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Coupon Clipping Leads Is it Worth it?
What it does to the consumer, is quite interesting. For one, it
creates the choice of brand, before the customer even enters the
store. This is huge. Marketing departments do extensive research
on consumer buying behavior to find out the exact point that a consumer
picks one brand over another; is it shelf placement, is it a direct
advertisement, word of mouth, when is it? When you, as a consumer,
choose to use that coupon, your decision has already been made.
The psychological gratification of simply using the coupon is enough
to encourage the purchase, oftentimes regardless of the need, or
a comparable purchase. Combine an in-store sale, and you have a
definite choice; a customer is likely to buy the brand again if
they like it, and now have a positive purchase feeling associated
with the brand or product in question.
Let’s take a look at the emotions involved here. Not only
are you seeking out the money-saving opportunity (gratification
#1), you are making a ‘sensible’ choice because you
are saving the indicated dollar/cents amount on the coupon (gratification
#2), you get to watch the total purchase at the checkout go down
as the coupons are scanned (gratification #3), and you can come
home ‘knowing’ you spent less than you would have without
the coupon (gratification #4). Four very real instances to feel
the positive emotions of buying. Four very real instances to be
a happy buyer, something not easy to find for any consumer who goes
through an extensive cost-benefit thought process at every avenue
and department of the store. The coupon-use process not only cuts
down your process for you, it encourages a subsequent process. And
so the cycle continues.
Soon, coupon clipping leads to more coupon clipping; sourcing and
finding coupons overcomes the actual need of any particular product.
Although it gives consumers the chance to try and sample new products
they wouldn’t ‘normally’ buy, many are so far
gone they simply rely on coupons to just buy what has been , well,
predetermined. Forget about actual shopping lists, real food that
comes from the perimeter of the store where the nutritional and
fresh food is. Coupons are available for all brands, non-generic,
processed, and usually higher priced items. Saving money in the
long-run? Unlikely. For the amount of time it takes to source, find,
evaluate, and carry out the purchase, most consumers are better
off creating a list, checking for sale priced items while in the
store, and trusting that the average purchase will be consistent
over a period of time, and not necessarily trip by trip.
This is a difficult mentality to realize in today’s ‘sale’
and coupon culture. It’s a step that involves some serious
thinking about what is actually consumed, needed, and found in a
given store.
Coupons are a marketing tool; they are an effort to increase purchases,
and simultaneously increase subsequent purchases and perhaps additional
purchases of other items in a given trip; simply put, the consumer
now feels that they have ‘saved’ money.
Realistically speaking, make a list, stick with it, and use coupons
as a ‘freebie’, not the reason for that trip to the
store! Marketing is best when it is inadvertent; think about how
much advertising you expose yourself to in the simple process and
act of coupon hunting. Think about how many brands you are conveniently
‘introduced’ to by monitoring those circulars, eBay
auctions, and sales across stores.
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