iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

'Extreme Couponing' Inspires Cult Of Grocery Store Savers

By JESSIE L. BONNER   07/ 7/11 06:58 AM ET   AP

BOISE, Idaho -- The women sat expectantly as Monica Knight told them she once routinely spent $600 a month on groceries for her family of four. Breaking into a broad smile, Knight says that figure has been reduced to only $100 to $150 a month.

And now the dental hygienist and mother of two is about to tell them her secret.

The women lean forward in their seats. They're the latest disciples of extreme couponing; women who carry pictures of their overflowing pantries on their cell phones; savvy shoppers who will spend hours flipping through newspaper and magazine advertisements in search of their bargains, and homemakers who have pinched pennies to put food on the table during the recession and need the extra help.

Most have watched the television series "Extreme Couponing," which debuted on TLC in April and follows shoppers whose intense devotion to finding bargains can whittle a $555.44 grocery store bill down to $5.97, to cite one extreme example.

Heather Border, a 36-year-old mother of four in rural Idaho, is a new to the extreme coupon phenomenon. But she was hooked a few weeks ago, after coupons and store deals brought her $180 grocery bill down to $40.

"I was feeling a little conspicuous because people were staring at me," Border said. "Then, I felt a rush."

She was among about 20 women who attended an extreme coupon class on a recent Saturday in Boise. The three-hour course was taught by Knight and her business partner, Cathy Yoder. They own the extreme couponing blog, "Fabulessly Frugal."

The women oohed and awed as Knight pulled out the fat binder of coupons that saves her 50 percent to 90 percent on every grocery bill. She showed off pictures of the stockpile of food at her home, where 46 boxes of cereal are stowed in her children's bedroom closet and packages of breakfast drink mix are kept under a bed.

In their class, Yoder and Knight warn against some of the practices that have given extreme coupon cutters like themselves a bad rap.

They instruct their students to be kind to their cashiers. They encourage them to stockpile food to help their families, but caution against "hoarding" or clearing shelves of items that their families don't need or won't use. They also warned against photocopying coupons, which can place stores on alert and ruin deals for everyone.

"I think the stores are a little freaked out because of the television show," said Knight, who advises her students to keep a copy of grocery store policies on hand during shopping trips in case problems arise.

Even before the "Extreme Couponing" series, grocery stores were put on alert about counterfeit coupons that were circulating online. The National Grocers Association issued a warning in 2009, as couponing made a fierce comeback during the peak of the recession.

The coupon-processing company Inmar Inc. reported coupon use doubling in the first half of 2009 compared with the same period a year earlier,

The Internet has also bolstered coupon use, with a wide range of online promotions, databases of coupons and bloggers who regularly post about the best deals.

"This is a whole new ballgame," said Glenda Glisson, 63, who attended the extreme couponing class in Boise.

The Kroger Co., which operates the nation's largest traditional grocery chain, launched a website about 18 months ago that allows customers to download coupons to their store discount cards or onto home computers to print. The site added a mobile phone coupon app last year.

"We've seen slightly more complex couponing, which can take longer for us to help our customers exit the store," said Kroger spokesman Keith Dailey.

The so-called extreme couponers make up a small portion of customers and Kroger has not been forced to limit coupon use because of the trend, he said.

"But we're certainly keeping an eye on the industry," Dailey said.

At Fabulessly Frugal, savvy shoppers can find video tutorials and state specific coupon lists. The site boasts nine bloggers, including the coupon class instructors Yoder and Knight, who specialize in specific grocery stores.

Yoder started the blog about three years ago for family and friends. She knew Knight, who had also started to clip coupons, from her church and the two started blogging together in November 2008. A few months later, Yoder learned that she was pregnant with her seventh child, and then her husband lost his job.

Her family, however, had a reserve of food to fall back on thanks to coupons, Yoder said.

During her best shopping trip, she purchased 165 boxes of cereal for about $14.

It wasn't long before Yoder and Knight realized their extreme coupon website could make money. The site features advertisements and they get paid per click on about 75 percent of the coupons found on the website, Yoder said. They made $35 the first month it featured the coupons, she said.

"We make that in an hour now," said Yoder, who now supports her family with the website, which gets about 30,000 hits per day.

The coupon craze is both good and bad, she said.

On one hand, she makes a living off it.

"At the same time there's just an increased level of frustration for everybody," she said in reference to the long lines and sometimes empty shelves.

Yoder and other extreme coupon cutters acknowledge some participants do cross the line.

In Idaho, two newspapers reported this month that coupon inserts were being stolen from their racks. The state's largest newspaper, the Idaho Statesman, set up a sting in Boise and filed a police report after a woman was caught pulling the ads from more than a dozen copies.

