Ask Me Your Coupon Questions!

Are you new to using coupons? Have questions about stacking coupons, the Lingo or anything else? If you have a question, chances are that someone else has the same one.

Simply head to my Coupon Questions page, submit your question and it will be answered in a future post on Moms Need To Know!

Looking for more Extreme Couponing tips? Make sure that you check out all the posts in my Coupon 101 and Coupon Ethics sections!

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Five Things a Coupon Newbie Should Know

The following is a guest post from Ruth at Living Well Spending Less:

Hi everyone! My name is Ruth and I blog about the adventure of finding style and luxury on a budget over at Living Well Spending Less. I am so happy to be guest-posting here today! One of my favorite ways to save money is with coupons, and while I’ve been using coupons for a long time, a recent visit to my sister in Washington State reminded me how overwhelming it can be for beginners.

If you are new to using coupons, here are 5 things you should know.

1. It’s okay to have questions.

Everyone has questions. Lots of them! And honestly, there are no stupid questions because chances are that if you are wondering about something, then someone else is too. Blogs are a great place to learn about coupons because you can leave comments and people will answer you! It’s a beautiful thing.

2. Prices matter

Just because it is on sale, doesn’t mean it is a good price. When you are just starting out, it is sometimes hard to know whether something is a “rock bottom” price. You can download a free LWSL Rock Bottom Price list here.

3. Extreme Couponing has its own language

There are a lot of acronyms that go along with couponing. Here are just a few of the most common:

  • Blinkie or Tearpad-Coupons found next to products in store
  • BOGO or B1G1-Buy One Get One Free
  • MQ-Manufacturer’s Coupon
  • Peelie-Coupon stuck to a product package
  • PG-Proctor & Gamble Insert
  • Q-Coupon
  • OOP-Out of Pocket
  • RP-Red Plum Insert
  • SS-Smart Source Insert

4. Try not to go too crazy

Saving money is exciting and in the beginning, it is very easy to want to take on everything all at once. While it is great to be enthusiastic, try not to become obsessed. Don’t freak out if you “miss out” on a deal–more will always come along–and don’t forget to live the rest of your life in your quest to master the coupon world.

5. Take it one step at a time

In fact, I highly recommend that you take it slow! You will have much more success in the long run if you really take the time to understand the process and not get overwhelmed. Stay organized, start with only one store, keep your lists small and manageable. Remember, it is a process not an instant solution!

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Readers Want To Know: “I Have Different Coupons Than You!”

I get these emails all the time…why am I posting different coupons that the ones that you got in your weekly circular?

The answer? Coupons are regional.  Companies have a limited advertising budget and want get their coupons in front of the greatest number of potential customers.  Many of these choose to forgo the “smaller market” papers and stick to putting their coupons in the “Big City” newspapers. Some even decide to put different value coupons in different areas of the country.

The Walgreens Splenda deal that I posted earlier today is a perfect example of how the inserts can be different.  Pictured above is the April 17, 2011 SmartSource insert from 2 different newspapers.

Why do I buy 2 different papers each week? Because The Philadelphia Inquirer, the largest paper in the area, no longer carries the RedPlum insert.  If I want to get the RedPlum inserts, I am forced to buy a newspaper for one of the other local small cities.

The insert on the left is from the Pottstown Mercury.  The insert on the right is from The Philadelphia Inquirer.  Both inserts have the General Mills coupons, the Kraft Homestyle Mac & cheese coupons, the Oreo coupons and more.

HOWEVER, the one on the left (from the smaller paper), does NOT have the Listerine coupons, the Splenda coupons and many more of the coupons listed in my Coupon Insert Preview for the week.

We’ve had this discussion a few times in the comments of my weekly Coupon Insert Preview posts, because I have started mentioning how many copies of the Philadelphia Inquirer I will be buying in order to get “the good SmartSource” insert.  A few of you have said that you were no longer going to worry about getting “the good SmartSource” any longer…and were just going to buy the one that contained the Redplum insert.  Those that did that this week will NOT be able to take advantage of the Splenda Deal at Walgreens!

Some of of you have emailed me that the coupons in my Coupon Database don’t match the ones that you got in your local paper.  With so many possible variations each week of so many coupons, it is hard to ensure that every different value of coupon makes it in to the Coupon Database.  Please feel free to use the “Suggest a Coupon” button (pictured below) when you find this happening.  The coupon will be reviewed by the team at MyCouponDatabase and inserted in to the database.  The more people who do this, the more we help each other!

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Readers Want To Know: When Your Legitimate Coupons Are Declined

Welcome to Readers Want to Know! These are your questions answered from the emails that I receive and responses to surveys that I periodically post. For more answers, make sure you check out my Coupon 101 posts which will also include other “Readers Want To Know” posts! Still have questions? Any other questions? Use this form to ask them!

swimchick037 (and a few others) asked:

What to say/do when the cashier rejects your coupon when you know it should be accepted?

That’s a great question and one that I covered in my “When Things Go Wrong” post…but let’s dig a little deeper.  I will be focusing on printables, because those are the coupons that seem to give all of us the most trouble:

1.  Remain calm and TRY to keep a smile on your face.  The old adage that you get more flies with honey than vinegar remains true.  Don’t take it personally.  This is a business transaction!

