The major consumer product manufacturers want to take away our Sunday cents-off coupons.

Technically, the companies’ goal, according to a story in
today’s New York Times, is to shift our access to coupons from the
traditional glossy inserts in weekend newspapers to more high-tech delivery methods.
Now I’m obviously a big fan of doing things electronically. And I once
thought I’d never shift from paper checks to online payments, but I have. So I
won’t say "never" when it comes to collecting coupons in a
newfangled way.
But, as the story notes, it’s going to take a while before the
companies can completely convert most of us old-style clip-and-save adherents. Still, that doesn’t stop them from trying, and manufacturers are exploring several different ways to wean us from
paper.
There’s the baby-step method, in which we’ll find the coupon
online and then print and redeem them at stores in the traditional way. But they also are
aiming for totally electronic coupons, which will be delivered to cell
phones (upon request, of course; no one wants coupon spam, even if one of the e-coupons is for that processed meat) and cashed
in by waving the phone over a cash register scanner.
The phone option, an enthusiastic high-tech coupon advocate told the Times, will be de rigueur in five years. Yeah, right. Don’t underestimate the power of quasi-Luddites.
We might all be talking too much, too loudly in too many inappropriate places on our
cell phones, but talking’s all we really want them for. Just look at how
hard it’s been to get us to use credit cards, which kids today seem to
be born with an innate knowledge of, in vending machines, and that’s just a small shift in the traditional use of plastic.
If something that
simple and already a part of the national purchasing process is still
trying to make additional inroads into our shopping culture (blogged
about here), I don’t expect cell phone couponing, as appealing and
easy as it might be, to show up in just five years.
More than money: Plus, as the Times‘ story points out, paper coupons are not only a
means of saving a few cents (or more if you use them wisely), but also
a way of learning about new products on store shelves.
I know that as I laze around on
my couch each Sunday afternoon, I find
browsing and clipping from a mini "coupon catalog" a lot easier and more appealing than
sitting in front of my PC and conducting a lot a separate product
searches. Especially since I can simultaneously clip paper coupons and keep an eye on the NFL (or other major league) games.
Sure, coupon aggregation sites where you can find a collection of
coupons to print have been around for a while. A few popular ones are FreeMania, Cool Savings and Freebie
Fanatic. Saver/blogger extraordinaire Frugal for Life also offers a review of some the sites that she looked at last year.
So by all means, check out the coupon Web sites. You might find a few worth printing.
Just be sure you can use the online versions. Back in Florida, the
grocery store where I regularly shopped refused to take computer
printed coupons. Apparently they had encountered some issues with
unknowing or unscrupulous shoppers redeeming fake coupons they found
online.
As for myself, I’m going to stay with the paper system I instituted back in
my much younger and poorer days (and detailed in this earlier blog posting) for as long as I can, for nostalgia’s sake as
much as for the savings.



sharon
I use coupons all the time and in quanity. Getting them off the internet will keep you from using it more than once. I hate it. I saved over $2000. last year!
Shain Jacob
Hi, I was wondering if you post the tax discount coupons from axispayroll.com encouraging client to efile their tax returns online. The coupon code can be found by going to the blog site.
Web URL is http://www.axispayroll.com/blog