or after looking through the same flyer a million times that my area didn’t get that specific coupon, or that my store’s coupon policy was different than the one across town. I also am very careful to only buy things that we will actually use, even if I can get something else for free. So sometimes I buy things that aren’t one of the super amazing deals the bloggers are all posting about, but I still want to get as much of a discount on it as possible. Enter TheGroceryGame.com After your free 28 day trial, you have to pay for access to this site, but not only have I paid for the membership several times over with the weekly savings I incur, the ease of use, the time it saves me, and the convenience of having it all in one place, for me is totally worth the $15 membership fee I pay every 8 weeks! I’ve signed up for access to just 2 stores’ lists. There are lists for 4 stores available in my area, and I did all 4 during my trial, which worked out well because it helped me see which stores I got the best deals at, but I didn’t like having to compare 4 different lists to see which store had the best deal on a specific item when the difference was usually only marginal anyway and 2 more stops adds quite a bit of time to my shopping trips, so when it was time to start paying for my membership I dropped down to just 2 stores (one grocery and one drug store). Here’s how I manage my 2 lists from the grocery game: Every Sunday I log into thegrocerygame.com and pull up that week’s list for my grocery store. I go down the list, only looking at the first column with the name of the product in it, and mark all the products I NEED to buy. When I get to the bottom of the list I go back up the list looking this time just at the last column with the % saved indicated. If the discount is 60% or more (that’s just my number… yours can be whatever constitutes a “great deal” in your opinion) I see if it’s an item I’d like to try out or something we use on the regular and I would stockpile… if so I mark it too (be careful on this step... this is where you can get in trouble buying things you wouldn't normally buy just because they're a good deal). Next, I choose the option to just show the marked items, hide the header and footer, and print my list. Then, repeat the process with the list for my 2nd store. Lastly, if I marked the same or similar items on both lists (i.e. both stores have deals on diapers) I compare the two to see which is the better deal, and cross the other off the list. Once my lists are ready, I find & clip my coupons from my super slick filing system, paper clip the coupons to my list, mark the order in which I need to buy specific items, if applicable (more on that tomorrow) and head out to the store.
Between the weekly lists on thegrocerygame.com and keeping up with the mysweetsavings.com blog I’m able to find tons of really great deals and save $100 or more every single week on groceries and necessities!
Next up, using your coupons!
Posted by
Stacey - Elle Belle
at
5:04 AM
0
comments
Labels: a series on couponing, basics of couponing, coupon deals, how to use coupons, where to find deals
Friday, July 9, 2010
Kick-off to a Series on Couponing
When was the last time you clipped a coupon? If it's been a while, I’d like to introduce you to a whole world of people who use coupons to buy stuff for free or almost free. It’s a great big confusing world that I spent at least 2 months being completely overwhelmed by. However, saving $100 or more every week on groceries and household necessities was good motivation for me to jump in and make sense of it all!
Although couponing really has nothing to do with what I usually post to this blog, I’ve decided to do a little 4 part series on it because 1) people have been asking me how I do it 2) I’ve never done a series, so that could be fun, and 3) if I could spare you the frustration I experienced starting out with this thing & make it easier for you to keep some of those hard earned dollars, I will have definitely done my good deed for at least the day… maybe even the week.
If you want to play along, you have a bit of homework... it's easy though, just buy at least 2 newspapers this coming Sunday, the 11th. If you live in the Tampa Bay area, buy the Tampa Tribune (don’t worry, those of you who don’t live in my neck of the woods, this series won’t be applicable just to my area, so go ahead and buy your papers too). We’ll get started Monday and I’ll post one part every day and wrap it all up on Friday.
Posted by
Stacey - Elle Belle
at
11:25 AM
2
comments
Labels: a series on couponing, basics of couponing, free stuff with coupons, how to coupon
