‘Hotcouponworld in the Media’


Redbook Magazine Mentions HotCouponWorld!

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

It is always fun when our site gets a little unexpected media attention and this one came out of the blue for us when we found out that we got a little mention in Redbook magazine. Once I found out I of course had to run to the store and pick up a copy of the September issue (it has actress Sofia Vergara from the TV show Modern Family on the cover)so that I could add the magazine to my growing collection of media mentions. If you want to read the article in your copy, you can find it on page 156, the title of the article is “Extreme Couponing for Amateurs” written by Lisa Costantini or you can read it online at the following link: Extreme Couponing for Amateurs.

The article offers a few simple tips for “extreme couponing” and HotCouponWorld is mentioned as a source for a great online coupon database to search for coupons before you go shopping. And of course we couldn’t agree more that the coupon database here is a great resource and tool to find thousands and thousands of coupons!

If you are unfamiliar with how the coupon database works might I suggest that you check out the How to Use the Coupon Database guide we have written up that gives all the information you need to know on how the database works. There is even a link in the guide to a video on how to find JUST the printable coupons in the coupon database, since that is a question we get asked a lot, and not all the coupons in the database are coupons you can print (although we do have a ton of printable coupons!).

Anyways…it is always nice to get a little mention in the media. And hey, if you are visiting HotCouponWorld because you saw us in Redbook magazine leave a comment on this post and say “hello” and let us know!


Hotcouponworld Mention in Entrepreneur Magazine

Thursday, July 15th, 2010
Entrepreneur Magazine July 2010

Entrepreneur Magazine July 2010

In the July 2010 issue of Entrepreneur Magazine the owners of Hotcouponworld.com and it’s owners Julie Parrish and Heidi Kennedy are given a nice mention in an article titled “The Bank in Your Backyard”. The article features advice on banking locally over banking at larger chain banks.

You can read the entire article online at the following link: The Bank in your Backyard by Gwen Morgan

Article:

Marilyn O’Neill’s company needed money. Nautilus Environmental, the San Diego environmental consulting firm she launched in 2004, had grown quickly. But to continue growing, O’Neill needed about three-quarters of a million bucks–smack in the middle of a recession and on the heels of her company losing about $170,000 during the downturn.

At the same time, the bank she had used since 2006–and the one that held her $550,000 line of credit–increased its loan audits from once a year to four times a year. “I didn’t think we should have to do that,” she says. “Then the CEO was fired by the board, and it started looking like things were unstable.”

So O’Neill began looking to other banks, large and small, in search of funding. Over the course of a year, she talked with about 10 of them, but one community bank in particular, Security Business Bank of San Diego, took an interest in her company. The manager eagerly courted Nautilus and seemed to understand the business.”He was working so much harder on making this happen than my current bank was,” she says. “He kept coming back to me, saying, ‘OK, we have these losses in 2009. Help me understand them so I can explain them in a way that gets us through the process.’”

In March, O’Neill closed a $709,000 Small Business Administration loan with Security Business Bank. The money paid off the $498,000 balance on her existing line of credit and gave her about $200,000 to shore up her cash reserves.

Yes, it took a year for her to get to that point, but that kind of due diligence is exactly what independent business owners need to practice when choosing a financial partner, says Richard Barrington, personal finance expert at MoneyRates.com, a financial information site that compares interest rates of various products. Choosing the right banking partner means looking far beyond great rates and convenient hours, especially in recessionary times.

First, some good news: Activity in loans backed by the Small Business Administration and other commercial lenders showed signs of renewal in the first quarter of the year, partly the result of more than $1 billion in loan guarantees from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. And there have been additional proposals to loosen lending to small businesses. In February, the White House announced plans for the Small Business Lending Fund, which would transfer $30 billion from the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). Now, the fund needs to wind its way through the legislative process.

Meanwhile, small businesses still need to find money. Conventional wisdom says it’s better to be a big fish in a small pond, but larger banks may offer more experience in and access to international services or a greater variety of financial products and services, says financial advisor Bruce Fenton, managing director of Atlantic Financial, an investment firm in Norwell, Mass. Some may be able to provide easier access to ancillary business lines in insurance or investing services.

However, the sheer size of many large banks makes it difficult for even midsize companies to have much influence.

That was Julie Parrish’s gut instinct. Parrish and Heidi Kennedy are co-founders of Coupon Girls. Last year they shelled out nearly $40,000 to successfully defend their website, HotCouponWorld.com, against an allegation of trademark infringement. Parrish and Kennedy knew they needed a line of credit but were afraid that their primary bank, Wells Fargo, wouldn’t look too benevolently upon them. Coupon Girls is a fledgling business whose owners found each other online seven years ago and have never met in person–Parrish lives in West-Linn, Ore., and Kennedy lives in Gillette, Wyo. Their credit scores were “in the low 700s,” says Parrish. And before Parrish’s husband was deployed to Iraq last year, the couple took out $150,000 in loans to renovate their 1977 home, and she racked up $20,000 in student loans obtaining her master’s degree in business administration.

