Free Inserts and Free Ink?

Since my other posts, a few of you have contacted me privately and asked how I get free ink and free inserts. Unfortunately, my free ink gravy train may be coming to an end. One of my friends is the moderator for the Staples forum on hcw, maybe she has some additional thoughts.

But, I was getting it at Staples. Staples had this fantastic program where for every ink cartridge you turn in, you get $3 in Staples rewards. The limit was 10 per month or $30. If you worked at a workplace that went through many ink cartridges like I did, I pretty much had unlimited access to used ink cartridges. Then I’d just take them to Staples, wait for my rewards certificate and go buy more. Recently Staples has changed it to $2 per cartridge, and I no longer have the unlimited access that I did. But depending on where you work or who you know, can’t hurt to ask “Hey, what do you do with your used cartridges? Mind if I take them to recycle them?” Worst that can happen is that they say no.

Staples also recently got a bit smarter, and now, if you buy something with Staples rewards, that amount is deducted from future rewards. They didn’t used to do this. So if I took my $30 in rewards, went and bought $30 worth of ink with it, I’d get the 10% purchasing reward too. It was just a matter of rolling the rewards, which they no longer allow. Or, for instance, back in the spring, they had a deal where you bought Duracell for 19.99, got 19.99 back in Staples rewards. Well, of course I purchased those batteries with ink cartridge rewards, and still got the full amount back. If I did that today, I wouldn’t get any at all. Or, if I used $10 worth of rewards on it, and $10 cash, I’d only get $10 back in rewards.

If you have access to ink cartridges, it still should be a good deal for you. You can still earn $20 a month, and the rewards are good for 2 months, so you can accumulate $40 before you have to spend them. I have at least a year’s worth of cartridges on hand, and not sure what I will do when I actually need to buy ink. but stay tuned and if I find a deal, I certainly will post it.

Inserts–
One way to get multiple inserts is to buy multiple papers. I see lots of moms do this and it makes me cringe. To spend $10 or $20 a week, you have to have some awesome deals each and every week to get that money back.

I started out by asking friends and family. Then, at my last employer, I put up a sign in the breakroom. Each week that usually got me 3-5 inserts. Then a few years ago, I approached the owners of Avon News in Avondale. Asked them if I could purchase leftover Sunday papers at a discounted rate. Even better, they said they’d pull the inserts for me! Yipppeeee! So that’s what they do. In return, I frequently bring them bags and boxes of free goodies. In fact, going to take them some Keebler snack crackers today.

Ask at your library, school, workplace, neighbors, family, local newsstand or corner grocer. I know some couponers have a deal worked out with Wawa. If you live in a region where you get the inserts in the mail on Thursdays, go to the post office that day and you’ll find many of them in the trash. And not for the timid, but hcw even offers a whole thread on tips for dumpster diving.

*Hot* Kelloggs deal at Weis

Missed out on the Giant deal last week? No worries, if you have a Weis. Click here to read this week’s Weis discussion thread.

But what I’m gathering is……..buy $20 worth of Kellogg’s/Keebler products….get $17 back. Get out those old coupon inserts if you have them, there have got to be lots of moneymakers out there (where you pay less than what you get back). For this one, it has to be 10 items with a shelf price totaling more than $20.

I don’t have a Weis, so I’m not going, but good luck & have fun. If you have any questions on what some of the acronyms on the discussion thread mean, just ask, I’d be glad to help. Don’t forget there are IPs on coupons.com for Kelloggs stuff.

digital cameras

I have a love/hate relationship with digital cameras. I love ours, I love the quality of photos it takes. I love the storage capacity. I love the simple deleting process for bad shots.

But all of our photos are trapped on our computer. I rarely get prints.

Then, when I see a free prints deal like the one I posted last week, I freeze up. I’m so overwhelmed by the amount of pictures on our computer, that it’s hard to just pick 25 or 50 to get printed. Same with the photobook deals I always see. I want to do it, but sitting down and putting a few dozen pictures on a flash drive, I just never get to it.

How do you organize yours?

Are you going to cut all those coupons? Seriously, how much time does this take? (more newbie advice)

There are a lot of stereotypes out there about couponers, and certainly supercouponers. I pick up my inserts (free!) on Mondays, so come to my house any Monday and you’ll see a huge stack of coupon inserts on my kitchen table. Monday is clipping day for me. After the boys go to bed, I clip. It takes me about 30 mins to get through a week’s worth of inserts. Certainly I don’t go through each insert individually, I spread them out page by page, stack them up, then clip several pages at a time.

And I’ve been doing this long enough, that I pretty much know which ones will get used and which ones won’t. The “won’t/maybe” stack gets put in the drawer, just in case of a future moneymaking deal. (Like the Keebler snack crackers! No, I won’t eat them. But if you’re going to pay me $5 to buy them, I’ll do it and donate crackers to food bank.)

I remember several years ago, on a moms board that I used to be a part of, someone posted a link about a mom whose husband was upset because she was just clipping coupons all the time–all her free time, in the car, at the dinner table, during…wait, no, she didn’t post that.

But overall, that’s a misnomer. I don’t spend all my free time doing this. I pick up my coupon inserts on Mondays and clip. Takes me 30-45 minutes, tops.

I peruse the various coupon message boards daily. 20 minutes, if I don’t do the social stuff.

Shopping–1 regular weekly trip. If it’s a good week, another trip or two to get freebies. I did my regular weekly trip at Superfresh on Friday. Yes, I had been to Giant a few times, but a rolling-catalina-freebie deal like that isn’t common. When it happens, if you use those products, you do it!

It’s a pretty slow week this week as far as deals, so my only plans are the swimming pool. I’ll clip everything I need to clip today while baby is napping and older child isn’t home from school yet. Then, other than checking message boards daily or every other, that’s it.
This is just a small part of who I am and what I do for fun. You do have to enjoy this (supercouponing) to make it work. If you view it as a chore like cleaning the bathroom, then you probably won’t be successful at it. I love the thrill of finding freebies. Of purchasing dozens of items and having the customer behind you in line drop their jaw at your final total. I love saving my family money. I love not paying for things. It’s just a part of me–I blame my Nan. And if you knew her, you knew she was the original bargain hunter.

Until you learn it, it does take more time, I won’t lie. But after a while, your brain starts to think in deals. Seriously. I can walk in to any store, and I see a deal posted, and immediately my brain goes into “How can I get this cheaper?” drive. It’s just about adjusting your thinking with your purchases. Think of it like exercising. All the health experts tell us now, that it’s not necessary to exercise for hours on end every day. It’s about the little changes here & there, that eventually become a part of your lifestyle.

Same here. Little changes here & there, that eventually become a part of your frugal lifestyle. You re-evaluate the big, fatty donut before you put it into your mouth, and choose a bagel instead. Same goes with spending–before you take a bite, think if there is a cheaper way to do it. And I’ll show you some tips along the way.

And not everyone has to become a supercouponer, nor is it my goal to change everyone into one. But simple changes can reduce your weekly shopping trip by 10% or more–for most families today easily means $50-$100 monthly in savings.

Why would you pay the grocery store an extra $100 a month if you didn’t have to?