The gracery game




















I just checked. So far, best site is GrocerySmarts. Would like to see others though if anyone knows one. CouponMom is a great site. Alerts, searching non-sale matchups, customer support, list building.

Anyway — feel free to check out all our free stuff including my free couponing podcast. If you should happen to be interested in more, you can use the coupon code GAME for a free week when starting. So sad to see the GG go!!! I just logged on to SavingsAngel for the first time, and frankly, it is very confusing to navigate and is hard to determine if your site can fill my need.

I appreciate you wanting to create a brand however your site is so busy. I started by clicking the try it free and have yet been able to access or even find where that is. I keep getting directed to all these buy this now ads as well as enroll in your service. I think your site could really be a contender filling the loss of the GG you just need to hire a professional to come in and clean up the site and make it much simpler and clearer to navigate.

Thank you so much for the feedback Eileen! So sorry — and please reach out to our helpdesk if we can be of any help — whether or not you decide an SA membership is for you. I totally agree with you Eileen. I signed up for it too, and paid, and I cannot get through making one simple list with it. No offense to Josh, but the site is a mess of ads and poorly formatted spreadsheets and very little advice about which deals are actually worth it.

But seriously, consider hiring some professional designers to clean it up, especially considering what it costs to be a member. Hey Annie, Rachel or I can help with nearly everything you mentioned. Just point this out to Rachel in a support ticket. Thanks for input Josh. I too was in a mass panic without Tgg services. Signed up with your site, you added King Soopers for us, thank you.

Biggest problem is your list are accurately represented fir different regions. The only Safeway we currently list on SavingsAngel. That is likely why. I loved GG and have been a customer for a very long time. I have never liked the free sites that I have found.

Selecting your deals, clipping the coupons, and printing your lists were a breeze when they updated their program several years ago. I too een a customer for a LONG time. I really deeded on the site weekly.. Where is everyone going now? Any suggestions? I would love to know too. I am also in CA. Yes, please share! I need easy! Your email address will not be published. Your Website. Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

Notify me of follow-up comments by email. Notify me of new posts by email. Share this! Tweet this! Tags: Coupon blogs.

Jessie says: February 9, at pm. Mara says: January 5, at pm. Cristine says: August 31, at pm. Good luck all and happy savings.

Jessie says: September 1, at am. Cristine says: September 1, at pm. Shandra Madsen says: March 13, at pm. Melanie says: December 18, at pm. Has anyone tried The Krazy Coupon Lady? Coupon says: September 1, at pm. Dana Warner says: August 25, at pm. Jessie says: August 25, at pm. Rachel Underhill says: August 25, at pm. Debby Borgerding says: July 21, at am. Rachel Underhill says: July 21, at am. Hi, Debby — I am very sorry for the frustration. I will address all your questions here.

I hope this addresses all your questions. I will also post this on the Coupons In News thread. Here for you — Rachel. LeighAnn says: November 11, at pm. Lisa says: November 12, at am. Jessie says: November 12, at pm. Skeeter says: July 11, at pm. Jim says: October 20, at pm. Depending on where you live, you may be able to use southernsavers.

Gene Jones says: August 8, at am. Donna says: April 27, at pm. Michael says: April 19, at pm. Annie says: March 14, at pm. Angela says: April 15, at am. Kimberly says: February 28, at pm. Rachel says: April 26, at pm. Hi, Kimberly — I am so sorry for your frustration. In not, please contact me at the SavingsAngel HelpDesk and mention this conversation. Catherine says: February 19, at pm. The website watches and matches coupons and sales for grocery stores around the United States and Canada.

This is designed to ensure that you can maximize your savings. The Grocery Game may help you save money and time, as well.

One benefit of the site is that it features both advertised and unadvertised sales; hence, you may get a deal on the site you may not find elsewhere. Further, the color-coded sales lists advice you on those rock bottom prices that are a very good deal and you are advised to stock up on the items. Black is for those that are of good value.

Blue, for those items you should stock up on. Whereas, green is for free items. Why clip thousands of coupons when you have a coupon-sale matching website that caters to your zip code and make the work easier for you? I still miss The Grocery GAme. It made it so easy. The Grocery Game is worth a try! Wikipedia tells us the chain peaked out at stores, evolved, acquired, and declined before going defunct around the year A familiar story for many regional and national grocers.

Mostly though, maybe the technology is the biggest difference. From managing the inventory with paper and pencil to pricing items with stampers to hitting the keys of the mechanical cash register, it was all so manual. Perhaps the biggest similarity is that we all now seem to be part of a timed contest.

Whether we are doing the shopping at the store or online, grocery shopping feels very much like a race to beat the clock to win, not free groceries, but time. We get to keep more of our precious time. Well that was then. And this is now. Sure, the emerging grocery retail landscape has its challenges, but there are huge opportunities for competitive advantages. Retailers who make sensible, considered decisions stand to gain greater control of costs and improve what they can offer customers.

This is only a small proportion of the overall market, but critical for attracting and retaining new customers — especially in terms of delivery. Or customers can pick up online orders inside a store or have it brought to them outside. The business model flaw here is obvious.

In a big weekly shop, customers self-service the picking and final delivery. But with online orders, retailers take on those costs. Is there a way of picking, assembling, and delivering orders at a profit? Some early adopters chose to fulfill online orders from the shelves of their larger stores. This allowed for a quick and relatively cheap implementation, but only for low volumes.

As volumes grow, obvious conflicts between regular customers and order pickers for online purchases grow, making picking less efficient and shopping less enjoyable. The best these methods can offer is next-day delivery, and a significant part of the online market has come to expect better than this. A half century ago, the big population trend was definitely people moving from urban cores to suburbs to exurbs and beyond.

Today, that has somewhat reversed. But local stores have constraints. Prime locations in urban stores are unlikely to have much space for loading bay or back rooms to accommodate full pallets of product or have much chilled or freezer capacity.

Replenishment — especially for fresh food — must be in small but frequent shipments. Local stores are also unlikely to offer a solution to the online shopping. And in many cities, regulation of truck sizes and times of operation further limit timely deliver.

Each era has had its own unique challenges for controlling and if possible reducing the cost of service.



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