10 Ways To Shop Smart And Save Your Money As Well As Your Frame Of Mind

As the holiday season approaches, your thoughts are probably already turning—with considerable help from retailers nationwide—to gifts, goodies, and twinkly-eyed elves. Unfortunately, however, many Americans find themselves in the throes of financial nightmares instead of dreams of a winter wonderland. And with today’s tightened economy, it’s easy to fall prey to money woes not just at the holidays but also all year round. Your best defense is to practice smart consumerism, says Art Beroff, coauthor of The Bargain Hunter’s & Smart Consumer’s Field Guide: How To Buy Almost Anything For Next To Nothing!

(PRWEB) October 23, 2003

As the holiday season approaches, your thoughts are probably already turning—with considerable help from retailers nationwide—to gifts, goodies, and twinkly-eyed elves.

Unfortunately, however, many Americans find themselves in the throes of financial nightmares instead of dreams of a winter wonderland. And with today’s tightened economy, it’s easy to fall prey to money woes not just at the holidays but also all year round. Your best defense is to practice smart consumerism, says Art Beroff, coauthor of The Bargain Hunter’s & Smart Consumer’s Field Guide: How To Buy Almost Anything For Next To Nothing! (Avebury Books 2003, available at Amazon.com and BarnesandNoble.com).

Beroff offers these tips for shopping smart and saving your money as well as your frame of mind:

1.     Study up. Research brands, features, and prices before you make a purchase. “Doing the homework is not just for school kids,” Beroff says. “As we stress in The Bargain Hunter’s & Smart Consumer’s Field Guide, this is particularly important for big-ticket products like cars, computers, and furniture, but is also valid for clothing and even groceries.” By keeping an eye on print and media advertisements as well as comparing goods at various stores, you’ll be able to determine the brands and outlets that give the best value and prices before you buy.

2.    Check it out. Before you contract with a service provider—painter, plumber, auto mechanic, dentist, doctor, or real estate agent to name a few—ask family, friends, and coworkers whom they use and would recommend. Besides the tip on a reputable provider, you’ll often get better service when you name the person who referred you. If you don’t get a referral from someone you know, ask the provider for references, and then take the time to call them. You can also check with the Better Business Bureau, online at http://www.bbb.org, or by telephone through the number in your local phone book.

3.    Get the guarantee. Retailers often offer price guarantees on bigger-ticket goods. If the item goes on sale for less than what you paid within the next 30 days, for example, they’ll refund you the difference. If your merchant doesn’t offer you the guarantee, ask for it.

4.    If it sounds too good. You know the old adage, “If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.” Believe it. Don’t fall for scams that offer a fantastic return on your investment, especially from people or organizations you’ve never heard of. The only way to earn money is to work for it; despite what you’d like (and they’d like you to) think, no one is going to give it away. Again, check with the Better Business Bureau as well as with your own common sense.

5.    Complaint Department. Don’t be afraid to complain to the owner or manager if you’ve received poor service or products. If you’re not happy, merchants and service providers want to know so they can correct the problem and keep you as a customer. They will often not only replace the product or refund your money but also give you a discount on a future sale as a gesture of goodwill. “Make sure,” Beroff cautions, “that your complaint is valid and non-antagonistic; your goal is to get what you paid for and create a merchant-ally (an important collaboration we explain in The Bargain Hunter’s & Smart Consumer’s Field Guide), not an enemy or an undeserved freebie.”

6.    Share fare. Eat out but spend less by sharing meals—with the added bonus of a slimmer waistline in addition to your fatter wallet. As restaurants serve larger and larger portions, Americans veer farther and farther into obesity. You can easily combat this while slicing your meal ticket in half by splitting a meal with your dining partner. By the time you finish the beverage, bread, salad, and entrée, you’ll find you may not even want dessert. And there’s nothing to be embarrassed about: most restaurants cheerfully allow meal sharing. Just don’t take advantage by asking to split all-you-can-eat or buffet meals.

7.    Be chary with charity. Don’t donate to every charity that asks. Many so-called charities are in reality scam operations skilled at tugging at your heartstrings and tapping into all that guilt bubbling just below the surface. Many legitimate charities spend more money on their own operations than they give to their causes. When in doubt, check with the Better Business Bureau. Or donate to a cause close to home such as a charity administered directly by your local house of worship, give a helping hand to an individual or family you know personally, or donate your time instead of your money by volunteering at a local shelter, youth organization, or other worthy cause.

8.    List mania. Keep a running grocery list on which you note staples and favorite foods as you run low. If you have the time (and the energy), prepare a weekly menu and list the ingredients that you don’t already have on hand on your shopping list. (If you have neither time nor energy, develop a repertoire of easy-prep meals for which you can buy a standard list of ingredients like hamburger, tomato sauce, and chicken.) Take your list to the market and don’t buy items that aren’t on it. You’ll be surprised how much you save when you bypass all those impulse purchases as well as the staples you already have three of at home but tend to buy anyway when you don’t have a list.

9.    Go easy on the cards. Don’t sign up for all those credit card offers that come in the mail. “Having a lot of cards actually hurts your credit instead of helping it,” Beroff says. “Potential lenders see a host of credit cards as an opportunity for you to get into a lot of debt. And as we explain in The Bargain Hunter’s & Smart Consumer’s Field Guide, they’re right.” Use only one card per household (or one per spouse) and pay it off at the end of each month. If you can’t afford to pay it off, shop for one with a lower interest rate and lower annual fee.

10.    Borrow instead of buy—for some things. You can save a lot of money by borrowing books from the library instead of buying them from the bookstore and renting movies instead of going to the theater. Borrow instead of buy does not, however, apply to furniture and appliances. Rent-to-own stores charge exorbitant rates; by the time you’ve paid them off, you could have bought that television or sofa three times over. “It’s far less expensive,” Beroff says, “to purchase the product you want from major retailers simply by asking what they have on special. As we illustrate in The Bargain Hunter’s & Smart Consumer’s Field Guide, you can get great deals at a fraction of the retail price when you buy display models, end-of-season items, and other products that may be heavily discounted but unadvertised.”

# # #

For more information on The Bargain Hunter’s & Smart Consumer’s Field Guide: How To Buy Almost Anything For Next To Nothing! call TC Boodman at (850) 636-4006 or visit http://www.aveburybooks.com.


Contact Information
TC Boodman
Averbury Books
www.aveburybooks.com
1-850-636-4006

Disclaimer: If you have any questions regarding information in these press releases please contact the company listed in the press release.
Please do not contact PRWeb®. We will be unable to assist you with your inquiry.
PRWeb® disclaims any content contained in these releases. Our complete disclaimer appears here.

© Copyright 1997-2010, Vocus PRW Holdings, LLC.
Vocus, PRWeb and Publicity Wire are trademarks or registered trademarks of Vocus, Inc. or Vocus PRW Holdings, LLC.

Terms of Service | Privacy Policy