Local Dad Masters the Grocery Game

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Overland Park dad Kevin McCanles was out of town on business when he heard about the Grocery Game on a news report. Always looking for a challenge, he decided to check it out.

He registered on the company's website and made up his family's shopping list. Each week, he got a list of all the items that he should purchase. These emails told him which coupons to clip in the Sunday paper and where he could find the coupons. Coupons in hand he would head to the grocery store. McCanles found that stores that double or triple coupons make the game work very well. For example, a bottle of mustard is normally priced at $1.69. It's on sale for $.99. You have a coupon for $.35 off. The coupon is doubled so you only pay 29 cents for a $1.69 bottle of mustard. This will save you $1.40! Then the trick is to buy all the mustard you can use before it expires.

McCanles really enjoyed the challenge of the game but warns that you do need to be careful and not get carried away with the grocery game. He realized at one point that there was a lot of very unhealthy snack food in the pantry because it was almost free!

In order to "win" at the grocery game he recommends that you be flexible with your meal planning, have a good deal of storage space and remain disciplined. He also advises that you have to play for a while before your pantry is stocked and you notice significant savings on your grocery bill.

With time, coupons and help from the Grocery Game, you too can help your family save money and keep your pantry full.

 

These Kansas City area stores have their prices and weekly specials in the Grocery Game data base:

Dillons

HyVee

Price Chopper

CVS

Walgreens

 

Warehouse or Neighborhood Store?

We've always wondered-do you really save money shopping at the warehouse stores?

KCP recently compared just a few prices to try to help you answer this question.

 

Warehouse                             Neighborhood store

Freshly baked artisan bread                $4.49 for 2 loaves                   $3.99 for one loaf

Scott Bath Tissue                                $0.58 per roll                           $0.66 per role

2% Milk                                              $2.75 gallon                            $3.19 gallon

Dole Chunk Pineapple                        $0.91                                       $1.29

 

 

GET IN THE GAME!

Michelle McDowell does something almost unimaginable these days: She feeds her family of five- including 8-year-old twin boys Adam and Zachary and 15-year-old daughter Chelsea- on $90 a week in groceries.

            "We've never had more food in our house," claims McDowell.

            But about 15 months ago her weekly grocery bills looked more like the bills the rest of us ring up, about $200 a week. Than a friend introduced her to TheGroceryGame.com by showing her the toiletry stockpile in her linen closet. "And I was amazed," McDowell says.

            The Grocery Game, created by Teri Gault in 2000, creates an online list of the lowest-priced products at your local supermarket and matches the products you select with manufacturers' coupons and weekly specials, both advertised and unadvertised. It then breaks down the list by items to put in your stockpile, items you need or want as a treat and items to be had for free. By tracking 10,000 grocery items weekly, the list does the math on the best sales, telling you how many of what product to buy, what size and even where to find the coupons.

            "Supermarkets are making money off people who don't know how to play the grocery game," Gault says.

            But more and more people are learning. There are now about 100,000 households using The Grocery Game every week and traffic has tripled since the beginning of the year as grocery bills have risen. A family can save up to 50 percent on their bill from the first week, with the average savings for a family of four ringing up at $512 a month, Gault says.

            "It's the only way that I know that you can save money without having to cinch up your belt."

            McDowell says she always cut coupons. But even after all the work of cutting out the coupons, she figures half the time she'd forget to bring them to the store. "And I may not have used them the right way, like now I won't use a coupon unless something is on sale," she says.

            While it took her about a month to really use the members-only lists, her full-size freezer, the pantry and the refrigerator are now always full. It even has her husband, Scott, asking: "How can you be spending less money when we have so much food?"

            As summer food prices soared, McDowell turned to her stockpile of food to keep her grocery bill in check. And when a neighbor collected donations in July to send overseas to American troops, she turned to her stockpile to fill up a box. "You have your own little grocery store in the basement," she says.

            She admits she used to feel embarrassed at the checkout with all the coupons but her typical savings of $50 to $60 a week with those coupons help ease that feeling.

            "The way the economy is now, it means a lot. I'm teaching my kids something, it's not just that we're saving money. They know if they go to the grocery store with me, before they even ask for something now they say ‘is this on sale, do you have a coupon for this?' We're teaching them you can't just throw money away just because you want it."

 

Tamara O'Shaughnessy is the editor of Chicago Parent magazine.

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