“We made some choices, with three kids, that if something should happen to him, the house is secure and I have the skills to support the kids,” she says.

So Parrish went into her local bank hoping to borrow money to help pay her attorneys, and within a few days they secured a $40,000 line of credit. Parrish says the bank’s manager pushed for the line because he believed in their business.

“There are three reasons why a small business would tend to favor borrowing from a community bank,” Barrington says. “One is cultural fit. Another is lower overhead. And, a third, is useful interest in the community.”

Barlow Research, a Minneapolis banking market research firm, finds that 73 percent of small businesses that bank with small banks consider themselves “very satisfied” vs. 50 percent of large-bank customers. Large banks are defined as those with $50 billion-plus in assets; medium banks are those with $1 billion to $50 billion in assets; and small banks have less than $1 billion in assets.

Small-business lending plans are on the rise among smaller-bank customers, too, says Linda O’Connell, managing director of small-business banking for Barlow. Sixty-eight percent of small-bank, small-business customers plan to borrow at their primary bank in the next year, compared with about one-third the year before. Sixty-one percent of medium-bank customers and 51 percent of large-bank customers plan to seek loans.

Regardless of the size of the bank, however, you should make decisions based on how eager the institution is to get your business.

“Don’t limit yourself to one size of bank,” Barrington says. “After all, community banks only represent 23 percent of the industry by assets, but they represent 97 percent of all banks by number of banks.”

Choosing the best banking partner requires research and negotiation. First, Fenton says, find a bank with a strong manager with whom you’ll be able to build a relationship. The relationship has always been important, the financial advisor says, but it has been tougher to cultivate in recent years because mergers and acquisitions have created more mega-banks.

Robert C. Seiwert, senior vice president with the American Bankers Association, suggests meeting with your bank representative and asking what kind of experience he or she has with businesses like yours. Your banker should have some expertise in your industry so that he or she understands the business and can help bring solutions to your firm. Make sure that the bank is capable of handling special needs, such as letters of credit or other tools for international transactions. Also, ask if you’ll have access to other advisors in the bank–if you have a problem, will the bank provide all of its resources to help you find solutions?

Once you’re satisfied with the people portion of the decision, look at the bank’s stability. The FDIC Bank Data section of its website (fdic.gov) includes information on bank health markers such as assets and liabilities. In addition, Bankrate.com’s “Safe and Sound” rating system measures the capital adequacy, asset quality, profitability and liquidity of banks and credit unions by using more than 20 tests and rates each bank on a five-star scale. This is important because if a bank fails, FDIC-insured accounts are protected up to $250,000, but loans and lines of credit have no such guarantees and may be frozen or come due.

If you’re looking for a loan from your bank, don’t shop just by rate, Seiwert warns: “There’s nothing more costly to a small business than the wrong loan at a great price.”

A bank that demands more collateral than is necessary or reasonable can hurt your business, no matter how low an interest rate you get. Pledging too much collateral limits your options to borrow again when you need it for growth or other reasons. Terms and interest rates are often negotiable, especially at smaller banks, where the chain of command to the ultimate decision-maker is shorter. If you need a loan in a short period of time and the bank you’re talking to has a minimum of a two-month turnaround, you need to keep looking, Barrington says. Your local Small Business Development Center can provide a list of SBA preferred lenders who often deal with small businesses.

Besides building a relationship with your banker, keep your options open to best serve your business. Parrish and Kennedy still have an account with Wells Fargo in case they ever need to tap the muscle of a bigger bank. In fact, one of their web developers is a Wells Fargo client, so they deposit their payments to him directly into his Wells Fargo account so that they clear more quickly, which helps the pair manage their cash flow.

Like anything else, the more research you do upfront about your prospective bank, the better decision you’ll be able to make, making it more likely you will find a long-term home for your business’s financial needs. That’s the experience Nautilus Environmental’s O’Neill had with her community banker.

“Going through the process made me feel that as we go forward with our plans to invest,” she says, “he would be there in the same way to support me and help me.”


Wall Street Journal Says “Extreme Couponing” – We Say Smart Economics and Savvy Personal Finance

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

Yesterday, members from this site and other online couponing communities were featured in a front-page article of the Wall Street Journal entitled “Hard Times Turns Coupon Clipping into the Newest Extreme Sport”.

Instantly, people on Twitter were tweeting about it, and bloggers were likening people with stockpiles to hoarders.  Sadly, the article and the subsequent video that went with it, went for the “extreme” shock value of what stockpiling is all about.  The video commentary that went with the story was quite offensive – calling extreme couponers “crazy and insane”. It wasn’t what I’d expected when I was interviewed for the story.  My personal take on stockpiling is about the economic value of having a pantry.  That wasn’t evident anywhere in the story.

So, I’m going to give you the other side of the story.  The one the Wall Street Journal missed out on, and the side that makes the point that stockpiling, extreme couponing, whatever you’d like to call it, is purely about economics.

Stockpile theory is a very simple premise…

First, make a list of the most important food items in your diet. Also make a list of non-perishable household items your family uses on a regular basis.  If you have pets, include items for their care as well.

