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Couponers share their best tips, strategies

 

Rachel Stark rachel.stark@indystar.com
The Indianapolis Star
July 24, 2011 ET

She had scanned and planned and print­ed and clipped, and now with her shopping list and coupon orga­nizer in hand, Briana Carter was ready to take on the grocery store.

The Tipton moth­er of four rose early on a Sunday to make it to a No­blesville Kroger by 9 -- at least a 20-minute drive that was worth it in the eyes of the local coupon queen. This morning, there was a special "mega sale."

Carter heads into ev­ery grocery store with a game plan: mem­o­rizing the layout of the store and orga­nizing her coupons accord­ingly.

This day, the first stop was the produce section. She picked up two packages of strawberries, placed them neatly in her cart, then rolled onward to aisle 3 for some snacks. Two boxes of Ritz crackers, on sale for $2.69.

Carter had a coupon in her hand for almost ev­ery item she picked up -- all part of a carefully constructed, ev­er-evolving system that the 32-year-old uses to stretch her bud­get.

Known as Bargain Briana in the couponing world, Carter de­scribes her system as "extreme couponing re­alis­tically." An accountant at a me­chan­ical con­tracting firm, she also runs her own blog, www.bargainbriana.com, which includes a coupon database, deal alerts and couponing tips. Since its cre­ation in 2008, she's gained a fol­lowing of close to 28,000 on Facebook and 63,000 on Twitter.

Carter's devoted fol­lowers are testa­ment to the current coupon craze, fu­eled by the con­tinued re­ces­sion and popular televi­sion se­ries "Extreme Couponing," which debuted in April on TLC.

Americans' coupon us­age began to rise in October 2008, accord­ing to Inmar, a North Car­olina-based compa­ny that issued a report on coupon re­demption in 2011. In 2009, the popular­ity of coupons con­tinued to increase, as Americans re­deemed 3.3 billion packaged-goods coupons.

And the trend shows no signs of slowing, as avid bargain hunters con­tinue to go to great lengths for coupons, including search­ing Dumpsters and recycling bins for newspaper in­serts and sell­ing them in bulk on eBay.

While the couponers on the TLC show truly are the extreme -- some even leav­ing the store with four carts and more than $1,000 in savings -- local couponers of all lev­els are joining in the craze.

As one of the experts, Carter is a confident shop­per who takes saving se­riously. While she shopped, she con­tinually consulted her list, which she orga­nized and print­ed the night before. Each time she spotted an item on her list, she paused and flipped through her stack of 55 coupons, gath­ered from newspaper in­serts, on­line coupon databases and Facebook.

She picked out two $1 off coupons and held them in her left hand as she reached for a package of hot dogs with her right.

"I don't eat hot dogs," Carter, a vegetar­ian, said. But her chil­dren -- rang­ing in age from 5 to 13 -- do, so she needed to stock up. Plus, the meat was part of the Kroger mega sale, which meant that if she pur­chased 10 items that were marked for the mega sale, she'd get $3 off her bill.

So she grabbed six packages of hot dogs and placed them in her cart, and then marked tallies on the top of her grocery list, one for each mega sale item she had picked up.

"I don't know how those people do it on the extreme couponing show, buying 1,000 items and keeping track of it all," she said as she rolled her cart to­ward the frozen-food aisle.

Carter began "hard-core" couponing in 2006 as a way to save mon­ey for her fam­ily of six. Now, she's devel­oped a system that requires about an hour of prepa­ration before each big shopping trip, when she does her coupon clipping. She puts in more time early in the morning, on her lunch breaks, and late at night to update her blog.

Af­ter 45 minutes of shopping, Carter was ready to check out. She piled her groceries -- including a box of Chee­rios, six cans of Chef Boyardee pasta and Yoplait Kids yogurt -- onto the conveyer belt and explained that the items she was buying were an odd combination, but paired with items she had stockpiled at home, they enabled her to make meals.

Carter of­ten plans what she buys accord­ing to the 12-week sale cycle. Items typically are discounted ev­ery 12 weeks, she said, so she stockpiles the ones she used the most.

