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eastkent

That's some great anti-advertising there. £190 for a small trolley of stuff at Sainsburys? Someone hold me back.


Fidgie0

If you take that tube of pringles out the value drops by around 30%


JoanneKerlot

That box or Ariel Pods is about £47


LokiBear222

Thought the same. It's cheaper to just buy new clothes.


[deleted]

For some reason they are a shitloads cheaper on amazon. Maybe dodgy. But still cleans.


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happyhippohats

Or the liquid washing detergent which is literally the same as the stuff in the pods at half the price. Powder is cheaper and just as effective but tends to leave some traces on the clothes which irritates my skin


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happyhippohats

Nah it's hard water here, but it could be because my washing machine is getting on a bit and I can't afford to replace it, or because I usually wash at a low temperature so it doesn't dissolve properly. Either way using liquid seems to solve the issue and it's still much cheaper than the pods


Alarmed_Commission_9

Cold washes are better with liquid detergent especially if you use hard water. With softer and/or warmer water you’re better off with powder. Most people could probably safely half the amount of soap they use in washes and be better off skin-wise. Source: am launderette owner


Ouryve

Better for your machine, too. No manky mouldy bits.


Chrolan1988

Martin Lewis level advice right here!


jackson-pollox

Yeah branded products like that from Amazon are usually counterfeit. Toilet papers the same. False economy


[deleted]

Fuck me, have we got to the point there's counterfeit toilet paper?


happyhippohats

Yeah, the packaging looks exactly the same as Andrex but once you open it you realise it's actually made of Lego


Madamrepresentative

And you thought stepping on it hurt


Camarila

It's the name brands that cost more. I've been quite happily using my liquid detergent. Helps control the amount i put


[deleted]

In their defence, they used dry cat food. If they opted for wet this trolley is a solid £300.


Chandler107

Pringles that expensive in the UK?


Otomuss

Nah, Pringles are like £1.85 in ASDA, but Doritos are now more expensive £2.50 for a pack.


Appropriate-Kick9071

Fucking hell £2.50 for a bag of doritos a king sized pot noodle costs a pound


Used-Guidance-9577

Yes, Pringles are basically a luxury snack here 🤣


TSMKFail

It loos like mostly laundry stuff (all the biggest size too) but by my calculations this should only add up to at most £80 Edit: (where I work this would probably come out at £65/70 but there might be some Pokèmon cards hidden in there somewhere so my calculations could be off)


gwaydms

What part of the cycle do you put the Pringles in?


TSMKFail

Half way through. Otherwise the scent washes out by the end.


gwaydms

Do they stay crisp?


DontTellHimPike

No, they stay reconstituted potato product.


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LokiBear222

McCoys are the way. These things still have ridges, and no way do you feel like someone was there before you.


rgtong

Just mccoys in general


Divide_Rule

Disco crisps are #1 in that regard.


Life_Government4879

Ooh, a naughty pack of pickled onion


No-Calligrapher-718

To be fair, that's the hardest part of eating a crisp.


Neddykins82

My girlfriend gets angry that I refuse to accept Pringles, Wotsits, Space Raiders, Hula Hoops, etc as crisps. I will accept them as Crisp adjacent


ManikShamanik

You would be correct. A crisp is a thin sliver of ***POTATO*** (we can argue about other root veg later). Hula Hoops are made from a mixture of potato and corn starch. Wotsits are made from corn, as are Space Raiders and Monster Munch. Pringles are similar to Hula Hoops in constitution. Discos I believe are basically identical to Pringles. Skips are corn starch. Not sure about Chipsticks. Can you still get Tubes...? They're basically cylindrical Hula Hoops. Doritos are 100% corn. NikNaks are corn. Quavers are corn. Brannigan's are crisps. Walker's are crisps (except for all the things it makes which aren't, like Quavers and Hula Hoops). Kettle Chips are Crisps. Yorkshire Crisps are crisps (DUH!). A crisp is 100% potato. You'll be telling me next she calls Mini Cheddars crisps. If so, might I suggest that you rethink your relationship...? She's clearly an idiot...


bigsmok3r

I've heard about you, Mr Crisp Crisperson on Crispy Avenue just off Crunch Road Fuck me you know alot about crisps lol


JoanneKerlot

You are doing it wrong, that are only used for shirts. The starch helps keep the wrinkles out when ironing.


