A blog dedicated to discussing current consumer affairs and the retail industry.

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Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Ebay Tip

As i mentioned earlier, I promised to give some usefull tips on how to score an item on Ebay at the lowest price possible. The truth is, bidding on Ebay really is an art to some people but to most it's not.

My first tip is the most important advice i can give. It is about timing your bids. Using this method has potentially saved me heaps of dollars. I have literally won items that have had no bids by using this method.

So the way to bid is to search through your items that you are interested in and find the items that finish very late at night or as early in the morning as possible because chances are everyone will be asleep and no one will bid on the item if you're lucky. It's common sense really. There are a few sellers who God knows why, end their items at some crazy time in the night or morning. I have won so many latest cds at a cost of only 99 cents by doing it this way. Give it a go and tell me what you think. Click the link below.

eBay is Australia's leading online marketplace

Monday, February 25, 2008

Cheap Ringtones for your Mobile Phone

I have been looking for cheap yet good quality ringtones for my mobile phone. I'm way too lazy to cut music up on my pc and sending it to my phone. I found this site is the best Jamster! - the latest ringtones for your mobile!!

Have a look. let me know what you think.

Friday, January 18, 2008

Your First Stop


Thursday, January 17, 2008

Corporation Greed?

I recently purchased a brand new 40gb Playstation 3 for $677 (Australian Dollars) from Myers, one of Australias largest department stores. Meanwhile you can get the exact same product in the US for $399 in US Dollars. Now what i quite don't understand is why there is a price different of $277 between the same product when the Australian dollar is almost equivalent to the US dollar. In fact the Australian dollar has never been stronger. Not to mention the economy in Australia has never been stronger and is still showing rapid growth.

Now i know that the retail market in Australia isn't as big nor competitive as it is in the US. But this still shouldn't matter. What i want to know is why Sony are inflating their prices on this specific product by over 50% on the exact same product in Australia when the dollar is almost matching the US dollar? It's not just Sony who does this. The same goes for many other transnational corporations.

The obvious solution would be to simply have bought my new PS3 direct from the US from an online retailer such as Amazon.com. Believe me, i tried doing this only to find that if i did i would be slumped with excessive import and customs taxes. Which i suppose is fair enough as this deters consumers from purchasing outside their own country therefore enabling the retail markets in Australia to remain as competitive as they can without this businesses going completely broke. But still, this is a question i put to Sony. Why are the prices of your products excessively inflated here while in the US they are significantly lower when the Australian dollar is almost matching the US dollar?

Wednesday, January 2, 2008

Bringing You Cheaper Products

This is a blog site dedicated to linking you to sources that offer cheaper prices for products that you will find in the major retail stores.