Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Money Pet Peeve: National Food Brands


Free Money Finance had a recent post about the Publix grocery chain offering a buy-one-get-one-free special, in which you would get a free store brand product along with a purchase of a national brand. This promotion is to try to convince buyers that their Publix branded products are every bit as good as national brand products. One of my biggest money pet peeves is the fact that people still waste money buying national brand products.

I asked my wife why this would be the case, and she said it had mainly to do with the packaging. Take a look at the above photo, for example. The Welch's juice bottle has a very pleasing photographic label, while the Publix brand is more monochromatic. This might lead to the unconscious impression that the premium packaging contains a higher quality product, which I have very seldom found to be the case.

When my wife and I do our grocery shopping, which we usually do in the middle of the night to avoid the big crowds, we usually pick up whatever products are the cheapest and will fulfill our needs. Safeway is our grocery store of choice, and their store brand is for the most part every bit as good as the national brand (plus Safeway offers online grocery shopping and delivery). There are only a couple of exceptions that I can think of, for which it is nice to have the genuine article. Here are a few products that come to mind, on which I don't mind spending just a little extra cash to get a product that makes me happy:

1) Crackers: I love Wheat Thins and Triscuits. Safeway makes a decent imitation of these crackers, but they just plain don't square up to the real thing.

2) Coca-Cola: This is more for my wife than for me. I would basically be content with generic Safeway soda (usually a six-pack for a dollar), but my wife is in love with Coca-Cola's diet black cherry vanilla coke. Much more expensive, but it is a unique flavor that to my knowledge no generic brand has tried to capture.

3) Herbs & Spices: Sometimes I will pick up a big package of generic Italian seasoning, but if I am doing any fancy cooking I like to pick up some premium spices that are a bit more flavorful and higher quality.

4) Charmin: This should be self-explanatory.

Other than these few items, we generally purchase the generic brand as long as the national brand product is not on sale for less than the generic (sometimes this is the case, so be sure to compare prices). If you are still purchasing national brand products, consider switching to generic products for the bulk of your needs. You will come home with a thicker wallet and you should be every bit as satisfied with the store brand products as with the national brands. Don't fall prey to deceptive advertising any longer!

(By the way, my wife is a former employee of Publix and she has nothing but good things to say about this company.)

3 comments:

Cat said...

Publix Power!

Joe & Liz said...

hum, i would say both. i have an ESA for both my children, it makes me feel like i am REALLY doing something for their future. BUT... a baby shower is about that and so much more. yes you are being a good uncle to do this but that is long term. a baby shower is about the needs the new family will have right away. i know the shower has already passed, sorry i missed you guys there (i went to the 1st one). you're celebrating the arrival of this new little baby boy about to enter the world and it really comes down to whatever you want to do to celebrate that. My grandma sent me a dollar for my birthday every year for 25 years. not that big of a deal, but now having her gone i sure miss that dollar in the mail.

Cat said...

Actually, Joe and Liz, you are wrong. A baby shower is NOT just about the needs the family has in the here and now...it is also about planning for the future and setting the parents (and the child) up for success. When I was born, my grandparents purchased a sizeable chunk of stock for me, with the intention of it being used to fund my college education. Because I had a full academic scholarship to the four-year university I attended as an undergrad, I was able to fund my entire graduate school education on that stock money. Now I guess that present may not have been as cutsey and in-the-moment as a set of onesies or a diaper genie, but I have to say, I am damn grateful that I (and my parents) were given such a practical and long-lasting gift.

Perhaps I lack the typical girly reaction to wedding and baby showers, but I do have to wonder: when did these events become associated primarily with gift-grubbing? OK, I'll admit, I did enjoy all the presents bestowed upon me for simply donning a white dress and walking down an aisle, but I hardly put any expectations on the people who were invited to share in the festivities. A gift is a gift, and chances are a lot of thought, love, and perhaps money, went into that gift, no matter how unromantic it appears on the outside.

So, the bottom line is this: Zach and I chose to celebrate the upcoming birth of our new nephew by setting up an education account that we could add to in the future. A lot of thought, love, and a good chunk of money went into that gift. If our gift doesn't seem as wonderful as all of the other standard cutsey baby gifts out there, so be it. In eighteen years those so-called wonderful baby items will be in the trash but our gift will still be in existence.

Thank you for your input and I think you have just inspired me to write about this subject in my own blog!

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