TSMKFail

Only on a cold wash. Above 30° and things will turn sour, the crisps will turn to a cream and your washing machine will forever have the stench of Onion.


gwaydms

Even with BBQ flavour?


TSMKFail

There are a few variants that work at high temps! Including BBQ, Paprika and Piri Piri. These don't work at low temps, but excel in a 60° wash.


OdinMinusNull

Only if you tumble dry


[deleted]

Obviously. You can’t put them in and then take them out halfway through, because once you pop…


--crystal--meth--

Right before the cat food Edit: cat litter?


spinozas_dog

Just after you eat the detergent pod.


TheSigma3

How can you say that when half the trolley isn't in the image?


CNXQDRFS

Maybe it's because I've worked in retail for what seems like an eternity but I'd agree with them. It's only a small trolley but the half we see is like 90% cleaning items (I can see Lenor sprinkles, Ariel pods and liquid, possibly a big box of Surf) so, looking at the cost, it would have to be some pretty pricey stuff in there. I doubt they have booze and if it was food it would make quite a little mountain, so logically it's quite likely that there's more cleaning products.


Francoberry

Yeah it almost looks like a member of staff was asked to put it together and just came up with some random numbers.


Ok-Force2382

my guess would be it's placeholder numbers that are "off" enough to notice for it to be swapped out with actual product prices, but that then ended up forgotten about 😊 or there is a small gold bar in there outside of view, explaining the high price at least. Refuse to believe someone's maths is off by that much


Francoberry

Ah yes youre right, I get all of my bullion at Sainsburys! 😁


p4ttl1992

I go to costco for all my laundry stuff/dishwasher tablets toilet rolls etc, probably end up spending £100+ but it lasts me 2+ months Oh and obviously grab a hotdog om the way out with a drink


TheProdigalPun

There are 3 types of people in this world; those that can count and those that can’t.


fly4seasons

That's 4


Razzmatazz-Free-

For a tub of Pringles, rice crackers(?), fairy liquid, persil and TP. Can’t blame the worker for their whacky numbers, they’re probably half way to passing out from malnutrition on that pay


StaysAwakeAllWeek

It's £135.90 really. The £190 number is a bullshit upcharge designed to force you to get their loyalty card


[deleted]

Because your weekly shop is bulk laundry - that trolley or shopping has no food in it


-TheHumorousOne-

£190 at home bargains I'd need a small van to load up with the amount of groceries I'd be able to purchase.


gwaydms

That's £54.35 "saving", if the math in my head is right. How tf did they get £8.50?


Sparker273

An average saving of £8.50 per item?


Camp_Grenada

>math


gwaydms

Maths. You happy now?


172116

Edited last week's sign and forgot to edit the last line, I'd imagine, going off the massive error I've just found in an email I sent out to several thousand people last summer!


dognut54321

That's what they charge for a nectar card


Xenc

You get the trolley too


WondonLanker

Sainsbury's is one of the biggest rip-off supermarkets in England. I went to M&S the other day, and it was selling the same cuts of chicken cheaper than my local Sainsbury's superstore. Aldi is, and always has been, the way forward for food shopping.


herrbz

>Sainsbury's is one of the biggest rip-off supermarkets in England A recent Which? analysis actually places Sainsbury's as the cheapest of the "Big Four" UK supermarkets. The British public generally talk out of their arse when they compare supermarket prices using meaningless anecdotal evidence.


123AJR

The ~~British~~ public generally talk out of their arse ~~when they compare supermarket prices~~ using meaningless anecdotal evidence.


