The kick-off of this whole entrepreneurial venture engages the art of the thrift. My salvage and saving skills are well-honed, if I do say so myself, and while I’m not an extreme couponer, I wish I could be. A whole shelf full of pasta? Unlimited toilet paper? Endless laundry detergent? Dreamy. Maybe someday I’ll commit myself to those efforts for real, but I’m not that good yet.
Plus, I’m building a business and that’s taking up most of my waking hours.
My most noteworthy money-back-in-the-Orla-Kiely-wallet strategies have been in motion for years. And it pays, which is the real reason why I keep on doing it, and am sharing today.
1. Lucky Magazine Rewards:
I’ve been a subscriber of Lucky Mag for somewhere around a decade; I lost track of the length of my relationship, but I do know that I scored my subscription at uber-uber-discount years ago, and I think I’m still paid through 2015. The best subscriber benefits is the Lucky Rewards program, which was among the first affiliate programs of it’s kind that I leeched on to. Before I make an online purchase, I’m likely to poke around this site and see if there are any cash-back incentives available, whether it be 1%, 5%, or (and I miss this) 20%, which is what I was getting back from Zappos when I was in college. Order through the link on Lucky Mag, get cash back in your account.
The subscription pays for itself. My Lucky Rewards have redeemed me over $230.00 (Just a brainy guesstimate. I can’t verify with a screen grab, because in 2008 they updated systems and I can no longer access my old reward data.)
The company has an established email marketing strategy, the messages from which I’ve gotten good at deleting without opening so I don’t find myself being tempted to spend, spend, spend to save, save, save (bad news bears in true snowball effect). This week’s is from Lord & Taylor, if you want to subscribe and get all over ordering some fancy sandals and summer dresses.
2. RetailMeNot:
I know there are lots of great coupon code sites out there but I’ve turned to these guys for years now with lots of success . Like Lucky Rewards, I turn to this site to check for codes anytime I’m about to order something online, most of the time finding something, whether it be a discount or free shipping upgrade. Cha-ching! Insta-savings, baby.
3. Snapfish:
I’ve been a Snapfish-girl for 9 years. I loved them way before they were big and all HP’ed-out. I still purchase prints once or twice a year (which most people don’t bother with anymore) because I like the option of framing my pictures and so I select the best of the best just to be able to flip through. Snapfish has also served as a good place to backup photos; I actually wouldn’t have this file of me with the goats at the Erie County Fair if it weren’t for having uploaded it in August of 2004. (Death of a hard drive is a sensitive subject and another topic all together.)
How do I save money by using Snapfish? Well, it’s cheaper than buying prints from Rite Aid or Target, and I get a really good value by buying prints in bulk from Snapfish in quantities of 250 (for $20). The bulk order discount is substantial, and the credits carry over from year to year if you place at least one order per year. I usually wait for free shipping offers, wink, and save myself a few more dollars.
I’ve also referred other folks and been rewarded 200 free prints over the years. And they also have extremely good customer service in my 9-year experiences; any issues with the quality or mail have always been fixed. I should just be hired for a Snapfish testimonial.
4. CitiCards ThankYou Points:
No one’s a stranger to the concept of ThankYou Points. I responsibly pay everything with my credit card these days. Emphasis on Responsibly. I’m not in credit card debt and keep the card balance at zero by spending what I’m budgeted to and pay off the card before the monthly statement and interest charges have a chance to generate. Free money, no interest fees, free points that accumulate and provide me with precious $100 Marshall’s gift cards every time I’m up to 10,000 credits. It’s a good reward for good behavior. And it’s a happy-dance kind of day when those free gift cards arrive.
5. Starbucks Gold:
We like Starbucks over here. Don’t hate on us for supporting the big guys. I like normal out of the coffee pot coffee just fine, but no one, including myself has been able to duplicate a Venti Peppermint Non-Fat, No-Whip, No-Foam, Extra-Hot Mocha like my very-routined neighborhood baristas. The Gold card is an upgrade from a normal registered gift card, and we benefit from some of the perks. Mostly, a 75-cent savings on my Peppermint Shot but also freebie coupons every 15 card swipes, which happens more than you’d think.
