Okay, so I'm no stranger to coupons. What I have been a stranger to is the science behind it. And the joy of making a huge dent in your total grocery bill. Enough to make you feel like Einstein and want to go to the grocery store everyday just to show off your coupon ninja skills.
A year and a half ago, when I was gainfully unemployed, I managed to make use of a nice little free subscription to the Review Appeal (a small, weekly paper here in Franklin) which housed within it an occasional coupon insert. Clip clip clip and you've got $.55 here, $1.00 there, and if you were lucky like me, you managed to have the time to shop between a couple of different grocery stores ALL of which doubled your coupons (up to $.50). I'd say on any given grocery store trip I was saving, oh, I don't know, $15-20. Small victories, but chump change in the grand scheme of what I could have been doing...
Fast forward to last year, and I hardly touched a coupon. I didn't have time. We no longer got that paper. And I just, well, I could really care less. Besides, we didn't have the space to do all those things that crazy couponers do like... breath... stockpiling.
And then somewhere along the way, probably in the last couple of months, I started thinking about all of those BOGO (that's buy one, get one) specials at Publix (where we shop, primarily because of convenience) and those crazy people who buy multiple copies of the Sunday paper and print coupons online and thought... I think they might be on to something.
See, when I was couponing before, I wasn't avid and fairly lackadaisical in my approach.
And I want to, at some level, stay that way. Not lackadaisical per say, just... calm? Casual? Because I don't want it to be something which consumes my life in a period of it where there's just not a lot of extra time. But man, how much I miss out on maximizing our monthly grocery budget and having - gasp - a surplus of food at the end of the month. One of the things I was excited about in purchasing our home was having space - in every capacity - but especially when it comes to food. Pantry, refrigerator, freezer - you name it. We've got more than we've ever had and that's the sort of thing you need if you're going to really take this whole coupon thing (relatively) seriously.
So over the last two weeks, I've taken a fairly okay stab each week at printing a few online coupons and browsing the store for deals like I used to, and getting back to that about $20 a week savings. But that $20 was only about 20% savings... and I was so nonchalant about it all I was probably spending about two hours in the whole process (so sue me, I like wandering the grocery store).
Today, I decided to focus and plan. I spent an hour doing the following: set up our new printer to print from both of the computers wirelessly (this is particularly useful for double printing), sat at my laptop with two (read that, TWO) copies of the Sunday paper and a pair of scissors, pulled the I Heart Publix site up, linked to a couple of printable coupon websites from which I printed about 10 pages worth of coupons, and browsed through the Publix insert (though I had already read about it from IHP). Then I spent 15 minutes creating a spreadsheet (because, hey, that works for me) with columns indicating the retail price (published in the insert), sale price, and coupon information (for the ones I had) for the items on my list.
Sidenote: about half of the things on my list were for a dinner I am fixing tonight for company (which isn't entirely economical, but it's going to be good and who gives) and I just gave my best estimate for what I'd spend on them. Printed this out, and there I had my shopping list.
Armed at the ready, I hit up Publix. Thirty minutes later, I had my cart full of everything on the list (and a bunch of bananas was added at the last minute because they're a staple around here, I'd forgotten to put them on the list, and they were $.10 off a pound) and was standing at the self-check kiosk. I had to see and be a part of this wonder of seeing my savings firsthand.
And wow.
If I wasn't right on the money at cutting my bill in half, I don't know where I was. Well, I mean, I do, because I was right at half. Seriously. Just an hour and forty five minutes total spent planning and executing - and I bought $88 worth of groceries for $44. No lie. I was stunned, honestly, because even when I left the house and surveyed what my spreadsheet said I would save (which was right at that amount) I didn't believe it. There was just no way. And that's just 50% and there's people out there working magic at 65-75% EVERY WEEK.
Incredible stuff.
I'm a believer.
And this is only just the beginning.
A year and a half ago, when I was gainfully unemployed, I managed to make use of a nice little free subscription to the Review Appeal (a small, weekly paper here in Franklin) which housed within it an occasional coupon insert. Clip clip clip and you've got $.55 here, $1.00 there, and if you were lucky like me, you managed to have the time to shop between a couple of different grocery stores ALL of which doubled your coupons (up to $.50). I'd say on any given grocery store trip I was saving, oh, I don't know, $15-20. Small victories, but chump change in the grand scheme of what I could have been doing...
