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[personal profile] gerisullivan
I'm mostly hopeless when it comes to using coupons. Yes, I occasionally manage to 1) have a coupon with me when I'm at the store; 2) find the product it's good for; and 3) hand the coupon over to the cashier at check-out. Far more often I manage two one, or even none of those three steps. More than once, heck, more than a dozen times, I've found myself thanking a cashier for noticing a tear-off instant savings coupon on a package after forgetting about it myself in the few minutes between the time I put the item in my cart and when I checked out. I'm lucky to remember to turn in bottle deposit refund slips. I often hold them in my hand while shopping to help me remember. Last spring, I ended up backtracking my steps through the Stop'n'Shop after dropping a $5 bottle deposit refund slip without noticing I'd done so. Found it, yay, but coupons are a pain.

I'm even worse with post-purchase rebates. Last year, I missed out on a $50 rebate on my new cell phone and a $30 rebate from Norton because I just didn't get around to filling in the necessary coupons and mailing them in. Yes, I know the companies are counting on that, and I even take my failings into account when deciding whether to buy something that offers a mail-in rebate -- I usually only do so if I like the price without the rebate.

I'm still annoyed that I blew off that $80. Over the years, I've picked up a couple free bras and some underwear from manufacturer's promotions that typically offer buy two, get one free in the store, then get another one free by mail. Those involve a lot of label snipping and annoying little forms, but the promised products eventually show up. So it's not that I never benefit. I benefit just often enough to suffer from the delusion that I'll collect on the big offers. And then remain peeved with myself (and with the companies) when I screw up.

Which brings us to Staples, and their lovely Easy Rebate program. They do a lot with automatic in-store savings. Look, ma, no coupons. I'm all over that. Yesterday, I finally picked up a paper shredder. I've been meaning to buy one for years, but have been balking at the price. There was a $25 in-store rebate on a $70 shredder, and a $15 post-purchase rebate. I had $37.70 in Staples Rewards checks, and using them toward a shredder seemed like just the thing. As I was checking out, I made some comment about how bad I am with mail-in rebates. Wayne, the Staples employee with the 1,000-watt smile and personality, pointed out that I could register for the rebate online. Whoohoo. And, y'know, today I even remembered to actually do it. Which means I actually got a medium-duty paper shredder for the $30 I think it's worth. And that $30 came from total purchase rebates earned on previous purchases. Rebates I most likely never would have realized if I weren't living in the future where this stuff is either automated or easier than it used to be. Sweet.

Date: 2008-03-16 06:18 am (UTC)
kaffy_r: The TARDIS says hello (Default)
From: [personal profile] kaffy_r
As we add to our store of years (so much nicer to say than "as we let entropy conquer us" don't you agree?), we grow wiser. It's been in the last five years or so that we've started paying attention to coupons and rebates. But just this afternoon, I deposited a $50 check from a computer purchase. As you say. Sweet.

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