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Free coupons -- no printing, no clipping

Posted May 01 2009, 10:34 AM by Donna Freedman
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Got coupons? Maybe not. Maybe your local paper includes few or no Sunday inserts. Maybe you're feeling so squeezed by the economic downturn that you can't afford new printer cartridges -- or for that matter, a Sunday paper.

Stephanie Nelson of CouponMom.com suggests a way to get free coupons. It takes very little work and is paying off for one of Nelson's co-workers.

First, write up a boilerplate note: "Your (insert product name here) is a terrific product. It (gets my whites whiter/makes my house cleaner/tastes much better) than any other products on the market. I've been using this product (for years/for decades/forever) but lately money has been tight and I have had to switch to store brands. Do you happen to have any coupons that you mail out to loyal customers?"

Next, go to the Web sites of companies whose products you like. Look for a customer feedback section. Cut and paste your e-mail. Hit "send."

Finally: Start checking your mailbox. Nelson says a co-worker who does this is "getting a lot of coupons in the mail -- some of the coupons are even for free items."

Sure, product feedback is a time-honored way to get noticed. Write or call to praise, or to complain, and you will often be rewarded. But Nelson's suggestion provides more bang for the buck. You can send a lot of e-mails fairly quickly, and this method requires neither stamps nor "hold time" on an 800 number.

Don't have the Internet at home? Head for the public library, or ask to borrow a friend's. (Hint: If you get a free baking mix out of the deal, be sure to take a few cupcakes over to your generous friend.)

If even one-fourth of the companies respond, this could be worth the effort -- especially if you double the coupons, "stack" them (i.e., combine them with in-store coupons), or combine them with sales/rebates. Should any of those companies send coupons for free items, that's quite the bonus; if they do, watch for "buy one, get one free" deals for that product and you'll get them both for free.

Nelson isn't suggesting you give up on Sunday circulars or printable coupons, however. "If they are for items you use anyway and you're printing a $5-off coupon for diapers, that's real money."

Incidentally, she surveyed her readers and found that nearly 90% of them have no trouble redeeming printable coupons.

One more tip: If you have a store loyalty card and don't get coupons mailed to you periodically, get rid of the old card and re-apply -- and this time, fill out and submit the form. "If you are not getting coupons from the store in the mail, then you probably didn't give them your address," Nelson says.

Some day soon, you'll be able to have paperless coupons downloaded to your cell phone or loyalty card. Then you won't have to worry about printed vs. clipped coupons -- or about forgetting to bring the coupons with you.

Related reading:

Frustrated by coupons? Maybe it's not your fault

Missed the big sale? Claim your savings anyway

The Zen of one loyalty card

Comments

 

I tried contacting most of my favorite brand companies and their stories were the same - high demand for coupons so they aren't giving them out anymore.  *SIGH*

Coupons are good - sometimes. It's worth checking out what is included in the Sunday newspaper. But, mass mailing companies to get freebies or cents off while not wrong, is indeed playing the system - and  with that I disagree. This is one of those "shades of gray" areas, and in this day and age where gray seems to dominate human morality, I advocate staying on the clear side of what is right. If one truly enjoys a product or has had problems, there is every reason to contact the company and to expect some recompense. To contact a compnay with the sole goal being to get something for nothing, is a bit shady and not my personal cup of tea.

About a year ago Quaker came out with a new kind of instant oatmeal.  I really liked it, and so I penned them a quick email praising this new product.  I wasn't trying to get coupons or anything, I was just hoping that they would keep on making the product and that my two cents might help to influence their decision to keep the product around.  Much to my delight, about three months later my friendly local UPS guy shows up at my door with a package from Quaker - inside were two full-sized boxes of oatmeal and two full-sized boxes of granola bars, along with about twenty or so coupons for more oatmeal and granola bars!  What a lovely surprise, and I'm even more loyal to this brand than before!

I was in walmart last week and they would not take my internet coupons with and without barcodes.  What do I do?  Kroger stopped taking them a year ago.  

If you can't afford new printer cartridges, as mentioned in the above article, how do you print out the coupons for your use you supposedly should receive via email? DUH!

This is stupid stuff!

John Geezer

My time is worth more than the money I might save spamming companies in hopes of getting coupons.

I shop at meijer and they accept internet coupons. I hope that does not change.

I stopped looking for coupons in the sunday paper. Most weeks it is filled with mail order merchandise instead of coupons. Not worth the money to buy the paper. And when they do have coupons its only for .35 or .50 off, if im lucky i break even with the cost of the paper.

I just emailed Welch's due to a problem with a frozen juice.  I received an email thanking me for mine and suggestions about the problem.  That was it.  I had poured the juice down the drain as it seemed to be bad.  No "we're sorry, here's a coupon". Nothing.  Just an email on what they think it was.

Walmart will take internet coupons.  They just have to have an expiration date, and an address to mail the coupon to.  I complained to Walmart Corporation when my Walmart told me that and everyone was calling me to appologize!!

If there are any sites for coupons, where you don't have to spend an hour answering stupid questions, just to get ONE coupon, let me know! I've given up on most of the sites because of the amount of time it takes to get their "free" coupons!

there is a website that will send the coupons to your store loyalty card electronically so you dont have to print, buy newspaper, clip, etc. The website is: www.upromise.com

Also, the money that you save using those coupons you can use it later for college savings... it's better explained in the website.

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