orange juice, all pulp wrote:
Go to the store and give it to someone who is buying shoes. Say Merry Christmas when you do. Win win.
Now that's a good idea.
orange juice, all pulp wrote:
Go to the store and give it to someone who is buying shoes. Say Merry Christmas when you do. Win win.
Now that's a good idea.
That's 50 bucks they aren't losing if you don't spend it there-especially if you have no intent of going there again. Nothing wrong with shoe stores. It'd be nice to support them a little if its not a chain. You might even meet some runners there.
Throw it in the trash. Nothing worse than dealing with running store employees/owners.
grouchy runner wrote:
Let's say I want Hoka shoes. Retail brick and mortar is $150. I can get them online clearance for $80 just by waiting a while. So by using the coupon, I lose $20.
What you are doing is basically waiting for the price to drop on last year's model. Find a shoe you like. Wait until a clearance on the model and buy several pair. New models won't be much different than old but markers know people --the general public-- link shiny new things best.
Bullet the Blue Sky wrote:
That was actually kind of funny.
grouchy runner wrote:Shredded it.
The idea of having this coupon in my life for one more second was intolerable.
Yeah, that was a pretty good line.
And shredding it gives a much better anger release then just tossing it.
elephino wrote:
orange juice, all pulp wrote:Go to the store and give it to someone who is buying shoes. Say Merry Christmas when you do. Win win.
Now that's a good idea.
I'll try to tape the voucher back together. Luckily, it's not cross cut.
An idea was get my wife to buy Adiadas Boost shoes for me since Boosts never go on sale.
If they accept the re-assembled coupons and third party buys without gait analyzing.