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 Post subject: Price Books Explained
PostPosted: 02 Oct 2008 16:17 
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Make A Price Book: Save Money At The Supermarket
Posted February 7th, 2008 by Cynthia Townley Ewer

Frugality: a noble value. Trouble is, if you've got a disorganized nature, the frugal life can seem daunting. How do tightwad friends remember all those prices, bargains, shopping bonanzas? Is the warehouse mega-pack a true bargain? When is a sale a sale?

Fight back with a powerful weapon from the frugal arsenal: the price book. First publicized by Amy Dacyczyn, author of the Tightwad Gazette book series, a price book is a tool for tracking prices, products and sales. It's a simple tool to save time, money and supermarket stress.

Form Follows Function

What do you use to create a price book? Form is unimportant. Low-tech tightwads use a small binder or spiral notebook to track price book information. Planner aficionados devote a tabbed section to price book pages.

The hi-tech housewife enters price book data in a computer spreadsheet (and the alpha geek downloads spreadsheet data to a palmtop computer for quick in-store consultation).

Paging Best Buys!

Whatever the form, the heart of the price book is the product page. Each page tracks price information for a single staple product. Down the page, you'll list the date, store, brand, size and price, and unit price for that product. Over time, you'll be able to identify the best regular price, recognize special sales, and track sale cycles for that product.

Our shopper can buy 8-ounce cans of tomato sauce for a regular supermarket price of 32 cents. Her warehouse store sells bulk cans of tomato sauce for a sharply lower unit price. However, the best buy occurs when the supermarket puts 8-ounce cans on sale at 10 for $1.

Armed with the price book analysis, our shopper has learned to stock up on 8-ounce cans of tomato sauce during supermarket sales. By continuing to track the price of tomato sauce, she can learn the sale cycle: how often to expect those 10/$1 deals to occur. In her area, that's about every 6 weeks--so she'll purchase enough on sale to cover her family's needs until the next sale.

Setting Up and Using Your Price Book:

You're sold on the concept of a price book. You know it will save money, trim time and lighten shopping stress.

Now for the fun! Follow these tips to set up and use your new price book.

Digging For Data

You've found a small notebook or printed free price book forms. Next step: gather and record your data.

Itemized grocery store receipts are a price book's best friend. On them, you'll find identified and itemized lists of products you buy and use. Jumpstart your price book by recording data from every receipt you can find.

For brevity, develop a list of store codes. Use a short abbreviation for each supermarket, discount store and warehouse store you patronize.

Keep a calculator handy for unit price calculations! To find any item's unit price, divide the cost of the item by the number of units. For an 8-ounce can of tomato sauce sold for $.32, enter .32, then divide by 8 to find the unit price of $.04.

If you're making price book entries at the supermarket, you can often find the unit price calculated on the shelf tag. Spreadsheet users can short-cut the calculation process by breaking out the price and size on the spreadsheet.

On The Firing Line

You've scrounged for receipts, entered your data, and now it's time to shop. Like good wine, a price book's value increases with age. At first, you'll be filling in initial entries for many, many product pages--but as time passes, the price book's growth will give you a clear view of the sales cycle.

Build your baby price book each time you shop. See a great special at Supermarket A, but you don't need the product that week? Record it in your price book. You'll know to return next sale cycle, ready to buy.

With a mature price book, item entries slow. Once you've sampled prices at several supermarkets, the discount store and warehouse store, only enter a new price if it is lower than your existing entries.

As your price book matures, be prepared for surprises! Often, the dedicated warehouse store bulk-buyer will discover that she's been paying premium prices for bulk goods. No single traditional supermarket has the "lowest prices" in every area, no matter what their advertising jingles say. Approach the price book exercise with an open mind; you'll find surprising bargains--and high price shocks--in the most amazing places.

Be aware: some price book shoppers have reported episodes of being confronted by supermarket personnel when they make price book entries at the store. A clear and polite explanation ("This is my personal price record; I'm tight-wadding these days. You've got a great deal on white potatoes this week!") should reassure store managers that you're not a snooper-shopper from a competing store. Don't stand for harassment! Any further confrontation should be reported to the chain's higher-ups for action.

Ready, Set, Save!

Over time, you'll build an impressive data bank of local supermarket pricing information. You'll know that name-brand Mexican food products will be offered at the year's lowest prices just before Cinco de Mayo, the 5th of May. You'll know when to stock up on steaks, or sodas, or diet foods. You'll understand that canned tuna will be offered at 3/$1 every six weeks--and you'll purchase six weeks' worth of tuna during that buying opportunity.

