Major Brands Pull Back on Paper Coupons
General Mills makes a deliberate shift to digital offers, as it cuts back on its once-plentiful paper coupons.
General Mills makes a deliberate shift to digital offers, as it cuts back on its once-plentiful paper coupons.
Shoppers are reporting torn-up cereal boxes, left behind by people stealing codes imprinted inside.
Printable coupons appear to have made a first-of-the-month comeback, after a notable decline last month.
A website offering exclusive Spanish-language printable coupons that English speakers could use, is revamped – without the exclusive coupons.
Among the 37 million email addresses in the hacked Ashley Madison data, many of them belong to couponers and coupon providers alike.
General Mills completely reverses its controversial new legal terms, which would have barred coupon users and newsletter subscribers from suing the company.
General Mills outrages couponers with a quiet update to its legal policy, saying you can’t sue them if you download their coupons.
Today was supposed to be the last day of a coupon offer that had some lucky shoppers cashing in on an amazing deal – as many free cans of Green Giant vegetables they could carry! Unfortunately, the word got out, shelves were cleared, the offer was revoked and everyone ended up pointing fingers at each other for “ruining” a great[Read More…]
If you’re a couponer with school-aged kids, chances are you’ve clipped a “Box Tops For Education” label or two. Now, the program is marking a milestone – though it’s coming at something of an awkward time. This week, the Box Tops program announced that it’s surpassed a half billion dollars in earnings since its inception in 1996. In all, the[Read More…]