In nearby Nampa, a woman said she was banned from Wal-Mart stores because of an argument over her use of a competitor's coupon.

"We should have accepted the coupon, and we understand that this could have been handled differently from both sides. I've since reached out to the customer and invited her back to our store," said Lorenzo Lopez, a Wal-Mart spokesman based in Arkansas.

While some newspapers have reported thefts, several have also reported that sales are up with help from coupons.

In Washington state, the Columbia Basin Herald reported single copies sales were up 12 percent in May, compared to the previous year. The newspaper reported that more than 800 newspapers were sold at its Moses Lake, Wash., offices on a recent Wednesday afternoon.

While the coupon clipping trend is probably not a huge factor when it comes to newspaper circulation, the coupon business has been very healthy during the recession, said Rick Edmonds, a media business analyst at The Poynter Institute in St. Petersburg, Fla.

"I think, particularly with unemployment rates what they are, the phenomenon is going to be around for a while," he said.

___

Array

FOLLOW HUFFPOST FOOD

Filed by Joe Satran  |  Report Corrections
 
 
  • Comments
  • 50
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3  Next ›  Last »  (3 total)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
writeon1
Pundit in my own mind
01:20 PM on 07/11/2011
I watched that show once and I was shocked. It won't be long before there will be a re-hab for coupon-ers. Talk about obsession. I am not referring to the people that truly need and use the stuff but the hoarders that, as one woman put it--get a rush. http://newsy1.wordpress.com
photo
Buckeye54
...the One your mom warned you about!
09:39 AM on 07/10/2011
Just look at the physiques of these people that appear on these extreme couponing shows. Most of them look like they would keel over if they ate any fresh fruit or vegetables.
01:51 AM on 07/09/2011
Mr. Dailey's statement that Kroger hasn't been forced to limit coupon use seems to be untrue. On April 13th, Kroger discontinued the double and triple coupon promotion in the Houston Metro area affecting 6.1 million people. The Perrysburg, OH Kroger store reduced 1.00 double coupons to .99. There have been numerous instances of new like coupon limits being put in place, and limits to the number of internet coupons per transaction. These changes have occurred since the initial airing of the TLC Extreme Couponing show in December, 2010. The series has been a showcase for what NOT to do with coupons. There were many examples of the incorrect coupons being used by the participants to obtain items at the manufacturers' expense. Even the stores who participated, were out the doubling portion of coupons redeemed fraudulently. Newspaper crimes are being reported daily. Over zealous thieves are stealing the coupon inserts, and even stealing papers from peoples' driveways. No good has come of this show. The only ones who profited are Discovery TLC, the advertisers, the participants who are driving traffic to their paid link blogs and forums, and the stores who generated publicity and sales. If they showed couponers throwing concrete blocks through grocery store windows to make off with free stuff, it would be on Cops. They'd be led off in cuffs at the end of the show, no clapping, cheering, or high fives!!
01:45 AM on 07/09/2011
(Part 2)

The people that go on this show and clear shelves and/or use coupons on items other than that written on the coupon have thrown away whatever ethics they had for INFAMY. I hope they enjoy their new followers, because the veteran couponers that MAY have known and had any respect for them have turned their backs on how they easily waived their Couponer's Ethics "because EC wanted me to do it." -- That EXCUSE brings to mind the age-old parents' question: "And if all your friends jumped off a bridge into a raging river, you would too?" ... Anyone that grew up with values/ethics KNOWS the "right" answer to that!

REAL couponers don't have a year's worth of anything -- sales AND coupons come in cycles. REAL couponers regularly donate, very quietly, throughout the year. REAL couponers do NOT throw their ethics out the window in order to be on tv.
01:44 AM on 07/09/2011
[quote]"We've seen slightly more complex couponing, which can take longer for us to help our customers exit the store," said Kroger spokesman Keith Dailey.

The so-called extreme couponers make up a small portion of customers and Kroger has not been forced to limit coupon use because of the trend, he said. [unquote]

Really? That isn't what shoppers are being told. Then, again, why am I NOT surprised that Kroger is telling different stories to different listeners? They choose to ignore the thousands of posts concerning changes in their coupon policies on their facebook page, not to mention the calls to corporate Customer Svc or complaints to managers from veteran couponers. They refuse to acknowledge the KrogerCouponers facebook group of 1400+ members fighting to have d/t coupons returned to the Houston/Gulf Coast area of Texas (and NOW, other areas of TX) AND to retain the coupon policies in other areas ... which HAVE changed since Kroger's PROMINENT visibility in this ridiculous show which promotes organized theft, fraudulent coupon usage, false store coupon acceptance policies, and shelf-clearing.