You'll also know, at a glance, when to buy in bulk from the warehouse store and when to look for a better deal at the supermarket. Not all bulk purchases represent true bargains. Armed with a price book, you'll know to a fraction of a penny when to load up on the big bag of flour, and when to pass it up in favor of the supermarket's loss leader of the week.

Most of all, a price book will reveal your target price: a realistic, rock-bottom price goal for each item listed in your book. Whether it's cereal for $1.99 per box or detergent at 9 cents per use, you'll have the information you need to know when a bargain is truly a bargain.

Price books. They give you a leg up on the chaotic, ever-changing supermarket price game. Save time, save money and get organized at the supermarket with a price book!

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 Post subject: Re: Price Books Explained
PostPosted: 02 Oct 2008 17:44 
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Wow this sounds great. But to do all the stores might be a daunting task. Maybe we could all band together and hit seperate stores, type them up and then share them. Or even better make a post on here for each store and as we go to the store we add the prices of the items we bought. Kind of like an ongoing thing that we could print or refer to. I don't know its just an idea?

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 Post subject: Re: Price Books Explained
PostPosted: 03 Oct 2008 09:08 
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2babies1momma wrote:
Wow this sounds great. But to do all the stores might be a daunting task. Maybe we could all band together and hit seperate stores, type them up and then share them. Or even better make a post on here for each store and as we go to the store we add the prices of the items we bought. Kind of like an ongoing thing that we could print or refer to. I don't know its just an idea?


I would do that. I HAD one for Homeland that I did for 2 months and when it rained it got ruined :( I miss my book. I can do Homeland!! I think I live there. Went to Wal-mart last month to do the bulk of my shopping on the 1st and Wowzers it was very high even with coupons. I am back to Homeland for most things. What we need to do is compile a list of prices we want to look at. Price books do not do any good if they are items that no one is buying.

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 Post subject: Re: Price Books Explained
PostPosted: 03 Oct 2008 09:20 
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I always wondered where it would be cheapest to shop. I have been going to Crest for the bulk of my shopping because I thought it was cheapest for my regular items. What I need to do is learn how to plan my meal items around sale items because then I could cut my bill in half. I just haven't figured out how to do that yet. I have several Crest reciepts to start us off in that store. I think we need a Price book catagory on here. I'm just wondering how we all could add to the post? But I love the idea, sometimes I just go to the store and spend hours going over my coupons with the regular prices to get the best deals.

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 Post subject: Re: Price Books Explained
PostPosted: 03 Oct 2008 12:14 
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2babies1momma wrote:
I always wondered where it would be cheapest to shop. I have been going to Crest for the bulk of my shopping because I thought it was cheapest for my regular items. What I need to do is learn how to plan my meal items around sale items because then I could cut my bill in half. I just haven't figured out how to do that yet. I have several Crest reciepts to start us off in that store. I think we need a Price book catagory on here. I'm just wondering how we all could add to the post? But I love the idea, sometimes I just go to the store and spend hours going over my coupons with the regular prices to get the best deals.


Since I am a moderator I could combine all the posts into one and then delete the other ones to keep it cohesive. I am posting about this in member chat to see who else is interested.

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 Post subject: Re: Price Books Explained
PostPosted: 04 Oct 2008 11:32 
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BE CAREFUL SOME stores get VERY VERY NASTY when people are checking and writing down prices. In some states you can be tossed out of the store and a no trespass can be issued. I had to go and do price compare for a store I used to work for and let me tell you the way other stores react you would think I was stealing the crown jewels!
Store who has nasty issue with people writing down their prices
Wal-mart
Walgreens
Target
CVS
Safeway
albertsons
krogers
so be careful when in the stores !

According to the stores this is..... are you ready for this spying ... it hurts their business, well lower your prices! Lord wish I could remember the name of it but some stores have been know to charge you with something lord it has been so long I can not remember the name of what they called it so be careful out there!
and yes stupid I know !

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 Post subject: Re: Price Books Explained
PostPosted: 06 Oct 2008 10:12 
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I did this at Homeland (Britton and May) Wal-Mart Neighborhood (Penn and Britton) and Buy 4 Less (NW Exp and Portland / NW 36th and McArthur) and had no problems.

I always shop at Homeland so they know me there same with Wal-Mart neighborhood. Buy 4 Less at NW 36th and McArthur the manager there knows me now and one of the ladies in the bakery calls my baby her son (I know a little weird) but they are all friendly to me and I have never had an issue at those stores about price books. I have told the associates what I am doing and saying I am trying to see what items go on sale when. The Frito lay guys are helpful too they can tell you the cheapest place in town to get their items...LOL!

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