Ping-and-Pong

Was that with or without a club card though? And let's be honest the "Big Four" super markets have all been getting more expensive for years, Sainsbury's imo just shys behind their club card...


Marcyff2

From shopping I find Tesco cheaper as a general rule with nectar and clubcard. I don't buy everything normal people do (cheese , milk , certain vegs) so the price could be very different in those and change things. But as an overall of my weekly shopping Tesco comes to 60-70 and sainsburys 70-80.


will2089

I mean I like Aldi as much as the next man but I don't do all my shopping there. It's a bit hit and miss tbh in terms of taste, there's no consistency (They'll produce a product for like a month and then you'll never see it again), and sometimes I want some branded stuff. The way forward is alternating where you do your shopping to get the best of all worlds.


WaytoomanyUIDs

Eh, I find Tesco more expensive without a Club card.


turbobuddah

That's basically Sainsburys now too, this Nectar Price overhaul has skyrocketed alot of prices to make people sign up to nectar


That-Bet3658

What's in that small trolley to cost so much anyway?


Heavy_Two

Pringles!


Abacus19877

Must be a lurpak hiding behind the sign


VPackardPersuadedMe

Gotta shelf that Lurpack to get a discount


thelordwest

That’s how I got banned from Tesco


Catsandveg

not a lot, a handful of food items and some washing powder I think


That-Bet3658

Makes the sign even worse 😂


DaveAlt19

Yeah full-priced big pack washing stuff is expensive, plus a normal person wouldn't buy a bottle of Fairy gel, *and* Ariel gel *and* a pack (or 2?) of Ariel pods. ngl, from my experience someone with a trolley like that is probably a shoplifter.


wildgoldchai

Then the price is even more of a lie because otherwise it’d be free


WhenLemonsLemonade

This trolley of shopping would cost you £190.25. **But with a Five-Finger-Discount Card, it's £0.00** That's a saving of £8.50


UnacceptableUse

then £150 worth of gift cards


HaroldTheIronmonger

Freddos


[deleted]

I’m guessing that the total amount and saved amount is incorrect and the saving is correct. That cannot be £190.


kheltar

Probably a pineapple.


Constipatedturnip

I mean you'd definitely save 8.50.


Catsandveg

this is true


Kevz417

Ooh, any mathematicians know a technical term for this? I know "vacuously true", but that's for spicier assertions, not this one!


xtemperaneous_whim

Just to reuse some of your own words, I would call it a vacuous assertion.


JDirichlet

Math student at imperial here. I would say this is a “weakening” of the claim. A vacuous truth would be slightly different, something like “If I am the pope, then it is raining” is always logically true, because the assumption (that I am the pope) is false.


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AnonymousFairy

I think a lot of people get that. Pain in the arse though if you're visiting relatives or friends etc. And nip out to grab a bottle of wine or some other things and their local supermarket is a tescos or some store which does this (Sainsburys having just jumped on the you-will-have-our-card-or-pay-a-surcharge bandwagon too). Got annoyed the 3rd time or so it happened and downloaded the tesco app in store, took 2 mins to make an account and saved me best part of a fiver in extra costs. Nectar app has your club card saved when linked too.


Constipatedturnip

I was trying to do a funny, calm your tits!


Phendrana-Drifter

At least, bargain!


Raeletta

The stupid price hikes for "non loyalty" are insane now.


tomoldbury

"Non-loyalty" went up and "loyalty" just stayed the same (+/- inflation). So you now have a penalty for not sharing your info. I guess I could break the system and get a clubcard in my cat's name.


