Now when I first heard of Extreme Couponing, I thought that it was people who were clipping every coupon they could get their hands on and militantly scanning the sales fliers for things like "Double Coupon Days" and other sales that would maximize what they could get for their coupons.
Then I had a daughter work at Walmart and I learned what it really is. It's fraud.
There are websites out there that cover this, but it seems that with the huge number of items out there in the marketplace, in order to speed up transactions instead of dealing with a megamart's database of items by looking up and doing a complete match between the coupon's UPC and the item's UPC, the systems are often streamlined to only check the first 4-5 numbers of the code to have it match up.
So you have a $5.00 off coupon for say a one gallon jug of Simple Green concentrate which can retail for $17-$19. Now the UPC Code also matches some other item that only costs $2.00. So you buy that and a bunch of other stuff, hand the clerk a coupon for the simple green, the system sees that indeed one item scanned does match the codes and you just got the item for free and another $3 knocked off your total cart.
My daughter had to call over a CSM to double check after someone had a full cart full of goods and the register stated that Walmart owed her $15 dollars.
A full cart of groceries that can run between $100 and $200 (depending on the items contained therein) being allowed by the computer Point of Sale system to walk out the store without payment *and* saying that the store fork over $15.
Yes you read that right.
When the CSM had my daughter re-scan the items and check the coupons versus the items in the cart, the EC'er got huffy and stormed out.
Now that Walmart has a policy in play that every coupon must be sorted out and be placed with the items that they're supposed to go with and this is pissing off the EC'ers.
Now my wife and I are avid couponers. We'll watch the sales, clip our papers until the living room floor looks like someone exploded a confetti factory. We usually can save about $50 off our bi-monthly shopping trips and we use that money to go out on a much needed date.
And we think we're doing alright doing that. But if these EC'ers keep having their way, how long before coupons become a thing of the past as no one will be willing to take them at all?
Then I had a daughter work at Walmart and I learned what it really is. It's fraud.
There are websites out there that cover this, but it seems that with the huge number of items out there in the marketplace, in order to speed up transactions instead of dealing with a megamart's database of items by looking up and doing a complete match between the coupon's UPC and the item's UPC, the systems are often streamlined to only check the first 4-5 numbers of the code to have it match up.
So you have a $5.00 off coupon for say a one gallon jug of Simple Green concentrate which can retail for $17-$19. Now the UPC Code also matches some other item that only costs $2.00. So you buy that and a bunch of other stuff, hand the clerk a coupon for the simple green, the system sees that indeed one item scanned does match the codes and you just got the item for free and another $3 knocked off your total cart.
My daughter had to call over a CSM to double check after someone had a full cart full of goods and the register stated that Walmart owed her $15 dollars.
A full cart of groceries that can run between $100 and $200 (depending on the items contained therein) being allowed by the computer Point of Sale system to walk out the store without payment *and* saying that the store fork over $15.
Yes you read that right.
When the CSM had my daughter re-scan the items and check the coupons versus the items in the cart, the EC'er got huffy and stormed out.
Now that Walmart has a policy in play that every coupon must be sorted out and be placed with the items that they're supposed to go with and this is pissing off the EC'ers.
Now my wife and I are avid couponers. We'll watch the sales, clip our papers until the living room floor looks like someone exploded a confetti factory. We usually can save about $50 off our bi-monthly shopping trips and we use that money to go out on a much needed date.
And we think we're doing alright doing that. But if these EC'ers keep having their way, how long before coupons become a thing of the past as no one will be willing to take them at all?
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