The local Sainsbury is so full of BOGOFs (buy one get one free) and other, often specious, "OFFERS" that one could be forgiven for thinking you could come out of the store with more money than you went in with.
So much of their merchandising – AKA confusion marketing – seems aimed at disguising higher prices and frustrating price comparisons.
The best example of this I've seen is their flapjacks, near the far corner of the store. These used to be priced at £1 for six slices, in a plastic tray.
The company has managed to hold the price at £1 but, there's a big but: the contents are dramatically reduced. Where once there were six slices, now there are only three.
In effect, the price is nearly doubled.
In order to help disguise the extent of the value reduction, the three, slightly larger slices are now separated in a redesigned tray that features two ridges that space out the slices more widely. Less contents, more packaging, same price. Does this amount to deceit?
More generally, weights & measures (that aid price comparisons) on most products are as hard to find as ever, often in tiny print and/or are deeply hidden.
Tags for Forum Posts: Sainsburys, comparison, confusion, flapjacks, marketing, price
Billy - If you're not interested in the discussion, then you have the freedom to stop following it. That's what we often call "freedom of speech".
Please list three "good" things Sainsburys has done in the last year.
Even more superb than any meat might be thought to be at Sainsbury's, if shopping in Harringay that at Baldwins is doubly so (to put it mildly).
The have installed a CCTV camera covering the cycle park ( with, I note, big yellow warning signs ).
Billy I agree with you about the economies of scale: this is one of the most basic truths in Economics which, as you say, most school kids will have picked up. But you may be slightly missing the point.
The more units you buy of something, the cheaper the unit price tends to be. This is true of small cheap items, or very big and expensive items. If you buy a longer print-run of a book or take options on a bigger number of jet airliners, the cheaper will be the price per unit.
All of us understand this, almost instinctively.
...
Why then, does Sainsburys sometimes turn on its head a basic tenet of economics? When buying multiple items – as compared with buying a one-off – Sainsburys sometimes charge either:
(a) the same price per item as for a single item – while simultaneously implying, by the surrounding dressing, that its some kind of special deal or offer, e.g. 2 for X – what is the point?
or
(b) [incredibly] an increased price per item (such as 2 for X, where 2X is more than double, X + X)
I still cannot fathom this phenomenon.
It's either a mistake by Sainsburys, or this company holds their customers in contempt. The difficulty with the 'mistake' theory, is that this conduct has gone on for some time now and it now looks like a pattern.
All of this price-trickery is surrounded with placards shouting "GREAT OFFERS". At what point does aggressive marketing become fraudulent?
I - more often than not - check the shelf label to find out more info and see how much it is per kg/100g/etc. That way you can more easily compare prices of similar products even if they're in different size containers. So you can see if that bit of beef on offer really *is* on offer by comparing the price per 100g with the rest of the meat on display.
Makes it so much easier for me as I'm dyslexic and dyspraxic, and trying to compare things of different sizes/weights is nigh on impossible for me. I've actually fled a store in tears before because it wound me up so much! I hate shopping for anything - god bless the internet *lol*
I was reading an article on "Yahoo" called "How to beat the latest supermarket tricks" and when I clicked on a link to get further details it brought me here. Hol doing well.
Yes, that's the one. Thanks Hob, I mentioned it to Clive this morning, but hadn't had time to track it down.
(Notice how it's always the stories that members write that get the attention - so keep it up guys! Keep 'em coming!)
I heard or read somewhere that the cost of BOGOFs is borne not by the supermarket but by the supplier/producer.
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