2.  Do a quick little “mental double check” of which store you are in and their specific coupon policy. If you shop at several different stores, it is easy to get the individual stores and their coupon policy mixed up.  Are you at Rite Aid and trying to use the (quite legitimate) $6/2 Benefiber printable coupon?  Well – Rite Aid doesn’t accept printables for over $5 (per their coupon policy).  Is it a Buy One Get Free Coupon?  My experience is that, due to rampant coupon fraud, about half of the stores nationwide have stopped accepting printable coupons that have the word “Free” on them, even when it requires an additional purchase.

3.  If the cashier is telling you “we don’t accept Internet Printables”, show them a copy of their coupon policy that you have printed from their site (note:  I am working on another post about various coupon policies…will update this post with a link as soon as the post goes live).  Not all stores post their coupon policy online.  If you are having consistent problems with a store, you might want to go to their website, use the “Contact” form and request clarification of their policy!

4.  Ask the cashier for specifics as to why she is not accepting your coupon. Is it because you printed it in black & white? She might be concerned that it is photocopied (as we discussed, this is ALL kinds of WRONG). Many printables now state specifically that the coupon may be printed in B&W or color. Is it because the coupon won’t scan? Many store policies now state that the coupon MUST scan in order for them to be accepted. In a case like this, there is nothing you can do (except run a print alignment function for your printer to ensure this doesn’t happen in the future, although the manufacturer also simply could have coded it wrong). If she just doesn’t seem to want to accept it or refuses to even scan it? Ask to speak to a manager.

5.  You’ve got the manager in front of you…now what? In 8 times out of 10, I have found that store managers (not “leads”…you want a guy in a shirt & a tie or a woman in dressier clothes than the cashier. Most managers are NOT required to wear a vest of some sort over their “regular clothes”…except where my husband works, but that isn’t a grocery store) are WAY more informed about how to spot a legitimate coupon and they simply insert their key and push the coupon through (or tell the cashier that it is ok).  When this happens, please try not to gloat too much in front of the cashier.  Unless she is a bona fide “couponer hater” (there are a few at EVERY store in the country), she was probably just trying to protect her job.  She accepts fraudulent coupons?  She gets in trouble!

5a.  There will be times when the manager comes over and STILL refuses to accept your legitimate coupon.  It’s ok.  Don’t lose your cool.  You can live to coupon another day.  Simply smile and say “that’s fine.  Please remove these items from my order, I won’t be buying them today”.  When you are in the store and dealing with the manager-on-duty…that is really the most you can do at that moment.

Keep your smile (and your cool) until you finish your transaction and get to your car.  THEN you can feel free to shout every expletive in the book.

Once you have calmed down, consider calling to corporate office to let them know what happened.

In all cases, always think about if this is the “hill you want to die on”.

If we are talking about a single $0.50 coupon and you are shopping on a Saturday afternoon and there is a line 6 deep behind you, it might be worth it to just skip to step 5a, ask them to take the item off your order and move on.

Because believe me….if you hold up their line on the busiest day of the week over a matter of $0.50…they WILL remember you next time, and not in a good way.  I know that may not seem fair (especially if you were in the right), but it is reality.

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Readers Want To Know: Can I Photocopy Coupons?

Welcome to Readers Want to Know! These are your questions answered from the emails that I receive and responses to surveys that I periodically post. For more answers, make sure you check out my Coupon 101 posts which will also include other “Readers Want To Know” posts! Any other questions? Use this form to ask them!

Welcome to my newest series…Readers Want To Know (heh! Get it?). In this series, I will be posting real questions that I have received from real readers. So let’s get started!

Can I photocopy coupons that I have printed from the Internet?

The short answer? No! The semi-short answer? NoNoNoNo, A Thousand Times No!

The long answer? Here’s a few reasons why:

If you wouldn’t consider trying to photocopy a coupon from a weekly insert, why would you think it was ok to photocopy a printable coupon?  I have said many times that coupons are a form of payment, not a discount.  It really is the same as trying to photocopy the $20 bill in your wallet and trying to use that as payment.

Aside from that, printable coupons have several security features to help reduce fraud (which photocopying of coupons is)…the most noticeable being the unique serial number in the upper right-hand side of the coupon (click on the picture below to enlarge it and read about the different features).

That number is unique to each coupon. Print out 2 copies of a coupon from almost any site (most coupon sites will allow you 2 prints per computer) and you will see that the two coupons may have identical UPC barcodes, but different serial numbers. The companies will only reimburse ANY store for that one serial number one time.

Bottom line: Copy coupons and use them? The coupons WILL scan at the store, but once they hit the clearinghouse (where the coupons are processed and the stores get reimbursed) any duplicate serial codes will be rejected and the store won’t get paid for your photocopied coupons. So you save money, the store doesn’t get paid and once “corporate” finds out, the cashier and store manager possibly both get “written up”.  Does that seem fair?

I am choosing to assume that the 8 variations of this question that I received on a recent survey were honest questions from people who didn’t KNOW that you can’t photocopy coupons. If you have been photocopying coupons because you didn’t know that you couldn’t, I hope that this inspires you to please STOP RIGHT NOW.

…because photocopying printable coupons is Coupon Fraud.

Any other questions? Head to this form to ask them! Please know that at any given time, I have over 100 questions to respond to. I try to respond to the “most asked” first!

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