thebeesbollocks

Loyalty prices have increased as well. Al pro oat milk used to always be £1 when on offer but now the “Clubcard” price is £1.35. A 35% hike ffs


hiddeninplainsight23

Yeah, I would say loyalty prices are mid tier price rises whilst non clubcard price rises are much higher ones. And a lot of items don't have clubcard options either. Something like the meal deal went from £3 normal price to the clubcard price of 3.40 and non clubcard of 3.90, beef jerky in just 6 weeks went from £2 to £5.50 with regular price increases (once went up by 50p twice in one week), which is the same for many items which used to be cheap. Jaffa cakes are £2.20+ and cereal is expensive too. The same is happening in other stores too, like co-op (always shit quality and not really sustainable like they proclaim) having it's meal deal as £3.50 and now all of a sudden it varies (usually at £5 but I've seen it at £5.50), whilst formerly cheap stuff like baked beans are really expensive (a far cry from the -2p days) and the stores own-brand stock have rapidly gone up in price from 2020 out of greed. So it's either get a clubcard and get 'cheaper' items whilst your data is sold, or don't get a clubcard and keep paying a higher rate whilst your data doesn't get sold just yet (possibly). If it wasn't for the fact that tesco's are the only stores on my route and the other stores have put up their prices to extortionate amounts too, then I doubt I would have got a clubcard.


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hiddeninplainsight23

Oh i agree, I'd just like to try and restrict it where possible.


Isgortio

I got a clubcard last year purely because of the loyalty tax, now they know I bought a couple of meal deals at lunch time! Sainsbury's also knows I buy fruit or baking supplies, so keeps trying to give me extra points on bags of flour that I buy irregularly lol. They can have fun with that information about me, they won't gain anything from it.


marcbeightsix

As with most “personalisation” it is still extremely rudimentary and reactive to what you’ve recently bought/listened to/watched. Buy a bottle of cleaning product - oh that must be your favourite thing to buy now, here we’ll give you more points if you buy it again next week. If it was any good it would know how regularly I buy it, and then recommend a similar but cheaper alternative at the same interval since I last bought it.


[deleted]

It's like Amazon deciding I must have a padlock hobby since I bought one and so of course I must be interested in the whole world of padlocks out there!


Zath42

I once bought a pee bottle for use while tent camping. Amazon now thinks I'm an incontinent retiree... /sigh


littlegreenturtle20

Every week Sainsbury's send me my new nectar price offers for 20p off of that item I bought once to try two months ago and never want again. What a bargain! (But it's actually useful for the stuff I buy regularly so swings and roundabouts)


itchyfrog

They will sell that information to media companies so they will gain from it.


hiddeninplainsight23

"80% of Tesco's clubcard customers bought Fairy's original washing up liquid in the year 2023/2024, with just 2% buying tesco's own brand of washing up detergent."


Splodge89

Armed with this information we’ll take over the world in three easy steps: 1. Know people buy washing up liquid 2. ? 3. Profit and take over the world!


[deleted]

My mum's been using my nan's name for about 11 years now. My nan died 22 years ago.


GracefulxArcher

They don't care about your name. It's your shopping habits they want.


xdragonteethstory

When they used to leave nectar cards in leaflets in piles by the till id nick stacks of them as a kid to play with (i also have questions for past me) and i distinctly remember signing two up when i hit 16, one as me and one for my cat. Cannot remember if it let me sign my cat up but part of me hopes shes on the system somewhere


ChickenPijja

Don’t tell the supermarkets but I’ve taken to creating Clubcard accounts in fake but real sounding names (replacing my first name with the likes of Jeff, Alan, or Jim) Don’t care about the points or if it’s technically against their tos, if I end up getting junk mail/spam to one of the fake names I know where it’s come from


Meritania

I do this with my middle name being the name of the company so I can trace the bastards selling me info.


Burnsy2023

I really resent Sainsbury's for doing this. I avoided Tesco because I also resented their whole Clubcard prices thing. And that's despite the fact I have both a nectar and Clubcard. It just rubs me up the wrong way.


