WEBSITE MAKES YOUR ONLINE PURCHASES SWEETER
I'm a huge fan of shopping online. I love how it affords me the
convenience of shopping without having to leave my room. In fact,
I'm already way past the point of wondering how I ever shopped
without the Internet. And I'm not just talking about holiday
shopping. I mean everyday shopping like buying clothes, shoes,
groceries, you name it. No longer must I schlep down to the store,
pay money to park, take the elevator, try and find the items I want,
go back to the car, drive home and finally unload everything that I
loaded into the car (I'm exhausted just having to type all of this).
Now I just simply click a mouse and poof it's waiting for me at my
front door.
However there is one frustration when I get ready to check out and
proceed to the final few screens. It's usually one field into which
I can type some information that I more than likely don't have. It
just sits there, taunting me. It's the field that's asking me to
type in a coupon code. It could also be the field that's asking me
for a gift code or a discount code or some other kind of code that
holds the promise of even more savings. It's like a secret password
you don't have so you can't get into a club. It feels like a slap in
the face, an ultimate thumb-to-nose taunt from the vendor. What? You
don't have our special secret discount coupon code? Then you don't
get our special deep discount or free shipping. You are not worthy.
You weren't smart enough to find it or maybe we just didn't bother
to send one to you. So YOU must pay the full price!
But now there's a way to get some of those valuable coupon codes.
There's a website that actually makes them available to you and they
do it for free! No special password or secret handshake required.
Just surf on over to DealLocker.com and you'll find a repository of
literally thousands of online coupon codes just waiting there for
you to use.
Deal Locker gets these special codes from active participants who
contribute them to the website and from the companies themselves.
The Deal Locker staff is constantly verifying these codes, updating
them and removing them when they are no longer active. Users report
back to Deal Locker when a code is no longer valid so the accuracy
is pretty good.
Companies also offer coupon codes to Deal Locker in hopes to entice
shoppers to their website as well. These are what Deal Locker calls
"Guaranteed Codes" and that classification speaks for itself. But
even if a code doesn't work, what do you have to lose trying it? If
it works, you'll get a better deal, free shipping, who knows? And
for the most part, the online companies really like what Deal Locker
is doing. The bottom line is that they are selling more stuff
because Deal Locker visitors actually find out about what companies
are selling when they visit the website. If not for Deal Locker,
they might never have known about the deal. Deal Locker also has
additional features like the Secret Amazon Discount Tool that lets
you search items being offered on Amazon by the discount being
offered. You pick a category such as Kitchen and Housewares, pick a
minimum like 70 percent off and it will find all the items that fit.
Very nice.
Another savings feature is the ability to find products on sites
like eBay via misspelled words. Too often, items can't be located by
potential buyers because the seller misspelled the item's name.
Their Typo Buddy finds these items and you might find yourself being
the only bidder.
If you've been shopping online, check out Deal Locker. Like me, you
may be a bit sad at first when you see all the online coupons you
could have used during your recent shopping and discover how much
money you could have saved. Don't let that happen to you and check
it out right now.
www.deallocker.com
| Craig Crossman is
a McClatchy-Tribune newspaper columnist writing about computers and
technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on
computers and technology, Computer America, heard on both the Business TalkRadio
Network® and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network®, weeknights at 10PM Eastern
time. Visit his website at http://www.computeramerica.com |
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