Four ways to avoid buying too much at Costco or Sam's Club
Warehouse clubs like Costco or Sam's Club are designed to encourage purchases. But there are ways to avoid buying too much.
Shoppers load items onto a cart at Costco Warehouse in Arlington, Va. Warehouse clubs are set up to encourage people to buy. Here are four ways to avoid the temptation to buy too much.
Molly Riley/Reuters/File
Jonah Lehrer wrote a brilliant little article over at the Science Blog. An excerpt:
The secret of Costco鈥檚 success 鈥 and the reason I鈥檓 willing to pay just to enter the store 鈥 is because I trust the company to give me a good deal. As a result, I don鈥檛 comparison shop on my phone when I鈥檓 browsing the Costco aisles, checking to see if I can get the same book, or sunglasses, or toothpaste for less on Amazon. My usual cheapskate anxieties have been quieted.
And then, later:
And this is where all those details of the Costco shopping experience make us more likely to spend money. The bare bones warehouse aesthetic, the discounted house brand, the constant reassurance that we鈥檙e paying 鈥渨holesale鈥 prices 鈥 it鈥檚 all an effective means of convincing us to not worry so much about the price tag. As a result, we鈥檙e able to focus entirely on our anticipated pleasures, which is why I walk out of the store with all this stuff I don鈥檛 need.
Quite often , I鈥檝e discussed the advantages of shopping at warehouse clubs. I currently have a Sam鈥檚 Club membership (it鈥檚 the only warehouse club anywhere near my home) and have visited Costco several times in the past 鈥 the shopping experience is almost identical.
What I鈥檝e learned is that almost always, you do save money when you shop there, but only if you buy things you would buy normally anyway.
Of course, that鈥檚 not where the profit lies for a warehouse club. If they earn a return on every item you buy, then they make a larger profit. It鈥檚 business 101.
Thus, the store is often set up to encourage you to buy more. They already have the psychological benefit of the idea that the stuff there is inexpensive 鈥 and it often is 鈥 but that often convinces people that things are a 鈥渄eal鈥 there and that they don鈥檛 really have to look at the price tag or think about whether they really need the item at all.
Take, for example, my last visit to Sam鈥檚 Club. I went there merely to buy Pull-Ups for my daughter. By the time I neared the checkout, I had several items in my cart 鈥 a paperback book, a large container of grapes, a two-pack of my son鈥檚 favorite fruit juice, and a few other odds and ends. Once I thought about each of them for a little while, I realized I didn鈥檛 actually need most of them 鈥 I was only buying them because I wanted them, thought they might serve a use for me, and believed the price was good. So I put them back and left only with the Pull Ups (a big win, in my eyes).
What can you do to avoid falling into this trap and spending more than you should on 鈥渂argains鈥 (that aren鈥檛 really bargains at all if it鈥檚 not stuff you really need)? Here鈥檚 how I usually work it.
I don鈥檛 go in there without a shopping list. I know what I鈥檓 there to buy the second I walk in the door. The trip has a very specific purpose 鈥 I鈥檓 getting the items on my list and nothing else.
I don鈥檛 even go down aisles that do not contain items on my list. Wandering is the enemy of frugal shopping, because you always see something you 鈥渘eed鈥 that鈥檚 a good 鈥渄eal.鈥
I re-evaluate everything in my cart as I approach the checkout. I look at every single item and ask myself if I actually need it or even want it that badly. Does it really serve a purpose in my life? Is that purpose worth the cost?
I usually shop with a buddy. That buddy is usually my wife. We talk ourselves out of an awful lot of frivolous purchases, which saves us both money. A good shopping buddy is someone who talks you out of stuff and doesn鈥檛 talk you into stuff.
Warehouse stores are great tools for minimizing your grocery and household budget, but you have to be careful not to give into impulse buys, which warehouse stores make so easy. Good luck.
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