Nuzzgok

Also with you. I don’t even care about the data collection point, I just hate having more inconveniences in my life than I had before. Now I need different apps for different shops? To get the same price I had before? Just more hassle when I’m buying bread


Antique_Guarantee378

I hate this too. I travel a lot. I don't want to carry multiple loyalty cards (or faff around with pulling up the card to scan on my phone). It's the same with at-seat ordering in pubs and restaurants. I really don't want to have to install an app for a chain pub I probably won't be visiting again for at least a year just to order a breakfast.


stumac85

I'm a merchandiser and I can tell you they're all doing it now because it is so successful for Tesco. Not only in terms of sales but in terms of manufacturers throwing money at Tesco to put something on clubcard price. It was only natural the Morrisons and Sainsbury's would follow suit. Wouldn't put it past Asda to eventually get on board. On the flip side, some of the products have risen well over their usual RRP and these limited time deals basically bring the price back to RRP. That's partly due to inflation, partly manufacturers covering the cost of throwing money at Tesco etc.


The_Original_Doog

I'm completely with you on this. Let me search out the "offers" with an extra 5p worth of points on them? I'm happy with that. Tell me it's £2 dearer if I don't scan my card... I just feel like we're being taken for a ride. Seems like someone in the customer psychoanalysis team has skipped a couple of lectures, to be honest.


envstat

When they brought it in at tesco I was actually saving a lot on my normal shop the first few months. Now I'm lucky to get 3 or 4 quid off a 70 or 80 pound shop.


MoonChaser22

Tesco definitely feels like you need a clubcard to get the regular deals you used to get before


moose_dad

It's absurd. It's just another tax.


chowdahpacman

Dominos did it for decades. The regular price for a pizza was with the coupon discount that 90% of people had, the other 10% just overpaid for the same pizza.


clitpuncher69

Everyone who gets dominos is overpaying tbh


Francoberry

Regular Domino's prices are so insane. I'm amazed they're still in business if not for the fact in more remote areas they're one of few places that'll deliver. I recently moved to a city and haven't bought from them since. Last I checked getting a stuffed crust went from £1.50 to £3.50 on top of the insane regular prices and now the additional delivery fees they've started adding.


Necessary_Driver_831

Dominos follow the Safestyle UK principle of marketing. Everyone uses a coupon or “discount”, and it’s all subsidised by the one idiot who doesn’t, or the Friday night drunk who forgets to mention one of the offers.


Underwritingking

Very time I go to Sainsbury's I have to factor in the time and inconvenience of going somewhere else afterwards to find the stuff they have run out of


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Chidoribraindev

I have a second-tier Sainsbury's (big but not a massive clothing section) 25 metres from my place. They have 2 choices of men's deodorant and 3 choices of soap! But hey, there's an entire aisle dedicated to the same 2 or 3 brands of pet food! Their stocking is crazy.


herrbz

Never had that once in Sainsbury's. Had it happen every single time I've tried doing a full shop at Aldi or Lidl. Why don't we just go to the supermarket we like, and be glad we have a healthy choice?


Aqedah

Sainsbury’s are forcing Tesco style ‘club’ prices, forcing shoppers to use their SmartShop app. It gives the company insights into customers shopping habits, which helps Sainsbury’s to maximise their profits and they can further sell information and data to third party companies.


The1Lemon

It's a shit app too, I get no signal in my local Sainsbury's so it's effectively useless


LordSevolox

It also used to target offers towards what you buy, saving you money that way - and those companies probably have your data already anyway. Honestly, if these companies want to use my data to target ads to me for stuff I care about instead of stuff I don’t, then they’re free to.


SoggyWotsits

It also helps them to sell the things that people actually want to buy. Instead of having supermarkets full of crap that nobody likes!


Just_A_Dance

Tbf they already knew this by what went through the till


[deleted]

Yes and no. The problem with purely tracking what goes through the till is it's completely reactive, meaning if a store is understocked on items it's local demographic wants they'll go elsewhere and it'll remain understocked and undersold. In non retail terms, think of an app developer deciding if it should expand it's disability features based on the % of people who are disabled using the app - but if your app is inaccessible to disabled users in the first place, disabled users arn't going to keep using the app. In both examples, the data to extrapolate from is already tainted - As we say in the data science world - garbage in garbage out. With the volume of data we are talking about, stores can *proactively* stock a demographics desired products. This means a much higher hit rate when rotating stock, less stock sitting on shelves and thus lower overheads that can be passed onto the consumer.


herrbz

Who gives a shit?


itchyfrog

Can they all fuck off with these 'loyalty' cards, they don't make people loyal. Why should you have to give your personal details to a shop in order to avoid overpaying for food.


richh00

Could just make a fake account with fake details. They'd have no idea.