The total for this week's trip? $137.47. But that was before the beeping began.

Carter watched the com­put­er screen as her bill shrunk with each scan of a coupon.

$69.96.

Beep.

$68.96.

On this day, no customers were wait­ing in line behind Carter. But she has seen her share of annoyed shop­pers who were forced to wait; sometimes, she even waves them ahead.

Beep.

$67.96.

Beep.

$66.96.

It con­tinued until the total reached $59.96, a savings of about 56 per­cent. Carter's goal is to save at least 50 per­cent with each shopping trip.

As she looked over the receipt, she re­alized the hot dog sale wouldn't start until the next day. Despite the loss of po­tential savings, Carter shrugged it off. She hit her tar­get savings, and that was enough.

"It's not a flashy, 'I got $100 for $5,' but it's re­alis­tic for most people," she said.

Occa­sion­ally, the bargain shop­per shares her secrets at coupon classes she holds at local libraries. Jama Fernung of Indianapo­lis has been to two of the classes, and despite identi­fying her­self as an expe­ri­enced couponer, she said she goes as a "refresh­er." Couponing was a hobby for the moth­er of a 5-year-old, until she lost her job at AT&T in March, when it became a ne­cessity.

"It's a good ad­diction," Fernung said with a laugh. "The more I save, the more I get into it. You just want to go a lit­tle bit fur­ther, a lit­tle bit fur­ther."

Fernung stumbled upon Carter's blog two years ago, and lat­er re­alized the two had both gone to Tipton High School. While they weren't close friends, couponing has cre­ated cama­raderie. Fernung knows Carter loves Chap­stick, for example, so she'll call her and tell her when she sees them on sale.

Fernung consults BarganBriana.com before ev­ery shopping trip to com­pile a grocery list and match up coupons. She has 10 bot­tles of A1 sauce in her base­ment. At a Marsh triple coupon event on Memo­rial Day, she saved 92 per­cent.

For this saver, it's more than just couponing, it's a lifestyle. On heavy trash nights in her neighbor­hood, she'll drive around and search for free stuff. She gardens and cans her own vegeta­bles. Couponing was simply the first step.

"Couponing is a per­fect way to save mon­ey," she said. "And also, once you start saving mon­ey by couponing, it's good to explore oth­er ways to save mon­ey."

Mar­sha Wil­son said she was couponing 30 years ago, before it became a craze, but stopped once her ca­reer picked up. Three months ago, af­ter living on a reduced income due to a job loss, she came out of "coupon re­tire­ment."

What helped spur her back into action?

The "Extreme Couponing" show, of course, and a lit­tle chal­lenge from her husband.

"He was watch­ing the show and said that we should do this," Wil­son said. "It was kind of just like, 'OK, let me show you we can do this. It's not just a televi­sion show.'"

Now, Wil­son, 54, uses a 3-inch white binder to orga­nize her coupons rather than the shoe box with dividers she used decades ago. The Inter­net has also made the saving process eas­i­er, al­lowing her to print e-coupons, research stores' coupon policies and cre­ate grocery lists on­line.

The Indianapo­lis grandmoth­er of nine, who teaches on­line cours­es at Ka­plan Uni­versity and Col­orado Technical Uni­versity, clips almost ev­ery coupon she finds and files them away. If she can't use the prod­uct, usu­ally some­one in her fam­ily can.

Despite the urge to save, Wil­son said, she'll nev­er become a true "extreme couponer."

"I'll nev­er be one of those people who devotes a room to ce­re­al or to laun­dry detergent," she said.

"I try to approach it as 'don't buy it just because it's a good deal if it's not some­thing you or some­one can use.' "

Source: The Indianapolis Star
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Couponers share their best tips, strategies
Rachel Stark rachel.stark@indystar.com
credit: Olivia Corya / The Star
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Briana Carter left with six packages of hot dogs. The mother of four doesn't eat hot dogs, but her kids do, so she stocked up.
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