The people that go on this show and clear shelves and/or use coupons on items other than that written on the coupon have thrown away whatever ethics they had for INFAMY. I hope they enjoy their new followers, because the veteran couponers that MAY have known and had any respect for them have turned their backs on how they easily waived their Couponer's Ethics "because EC wanted me to
10:25 PM on 07/08/2011
I agree I think extreme anything is not good. There are some great coupons out there but there's no way I would buy stuff just because i have a coupon. I regularly check one deal site www.idreamfrugally.com and mainly because i love the travel posts, kids stuff and clothing.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Enzo Ferrari
04:07 PM on 07/08/2011
They need to rename this show " Hoarders 2 "
02:00 AM on 07/08/2011
This past week the TLC network premiered a new series called Extreme Couponing. It has drawn a great deal of controversy across the internet. one smart source for coupon is "Printapon" check it out
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
09:45 PM on 07/08/2011
I did, it's lame and spammy. Wish I could vote your post down.
photo
EmilyRose 85
A green city on a blue lake.
12:43 AM on 07/08/2011
My sister-in-law, a stay home mom, is a fan of the couponing trend and has used it to stockpile some staples, hygene products, and other items especially for her two young kids (think diapers and baby food). You can certainly take it too far and I think for some people it does serve as a justification for hoarding tendencies or buying food no one needs to eat in the first place. But as hard as it is for families to get by these days, I think it's a little sanctimonious to portray big box retailers as victims and the behavior as 'unethical.' Retailers can choose to limit/prohibit coupon acceptance if they feel it's worth the trade-off.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:03 PM on 07/08/2011
I had to get my wife to stop buying crappy food because of coupons. Toiletries are fine, but keep anything in a box out of my kitchen please.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
deweydecimal
@DeweyMai on Twitter
12:00 AM on 07/08/2011
It's fascinating and grotesque all at once because it seems it's all heavily processed food. I've never seen this type of behaviour in a Canadian grocery, I don't think our system allows it.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:02 PM on 07/08/2011
I don't think they allowed stacking at grocery stores when I lived in Canada. Here, you use a manufacturer's coupon, store coupon, sale price and store premiums (some stores give in-store "bucks" back) to get items virtually free. My wife hasn't paid for toiletries in years. The food they discount is pretty much crap though.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
deweydecimal
@DeweyMai on Twitter
06:54 PM on 07/08/2011
I'd love to not have to pay $8.49 for a bottle of shampoo. That was yesterday at Shoppers. Jeez.
06:20 PM on 07/09/2011
I don't use coupons for food very often for this very reason. Most of the food coupons are for packaged foods I don't make. Finding coupons for staples is hard.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Happy Clb
07:58 PM on 07/07/2011
this could almost be performance art. :)
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
07:25 PM on 07/07/2011
Their website pictures processed crap food that they got for "free" using coupons. They talk about getting Oscar Myers lunchmeat coupons at checkout--I pass. Frankly I don't eat that crap and I don't feed it to my family.
06:11 PM on 07/07/2011
This is wrong to me on so many levels. Coupons are often to introduce you to a new product. They are meant to be one to a customer. Just because you can find multiple copies of a coupon and use them all at once doesn't make it right. And often, it seems to me, the people doing this are the conservative religious types. Don't they see the moral question? Then the whole hoarding issue is also offensive to me. Why are they hoarding boxes of sugary cereal and drink mix? I agree with other posters who say this is all processed food that should be eaten occasionally, not on a daily basis. This all sounds condescending, I know. I have never had to feed seven children on a limited budget. But then, I would never have seven children in the first place!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
07:28 PM on 07/07/2011
Yes, I looked at their website and it pictured processed food and listed current coupon deals for the same type of foods. There were no coupons for fresh vegetables and fruits.
photo
baxtron
tek phlarpt
05:48 PM on 07/07/2011
sweet! they can fill those empty craft stores with couponing classes.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
xeronius
Mostly Straight, LGBTQ Friendly
03:12 PM on 07/07/2011
I wish coupons weren't mostly for processed food and sugary snacks and such. I have recently started cutting most of that out of my diet and eating fresh healthy food. I wish there were more coupons for folks like me, because not eating garbage can be pretty expensive.
Tia2008
A little kindness goes a long way.
09:22 PM on 07/09/2011
"not eating garbage can be pretty expensive." You are so right. We usually eat fresh healthy foods but the cost really hits us in the pocket. Went grocery shopping yesterday and the red peppers (my favorite) were 2.99 lb.; the asparagus (my favorite green veggie) was 3.99!
Veggie coupons would be nice. We use coupons for toiletries and occassional sweet snacks and that does help us save some money.