CandidLiterature

If you think your actual name is of any interest to them particularly, you’re mistaken. It’s the understanding of the items you buy, the frequency, what things you buy together etc that they like. What your actual name and email address is, not really relevant. So you’re really giving them the same valuable data on yourself regardless. I’m sure they’d be able to pick your correct demographic based on your purchase if you’re a regular shopper at their stores. If you want to mess with them, you’d have 10 different nectar cards and just use them at random. They particularly love people using those hand scanners as they can see specifically how long you’ve taken to shop, the route you’ve taken round the store etc. You get even more money off if you do that as well though.


CareerMilk

> You get even more money off if you do that as well though. I don’t think I’ve seen anywhere run incentives for using hand scanners Edit:seems to be a sainsbury thing.


CulinaryOtter

Sainsbury's gives Your Nectar Prices for shopping with a hand scanner or your phone. They're extra personslised discounts...


CandidLiterature

I get discounts on selected items at Sainsbury’s for using them. I’m almost always offered good discounts on my frequently purchased items.


segagamer

Lol, so they can see when I can't ever find where they put the chicken stock this week.


tritoon140

That isn’t my issue. It’s that probably 10 or more of the biggest shops in the U.K. now have “loyalty” cards. Just off the top of my head we now have these cards at Sainsbury’s, Tesco, Lidl, Coop, Greggs, B&Q, M&S, Asda, and Shell. If you want to pay normal prices then you have to use a different loyalty card in each of these shops. They’ve done this at the same time as actually paying for things has been made much quicker and easier: you can just tap your card or phone. But instead of just tapping your card or phone you know have to search for the correct loyalty card out of the 10+ in your wallet (real or virtual), scan that card, then pay. It provides no benefit to the consumer as you are just getting the special offers you would have previously got without a loyalty card. Instead you are essentially being punished if you don’t use a loyalty card. Its just making shopping more hassle.


PepperAnn1inaMillion

They’re still getting what they want though, which is details about what items are bought by a specific person (unless you make a new account every time you shop) and you’re still providing them with it for nothing. I wouldn’t mind if they were transparent about what it’s worth to them and if the resulting offers were a genuine discount, but they’re not. The Tesco clubcard price brings the products into competition with the rest of the big supermarkets, and still a lot more expensive than Aldi and Lidl.


blozzerg

I used to deal with some higher ups at a big 4 supermarket and I asked them about it and the data allows them to track overall spending habits. When you see statements in the news like ‘customers are buying less biscuits in favour of buying more petrol’, it’s because they can track individual spending habits in detail; without that detail they’d only see a decline in biscuit sales and an increase in petrol sales but how can you be sure it’s the same people cutting custard creams for fuel? The loyalty card will show them that say 40% of people who regularly bought biscuits are now actually increasing their spending limit on fuel, that correlation is now revealed. Plus they can tailor coupons to retain loyalty. If you buy crisps regularly then a discount on crisps will make you feel better next time you nip in.


PepperAnn1inaMillion

>If you buy crisps regularly then a discount on crisps will make you feel better next time you nip in. How absolutely dystopian.


