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I'm becoming far too cynical in my old age.

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ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

TeresaW

TeresaW Report 29 Mar 2010 22:47

Just seen an advert for morrisons advertising crisps at buy one get TWO free, and my first thought was, 'that just goes to show how overpriced they are in the first place then.'


Anyone else getting cynical too? (shurrup Hayley lol)

Grabagran

Grabagran Report 29 Mar 2010 22:50

I always think that about anything that is BOGOF

Just shows the profit that they make at any other time lol

maggiewinchester

maggiewinchester Report 29 Mar 2010 22:52

...That's why I only buy clothes in sales!!!

Supersleuth

Supersleuth Report 29 Mar 2010 22:52

You usually find that the price of products due to go on a BOGOF increase by a third, for the two weeks leading up to the offer - then there is a sustained price increase afterwards.

There's no such thing as a free lunch - unless you the one profiteering.

StrayKitten

StrayKitten Report 29 Mar 2010 22:54

oh what crisps? its normaly pringles baby S favourite lol,

yeah i agree tho if thy can sell them at that price for a short time why not all the time x

SueMaid

SueMaid Report 29 Mar 2010 22:54

Just a thought - I wonder if they have these BOGOF specials when they want to get rid of a surplus in the factories.

Sue xx

TeresaW

TeresaW Report 29 Mar 2010 22:56

Them posh walkers ones stray lol

TeresaW

TeresaW Report 29 Mar 2010 23:11

Well I'm glad its not just me then...lol

Muffyxx

Muffyxx Report 29 Mar 2010 23:14

I'm terrible nowadays.

I walk round Asdas tutting at the special offers saying

*nope....only saving 2p...not worth it....*

I know exactly what things usually cost and it's very tricky for them to pull the wool over my eyes ...though dif story a couple of years ago.....xx

TeresaW

TeresaW Report 29 Mar 2010 23:17

Thats where I am better shopping online for asda...

I can see how the multi's and the rollbacks savings are adding up

Great when they cover the cost of delivery.

I'd go to the store itself but it's two buses, and I can't carry lots of heavy shopping, and Hagar can't do it, so it's online for me anyway

UzziAndHerDogs

UzziAndHerDogs Report 29 Mar 2010 23:17

Ive always been cynical. Me mum owned a shop so I knew the mark up prices to small shops, yes we had to make a living.

I also owned a leased pub and payed more for my beer than rented pubs. and they needed us to work as they got rent of us rather than pay a wage !

MayBlossomEmpressofSpring

MayBlossomEmpressofSpring Report 29 Mar 2010 23:30

The biggest profit making product when I had a shop was birthday cards, 200%.

Supersleuth

Supersleuth Report 29 Mar 2010 23:43

SueMaid - the food distributor I used to work for would simply reduce the price to one supermarket to keep their business from time to time - so they could sell them exclusive new lines.

Products had a three day turn around and had to have at least a 75% shelf life from time of production.

Rare for there to be surplus because of the 'just in time' system ...... but mega stressful for the buyers ..... that's why I left - on my last month the computers crashed and I had to buy and sell over £1m of stock completely blindfolded!! ..........arrrrrrrgh

Redrobin

Redrobin Report 30 Mar 2010 00:27

I don't know what the mark up is these days, but back in the late 70's I was a ladies wear fashion buyer for a large chain of shops.

We would have summer print tiered skirts made up by the thousand for £2.00 each, sell them pre sale for £7.99 and then cut them to £4.99 at sale time.

We couldn't get them made quick enough and they were all made in London East End, not imported.

Tee shirts, imported via a Manchester wholesaler we got at 50p each, sold at £1.99. Sold out every time.

It is very hard for me to buy clothes knowing what I know.
Stick to classic styles, buy in winter sales for next winter etc.

SylviaG

TeresaW

TeresaW Report 30 Mar 2010 00:30

I worked for a distributor of childrens shoes. We'd sell wholesale at £18 to the retailer, but the RRP was £38.

We sold to Amazon and they went below the RRP, and the retailers went mad! I had to take all of those phone calls...needed a week off after that, but we dropped the Amazon account PDQ.

UzziAndHerDogs

UzziAndHerDogs Report 30 Mar 2010 00:55

SylviaG the stories I could tell about fashion stores lol I used to work in a sewing shop ...what didn't make M&S made the markets etc We did the same stuff for so many different brands

same as working the land really M&S took, some the The others, and the crap went to the markets ,,they all came out of the same sh*t

TeresaW

TeresaW Report 30 Mar 2010 10:15

Uzzi, I used to work in a celery packing plant, packing for all the supermarkets. M&S always got the biggest ones, Tesco the next size down, Sainsbury and Waitrose the next and Safeway slightly smaller. It was graded by how many we could get in a box, so size 18 would fit 18 to a box, always four boxes in front of us. When we'd packed the day's quota for M&S we then had to trim them down to the next size, the waste celery sticks going to the canning line for soups. Own brand would come last in the day, but strangely enough, they would end up in Tesco or Sainsburys, at a higher price than the supermarket branded. Same company, same field, and probably the same packer!!!

UzziAndHerDogs

UzziAndHerDogs Report 30 Mar 2010 10:26

TW I don't envy you the celery plant I used to work for shropshires packing (as well as a few others in E Anglia) and avoided the celery when ever possible. Used to pack cabbages or little gems instead but same thing M&S got the biggest then Sainsburys etc etc

TeresaW

TeresaW Report 30 Mar 2010 10:33

Uzzi nooo...I'm talking about Shropshires. Never made it to Greens lol

What a small world!

How long ago did you work there? I was there in 78 to 79

UzziAndHerDogs

UzziAndHerDogs Report 30 Mar 2010 11:20

lol what a small world I missed you by a year good old Shroppies eh?