Making Coupons And Discounts Pay Off
Posted On: 4/26/2010 6:00:00 AM
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I know that I've been gone for a while -- my mother passed away on June 6th, and I've been absolutely overwhelmed dealing with everything. I'm just about ready to return to my normal life, and that means that my blogs will be returning too. I look forward to reconnecting with my site visitors -- keep an eye out for me in late September!
Coupons, if done correctly, can be a great way to reduce your weekly grocery bill. Unfortunately, very few people manage to take full advantage of all those discounts offered in the Sunday paper. Why is it that, more often than not, your good intentions end up expiring before they can save you the first dime?
Why Is It So Hard?
You know how it works. You sit down with the weekly advertisement section and are seduced by the dozens of money-saving offers available to you. You diligently clip and snip and stash your coupons away in an envelope -- where they lie lonely and forgotten until their deadlines have passed. Then, several weeks or months later, you find your envelope and lament over all the missed opportunities contained therein. Coupons are like leftovers -- they make you feel thrifty at first, and then guilty when you have to throw them out because they have gone over. Money lost and time wasted.And it's not just you -- it's everyone! What's the problem here? Do we, as a society, have a collective mental block when it comes to using coupons? You would think that with the financial crunch many people are experiencing, it would be easy to remember a little piece of paper that will save some cash at the store. But it's never going to happen, unless you have system for keeping track of coupons and promotions. It's time to stop tossing all of your clippings together into one big envelope. Take a minute to set up a small accordion wallet with a section for each category of "savings":
- grocery and household items
- other shopping
- restaurants and fast food
- entertainment
- personal services
Planning Your Errands
The next step toward making use of all those money saving offers is to actually plan your shopping around the coupons and certificates you have accumulated. I'm certainly not suggesting that you buy things you don't need just to save 10 cents (if you don't need it, don't clip it in the first place!) But if you go through your stash as you write out your grocery list, noting specifically which items have a coupon (then clip your list to your coupon wallet), you're almost guaranteed to save money. The same goes for gift certificates and sale ads -- as you develop your "errand day" list, include those shops where you have a possible discount or even free money to spend. Actually schedule them into your day. And if you have a sale that you must take advantage of on a specific day (or a rebate that has a set submission deadline), try these two tricks for jogging your memory. First, make a note in your calendar (simple enough) -- second, set up a tickler file. A tickler file has folders labeled 1-31 for each day of the month. Simply place the ad/coupon/rebate in the correct date file, check the current day's folder each morning, and take care of any items in that folder that day. This is also a handy tool for other dated to-do's -- like bills to pay, birthday cards to send, and follow up calls to make.Would you like to reprint this article? Please review our reprint guidelines.
Read More: financial freedom - getting organized - paper management - time management
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