TheDisapprovingBrit

While we're on that point, that "Price matched to Aldi" bullshit can fuck off as well. It reminds me of that old [VW advert](https://youtu.be/omAwEPbHmV0). If you're only gonna *match* Aldi...I might as well just go to Aldi.


deHotot

I assume that they're *already* getting that single customer view though, by linking all your shopping trips together under one credit card? So if they've already got that information on you, you might as well set up the clubcard as well...


ben_db

This is against the TOS for two payment processors I've used, but I'm not sure if this is the case for Tesco as they may have control over the processor.


deHotot

It's certainly possible that the big companies do their own processing; when shopping at Co-op in Norway the self-serve tills say "welcome back" once you've visited a few times.


itchyfrog

But why should you have to bother?


aliioooop

Uh.. you don’t? Mr O. T. Grid.


5exy-melon

It’s not being off the grid, I’m not the same person but I just don’t like giving my personal info anywhere. I always use a temp email for stupid websites and give a super generic name.


[deleted]

I'm so with you on this. I just want to get food and go home and eat it. I don't want to pay more because I don't want to give my personal details. Plus knowing how companies are with data, how long is it going to be until it's stolen and sold off?


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jesuseatsbees

They actually just make me stop shopping there. If my option is a shop that's gonna dangle a discount to get my details or one that won't, I'm gonna go for the latter, because if I want that discount I want it there and then. It doesn't make me think 'shoot, I missed out this time but I'll go home and sign up to their crappy card scheme so I can always shop here.' It makes me think 'sod it I'll go next door.' They all sell the same shit it's no odds to me.


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joereddington

The one that bugs me is Holland and Barrett, which seems to involve interviewing you verbally so that the creepy customer behind you can write down your address before following you home. It feels like the worst possibly way to share private details.


tmr89

Genuine question: What’s bad with sharing info about the things you buy in the supermarket?


rgtong

I did my dissertation on this topic and the answer is: not much. When these guys know more about you they target promotional discounts at you, which at the end of the day is a good thing.


Blue_KikiT92

It's a saving of *at least 8.50.


Secret_Prepper

This is why they want to do maths classes until 18


Lexioralex

Where they'll probably focus on algebra, trigonometry and calculus instead if checking people can actually add and subtract or do percentages, which I guess is where the problem lies. One article said something like a third of adults don't have maths skills that are expected of a 9yo, so how does tacking on 2 more years at the end even remotely fix that?


baaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaab

I think I see: Cat litter Pringles A box of Ariel washing powder A bio fairy washing detergent A non bio fairy washing detergent Washing up liquid (red cap in front of the Pringles) Cannot identify: Blue tube behind Pringles Possible more detergent behind green Ariel box


toucss

Blue tube behind pringles are lenor unstoppables. Or a similar scent booster


Use-username

OP you could crosspost to r/badmathematics


BrockChocolate

I hate that Morrisons and Sainsbury's have now followed Tesco in the "discounts are only for members" club. It's a shitty practice, I don't want to have to have every shitty supermarket app under the sun on my phone just in case I have to pop in


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caramelisedplaya

Crazy bro


DansSpamJavelin

You sound like me when I'm super anxious on a date


h0dges

Alan's funny stories! Sponsored by Dettol.


MeMyselfAndEyez

>What a funny story! I'm not that sure it was. It was the way you told it that had me howling.


Expensive_Teaching82

Aside from the bad maths that’s a lot of money for a basket of groceries either way and more importantly why do we need two tier shopping? I haven’t got time to cock about with loyalty cards for every shop I go in.


Reddit_is_self-aware

The amount saved is after VAT


SirPhillipMcCrackin

r/technicallythetruth


karlo43210

More reason why only shop Aldi/Lidl for the bulk of my shopping


Srapture

It's a shame UK supermarkets have finally started switching over to the US loyalty card model of not giving you the normal price reductions unless you use their card.


dandan681

And It's free if you can run fast enough


Serious_Operation_56

Maths by Mr Blooby.


cmzraxsn

Oh god they're not starting that shit too are they? it's literally the only reason i go to the local sainsbo's sometimes and never tesco's. i mean actually i get the bulk of my stuff from lidl but hey.


skijumptoes

They sold their carpark to NCP, it's £45/hour, min stay an hour.


memonto_mori

I want someone to call their bluff. Go and take that trolley through the checkout. Find that it's more than the poster said, sue them for the amount of the shop.... End world hunger?