6. Gas Stations.
What? Yeah, this is new and just a temporary promotion, but I’m workin’ it. The Hess Express location nearest my house had a banner inserted above the pump one day that caught my eye; with every purchase of 8+ gallons, get a free water bottle for a penny. Really, this is a penny + 5 cent refundable deposit in NY, but it’s a nearly free bottle of water to consume in my travels. Between Pete and I filling up, I’ve already gotten a dozen bottles of Aquafina.
7. Amazon Prime:
If you find yourself ordering items from Amazon as regularly as we do, you’ll benefit by paying the small monthly fee of $6.59 (it’s a $79/year). In a way, it makes total sense to order more than just special items on Amazon; I just found a great deal on sunscreen and dog treats, both of which were cheaper than retail (considerably) and shipped for free in just 2 days. You can even try it out for one month free right here if you want.
16 Comments
I heart RetailMeNot! It came in quite handy when I ordered the library curtains and I check it whenever I’m about to buy something, too. Also, I know what you mean about deleteing emails without opening them to avoid temptation.
Little known (at least in the blog world) fact about me? I used to work at Sbux. I could(can?) make a mean peppermint mocha (or peppermint hot chocolate, for my non-coffee-drinking friend, ironically named Emiley).
Your appreciation of Starbucks is why I like you most, Cait. OK, not really, but now I know I can ask you for the secret formula and maybe a special stash of peppa-minty goodness.
Haha! I haven’t used our espresso machine (which I got pretty cheap on eBay) for much besides double espressos recently, but I think I could hone my skills again. ;)
I know that you can buy bottles of peppermint from Starbucks (they’re about $7 a liter), and sometimes they even have mocha powder on their retail shelves. Annoyingly I have yet to find another peppermint syrup that tastes as good, but the site says their mocha is just “sweetened cocoa”.
MMM. I do own the mocha powder and use it in smoothies (DIY Vivannos) and iced coffee from time to time, but maybe I’m not using as much as they do in the stores; it’s never quite the same.
I think I need to come up with a “pump” to “tablespoon” conversion. PMs get 5 pumps mocha and 5 pumps peppermint, but I have no idea what that is in normal people measurements… haha.
Well, 5 in a venti. (3 in tall, 4 in grande and 6 in iced venti.)
Oi vey.
But I heard a rumor that calories and sugar content don’t count when it’s coffee? True story. ;)
Good, because I’m sure a 5-er of peppermint isn’t 300 extra calories or anything.
I’m pretty sure the rumor specifically mentioned that any-and-all things peppermint are calorie free.
I am a huge fan of walmart.com. I always buy diapers from walmart.com- because it sure as heck beats loading and unloading 3 kids and then standing in a walmart line! Shipping is free on diapers and the price is the same as in store so you save on gas and hassle. They also have $.97 shipping on many other items- which also figures out to be savings in gas and hassle. And typically, the prices online are much cheaper than in the store.
Awesome! I’ll keep that in mind for someday down the road.
Ok, raising hand. Heck yeah I’m a wanna-be extreme couponer! Within the space limitations though – no way am I storing toilet paper under my coffee table.
2 additional faves from me:
– Mr. Rebates also offers cash back and usually have an awesome percentage.
– Evreward.com allows you to compare cashback sites to make sure you’re getting the best deal from a particular site.
RetailMeNot & Snapfish are my guilty pleasures, and I’ve taken advantage of some of the Subscribe & Save deals on Amazon for things I order regularly to save even more (and somehow qualified for free Prime membership). And also echo the whole credit card with points/cash back sentiment. Great list!
I’ll check out Mr. Rebates and Evrewards.com! Lucky you for getting a free Prime membership!
LOVE this post! Eric and I are totally budget-savvy whores! I even talk about how our budget makes our world go ’round in our “About Us” section! LOL
In all seriousness, we are super responsible with money and have seriously been considering getting a credit card with awesome points for the exact same reason! hmm…
I’ve had my Citi ThankYou Card for about 5 years; I made out REALLY well the first few years that I had it because they were doubling points for gas/grocery/drug store purchases and I earned enough points in a short amount of time (like, enough to buy a TV and a few hundred dollars worth of other random gift cards, used for things like gifts at Christmastime). The deals aren’t quite the same since the recession, but I did just get some mail today telling me that they were increasing the value of each dollar spent by 20%, so each dollar was actually worth 1.2 points. Little things. A good card, nonetheless.