WAY OFF: Insidious business practices

Sam Kirwan samantha.kirwan at NTL.COM
Thu Mar 29 09:02:24 EST 2001


They've all got loyalty cards over here and for pretty much the same
reasons.  Best thing is to mess them up as much as possible.  At least 4
people use my card every week - Supermarket must think I'm feeding the
British Army and every few months when they send me vouchers I spunk 'em all
on Brandy.  An alcoholic feeding the British Army!!

I think it's quite amusing the way these large companies spend bucket loads
on marketing and promotions - have you seen the adverts - they are learning
nothing!!!!
Sam

-----Original Message-----
From: Brian Halligan [mailto:blackblade at BHALLIGAN.COM]
Sent: 29 March 2001 14:55
To: BOC-L at LISTSERV.SPC.EDU
Subject: Re: WAY OFF: Insidious business practices


Grakkl (FAA) wrote:

> the local grocery store chain (Kroger's) that I've shopped at
> for years suddenly introduced this ridiculous "Plus Card" (tm) that
appears
> to save you money and make it seem like they think you're important to
their
> business.
> P.S.  Have these things gone nationwide?  Worldwide?  They should be
banned
> quicker than human cloning!  :)

Oh, now you've done it. ;-)

They've had them here in Rochester, NY for 2 or 3 years. I totally agree
with you. Of course, in a metro area of about 1 million people, Rochester
has only 2 major supermarket chains. One is Wegmans (which is based here and
probably has 70% of the market), and the other is Topps which is a chain out
of Buffalo. They both have the cards.

Other results of this duopoly are that many poor city residents aren't
served by a supermarket *at all*. Unfortunately, the company that's coming
in to "help" these people is Wal-Mart, who are opening a superstore with a
complete grocery in a part of the city not served by Wegmans or Topps.

Speaking of Wal-Mart and their ilk, on we go to another dilemma. Stores and
plazas are being built everywhere, all the time, yet the population of the
area is stagnant. We're basically creating a landscape of deserted Wal-Marts
and Home Depots that shift from section to section of the ever-increasing
sprawl. And I bet a lot of the other cities in the Northeast are the same
way.

One more thing about the cards. Sure, they save you money but they also
entice you to buy things you wouldn't have even thought about buying
otherwise, or in larger quantities than you normally would. So, in a way,
there also contributing to America's weight problem. :-)

Ah, that felt good.
Brian

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Vincent Price Talking Lawnmower
MP3 Radio
Updated Semi-Occasionally
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