Fast forward to last year, and I hardly touched a coupon. I didn't have time. We no longer got that paper. And I just, well, I could really care less. Besides, we didn't have the space to do all those things that crazy couponers do like... breath... stockpiling.
And then somewhere along the way, probably in the last couple of months, I started thinking about all of those BOGO (that's buy one, get one) specials at Publix (where we shop, primarily because of convenience) and those crazy people who buy multiple copies of the Sunday paper and print coupons online and thought... I think they might be on to something.
See, when I was couponing before, I wasn't avid and fairly lackadaisical in my approach.
And I want to, at some level, stay that way. Not lackadaisical per say, just... calm? Casual? Because I don't want it to be something which consumes my life in a period of it where there's just not a lot of extra time. But man, how much I miss out on maximizing our monthly grocery budget and having - gasp - a surplus of food at the end of the month. One of the things I was excited about in purchasing our home was having space - in every capacity - but especially when it comes to food. Pantry, refrigerator, freezer - you name it. We've got more than we've ever had and that's the sort of thing you need if you're going to really take this whole coupon thing (relatively) seriously.
So over the last two weeks, I've taken a fairly okay stab each week at printing a few online coupons and browsing the store for deals like I used to, and getting back to that about $20 a week savings. But that $20 was only about 20% savings... and I was so nonchalant about it all I was probably spending about two hours in the whole process (so sue me, I like wandering the grocery store).
Today, I decided to focus and plan. I spent an hour doing the following: set up our new printer to print from both of the computers wirelessly (this is particularly useful for double printing), sat at my laptop with two (read that, TWO) copies of the Sunday paper and a pair of scissors, pulled the I Heart Publix site up, linked to a couple of printable coupon websites from which I printed about 10 pages worth of coupons, and browsed through the Publix insert (though I had already read about it from IHP). Then I spent 15 minutes creating a spreadsheet (because, hey, that works for me) with columns indicating the retail price (published in the insert), sale price, and coupon information (for the ones I had) for the items on my list.
Sidenote: about half of the things on my list were for a dinner I am fixing tonight for company (which isn't entirely economical, but it's going to be good and who gives) and I just gave my best estimate for what I'd spend on them. Printed this out, and there I had my shopping list.
Armed at the ready, I hit up Publix. Thirty minutes later, I had my cart full of everything on the list (and a bunch of bananas was added at the last minute because they're a staple around here, I'd forgotten to put them on the list, and they were $.10 off a pound) and was standing at the self-check kiosk. I had to see and be a part of this wonder of seeing my savings firsthand.
And wow.
If I wasn't right on the money at cutting my bill in half, I don't know where I was. Well, I mean, I do, because I was right at half. Seriously. Just an hour and forty five minutes total spent planning and executing - and I bought $88 worth of groceries for $44. No lie. I was stunned, honestly, because even when I left the house and surveyed what my spreadsheet said I would save (which was right at that amount) I didn't believe it. There was just no way. And that's just 50% and there's people out there working magic at 65-75% EVERY WEEK.
Incredible stuff.
I'm a believer.
And this is only just the beginning.
6 comments:
So, I'm like you in the fact that I don't want to become "that" crazy couponing lady, but I too have been saving a lot just in the past 6 months or so.
Here's one tip that may save you some time: go to couponmom.com. It's one of those overwhelming coupon sites, but the only thing I use it for is to look at her "spreadsheet" of stuff at each store - she's already calculated the savings for you. In the left nav go to "Grocery deals by state" and then select your state/store. When the list comes up, sort them by %savings. Some stuff you can even get for free and donate to a food pantry. Most of the time, her math seems correct, but keep an eye out when you're in the store anyway.
Hope that helps!
i'm not much of a coupon user...probably because I am fairly limited with my neighborhood grocery market and the small bodega underneath my apt that likes to charge ridiculous prices for my fig newtons. Occasionally when I'm motivated, I walk my granny cart 10 blocks to a moderately sized Pathmark where I can really shop and save some money. ah, city living....
Welcome to the dark side. It is fun over here. It is even more fun when you keep your grocery budget so low that you have money left to go out to eat!
Me too! I did this yesterday-- well not what you did, but printing and shopping the sale-- and got $65 worth of groceries for $25. I couldn't believe the tiny amount of effort it took. I'm sold.
awesome! thanks for the inspiration:)
Its kind of a rush to save money isn't it?? It seriously is like a game for me. (And don't worry, I like wondering around the grocery store too!) So glad to know that someone else my age clips coupons!
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