Grocery Growth Ray To Hit Ketchup, Chips
A grocery growth ray is set to hit a popular condiment and several kinds of baked corn with names ending "tos." To push the brands as being good values, Heinz will be selling slightly larger ketchup bottles, and Frito-Lay is adding 20% to Tostitos, Fritos, Cheetos and Doritos - without raising the price. Unlike the grocery shrink ray, you can bet this change will be loudly trumpeted on the package.
Consumer-Goods Makers Heed 'Paycheck Cycle' [WSJ] (Thanks to RandomHookup!)
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Comments:
Don't they put it on the package regardless to make you *think* you're getting a better deal. It's marketing working against you because you think "Oh well they'd never advertise a smaller size!"
We've seen plenty of examples of products with "New! Now 10.5 ounces!" which makes you think oh, it must've been 10 before, when in actuality it was 12.
This will be an easy way to add 20% to the bottle while adding 50% to the price tag.
I stopped buying "real" ketchup a long time ago, about the time the generics became less than 1/4 of the price of the real thing. Sure, they're not as nice, but I've found all you need to do is add some salt. Or sometimes vinegar. And for the price difference, I just don't mind that much.
My personal favourite subs: Aylmer's and Hunts. Unfortunately, the grocers only sell these when Heniz product price breaks the $4 mark on the most popular size (can't remember, but I think it's something like 750 mL to 1 L).
This is great news. Companies have continued to down-size packaging claiming that it maintains sales volume by keeping a 'price point'. I've had my fill of these HIDDEN price increases and have stopped buying tuna and ice cream for just that reason. The consumers only recourse is to speak with your feet.
They probably changed the ketchup formula again. Probably more corn syrup and water along with some tomato flavoring added.
I quit buying ketchup after the last bottle. It didn't even taste like ketchup, more like vinegar laced goo. There are some decent make your own ketchup recipes out there and much tastier.
As for the growth ray, what is the catch? I am guessing it was the shrink ray then the un-shrink ray marketed as growth.
I used to buy nothing but store brand chips, but they strangely started disappearing off of Stop and Shop's shelves. At least I can still get cheapo chips at Aldi.
I'm going to stick with the lessons I learned at the Chuck Garabedian Mega-Savings Seminar. Nothing but 33 cent stores and canned plankton for me!
@emona: I bought a gallon of 2% in Des Moines at a regular grocery store for $2.69 last week. Today, I saw gas for $1.49. Seriously, everything is cheaper here.
@Hank Scorpio: Mr. Scorpion, I like the fact that someone finally figured out Phase 2. Now what do I do with all of this underwear?
@shepd:
I don't mind Hunts ketchup, but the jerks managed to squeeze gluten into it, so now I can't buy it anymore.
@Fermina Daza: I kind of feel like the "organic" craze made produce and other unprocessed foods seem like luxury items, and the prices went up accordingly.
@fuzzymuffins: Watch out, fuzzymuffins wants to control your caloric intake! First its smoking, then what one can eat, then its off to the FEMA concentration camps and loss of our freedoms!
mariospants:
Yeah i thought that too... "Ketchup, chips" or "Ketchup chips?"
My first bag: [flickr.com]
All the McDonald's (and pretty much everywhere else) here have been hiding them behind the counter. You have to ask for them, and then you have to specify just how many you want if you don't just want one or two. They'd balk at giving you 10 or 20, or if you're not a take-out customer. :)
For those wondering how everyone gets ketchup with their eat-in meals, they usually have those gross condiment pumps (which are usually empty) and sample cups.
Actually, for ketchup, it's been so long since I've found "restaurants" with packets, I bought a box of packets (~500 for $8... I still can't figure out why they hide them, can't be the price) for my desk at work. Stays fresher longer than a bottle and it's still 4L, so it's still a reasonably good value in this case.
@emona:
$5.49 a "gallon" (actually for a total of 4 L of milk divided into three bags) in most grocery stores when you go across the border. $3.97 in Walmart, but that's a heavily advertised loss leader, IMHO.
Of course, I'm lactose intolerant, so I don't care, but my wife drinks it like it's going out of style. :(
@bohemian: "vinegar laced goo"
Yep, that's about right, and it's what makes ketchup the finest condiment in history. It's allegedly one of the few rare substances to tingle all five of the taste sensations simultaneously, including the mysterious "umami." I loves me some ketchup. Who needs tomatoes?
@Vanilla5: Yeah, but look at all that "air" (or whatever gas it is) you're getting to keep those NCAA BOWL GAME chips nice and in one piece. You don't want crumbs with your NCAA BOWL GAME Salsa do you?
























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