What Happens When Your Coupons Suddenly Become Worthless
Amateur athletes who were rewarded with sporting goods coupons, suddenly discover that the coupons are actually worthless.
Amateur athletes who were rewarded with sporting goods coupons, suddenly discover that the coupons are actually worthless.
Food Lion accidentally releases dozens of free product digital coupons at all once.
A high-value coupon with no restrictions is posted online – to the company’s regret.
A high-value printable Pilgrim’s chicken coupon goes viral – but is it really counterfeit?
A fast-food restaurant quickly regrets, and then starts refusing, its own terribly-worded coupon, angering coupon-carrying customers.
A grocery shopper with a “75% off” coupon tries to buy 15 shopping carts full of food, and threatens to sue when the store says no.
A pizza chain is overwhelmed with “free pizza” coupons sent to email club members, that it now claims were fraudulent.
ALDI finally decides that a controversial $10 off a $40 purchase coupon is valid and will be accepted, after initially dismissing it.
Maybe if the way companies name and categorize their products wasn’t so confusing, their coupons wouldn’t be quite so confounding either. The latest company to issue a coupon that’s generating excitement, befuddlement, controversy and even outright greed among some couponers is the maker of Rachael Ray Nutrish dog food. Some couponers are cashing in big time, as the company tries[Read More…]