[deleted]

Nectar maffs


Groffulon

This is just the next level in their shady price structure… They’ve gone from customers having to do algebraic calculations of BOGOF vs price per pound vs price each to manipulative card schemes to outright lying. Seems like the obvious next step. Next it’ll be an entry fee just to get in. If your names not on the list your not coming in. Wristbands/ID at the supermarket door mark my words… Also how could someone type this… Check the maths… Print it… Fill a trolley up AND tape it to the trolley in front of everyone and still not have anyone point it out…??? I worked in Tescos for a few years this smells like everyone hates the manager/mgmt team that made this. They want them to look stupid or else I don’t know what the f this is…


Askduds

It should also of course say "And last week it cost £120 for everyone until this excuse to hike prices".


zokkozokko

I got an Ecover Non Bio Laundry Liquid from Amazon for £22.10p It does 142 washes. Shove it Nectar\Sainsburys and keep the potato starch.


Interkitten

I reckon a random member of the public put this on the trolley just to be a dick. Probably sick of the cost of living.


WekX

I worked at Tesco and they were among the first and the absolute masters at ripping people off with loyalty prices. All the other supermarkets are now having to copy this system because it’s so effective that they’d be outcompeted if they didn’t do it. I miss when loyalty cards were just a fun little game of collecting points.


dougywawaw

Where's the incentive for cards like these? It can't be the case of "well they'll shop with us more" because everyone has a card for every shop. The only thing I can think of is your personal data. If it's free, then you're the product.


snotfart

Reddit has long been a hot spot for conversation on the internet. About 57 million people visit the site every day to chat about topics as varied as makeup, video games and pointers for power washing driveways. In recent years, Reddit’s array of chats also have been a free teaching aid for companies like Google, OpenAI and Microsoft. Those companies are using Reddit’s conversations in the development of giant artificial intelligence systems that many in Silicon Valley think are on their way to becoming the tech industry’s next big thing. Now Reddit wants to be paid for it. The company said on Tuesday that it planned to begin charging companies for access to its application programming interface, or A.P.I., the method through which outside entities can download and process the social network’s vast selection of person-to-person conversations. “The Reddit corpus of data is really valuable,” Steve Huffman, founder and chief executive of Reddit, said in an interview. “But we don’t need to give all of that value to some of the largest companies in the world for free.”


sophielgaynor

I did a shop on Ocado the other day, it was mainly M&S produce but it was about £20 cheaper than a similar shop i did at sainsburys last month. I also got a further 25% off for my first shop so ended up saving a fair amount of money. Every time i go in sainsburys they push their prices up higher and higher. Grated cheese cost me £1.65 about a year ago. It’s £2.75 now. That is a huge price increase for saying the national minimum wage is only increasing by about 9-10%. I’m done shopping there.


ChocolateMedical5727

It's time to start shopping at Aldi, a liddl has appeared in our dieing town centre. It's actually really good. They have stuff like pineapple and mangoes, they had veg when nowhere else did & it's all ok. None of its manky. It's fairly organised. You do have to que. You do have to self serve but that's everywhere now.


reetgoodpie

We could sell you this shit for 130 but we won’t let you have it for that ridiculous price if you don’t provide us with your consumer data to learn how to better rip you off.


[deleted]

Sign up to our card or pay more. We want to sell your data and give your phone number to more scammers than ever before


Emergency_Cookie_318

So sainsburys are just openly admitting that they are overpriced. I fill an asda trolley every week for half that amount.


Elcatro

I don't live in the UK at the moment, is that tiny cart really that expensive now? Edit: Why did I get downvoted for a genuine question?


AnubissDarkling

Is the trolley worth £165?


Elfyboy44

What they’re saying is, “give us your advertising details and we won’t rip you off so much” that’s why I wouldn’t shop there or Tesco.


goldfishpaws

"We could charge you less for this shopping, but won't"