Then look at the average weekly consumption of any given item.  How much cereal do you eat in a week?  How many times do you cook pasta, feed the dog, wash your hair, brush your teeth?

When you find the average weekly consumption for your list of items, multiply that amount by 52 weeks in a year.  That’s the amount of “inventory” your family should reasonably consume during the entire year. However, one should also consider the value of non-perishable items.  If the sale price is right, or the item is free, then it’s not unreasonable to stock up on more than a year’s supply of light bulbs, toilet paper, toothbrushes, or shampoo.

Then, look at the shelf life of a given item.  In the Wall Street Journal article, I was quoted as buying “50 jars of peanut butter” and some people commenting thought that was excessive.  However, peanut butter has an 18-month shelf life and I use one jar per week.  So a 50-jar purchase made all in the same week at the lowest seasonal price is not unreasonable. In fact, the savings on that one item was over $150 for the course of the entire year.  If my family’s consumption is one jar per week, rather than making 50 trips to the store to pay full price each visit, one trip to the store to buy what I need at rock bottom prices is much more economical.

Some items don’t have that kind of shelf life, and subsequently, they run on shorter cycles.  Steep discounts on oatmeal and granola bars happen twice a year, and the sales tie in quite nicely with the 6-month shelf lives on those products.  So understanding the simple principle of “First In, First Out” is helpful for maintaining a stockpile of perishable goods.

Foods that are still within the expiration but have a chance of not being consumed should get donated to a local agency that accepts food donations. The great thing is, you can do so and get a charitable tax deduction for the donation.  For some, the value of the tax deduction of the donated goods offsets the cash outlay for the goods purchased for personal consumption, making the cost of grocery shopping either a break even proposition, or a profitable experience.

In the peanut butter example, that $150 I saved can now go towards stockpiling some other items for future use. Stockpiling isn’t about over-consumption – we consume our pantry items at a regular rate of consumption. My family rarely consumes more than one jar of peanut butter a week.  Just because it’s there doesn’t mean my children are gorging themselves on peanut butter.

I liken the savings in my household to the retained earnings of a business. Stockpile savings is like profit after business activities. It’s net after-tax dollars that can be either taken as a draw for fun things (like family vacations and piano lessons for the kiddos) or it can be reinvested into the personal finances of your family – ie, fully funding a 401K, paying down debt, buying a first home, going back to school – things that create economic value and build wealth for your family.

A good business manager is rewarded for cutting costs, managing inventories effectively, and creating wealth for the company.  We don’t call him crazy or insane.  Instead, he’s given more stock options, raises, and promotions.  Those of us who fall into the “extreme couponing” category are doing precisely the same thing except the wealth is being created for our personal financial gain.  If I put $10,000 into a 401K account, I’d be doing better than most Americans.  But if I could put $10,000 in the 401K, and then shaved $10,000 off of my planned purchasing, the dollars I saved couponing could actually do more for me than the money I’ve saved in the 401K because it’s cash dollars I can spend right now and use for other investment vehicles.

Are there people out there that are clinical hoarders?  Absolutely!  We’ve seen from shows like A&E’s “Hoarders” that an estimated three million Americans suffer from hoarding.  Interestingly though, you never see people in those shows clipping coupons as a means of feeding the obsession with accumulation as it relates to the disease.

Could there be people who coupon who do have a hoarding illness?  I’m sure there are.  But the people you find at sites like this, using social media tools to save thousands of dollars a year – the obsession isn’t in the accumulation of stuff, rather, it’s in the security of having finances and an inventory of goods that will get them through hard times. For some, the economic gain of stockpiling is what’s kept them ahead of the recession.

Interestingly, Hotcouponworld has a disproportionate amount of members and site visitors that are in high-income earning household compared to other sites on the net.  The bulk of our members are either working towards or have achieved some level of post-secondary education.  That tells me that many “extreme couponers” do so because they have a grasp on what it takes to achieve wealth, and for those who have amassed some level of security, why pay full price and deplete those resources faster than necessary?

Once upon a time in American history, having a supply of food on hand was considered to be a sign of wealth, security, and prosperity.  Today, one-tenth of the country is on foodstamps and food insecurity is a sign of the times. People who have used modern day marketing tactics to their advantage to accumulate a stockpile are doing better than the average American.  It makes you wonder if our ancestors didn’t have the right of it that the material things in life that mattered most were the ones that covered basic needs.

As I spent some of yesterday responding to commentary on different blogs posts about the article, one thing struck me.  One commentator posted that he “prayed the economy would get back to “normal” because of all the extreme couponing happening out there”.  My comment back was that for those of us who have been doing this, we’ve been at it long before the economy tanked.  For many of our members, having a stockpile is what has kept them in their homes and ahead of their friends and neighbors as they lost jobs and had houses foreclosed upon.  But, believe me, we too wish the economy would get back to normal.  The there might just be a little more elbow room at the grocery store!

A more interesting article from the Wall Street Journal would have been one that portrayed the economic security of having a 3-month, 6-month, or even 12-month pantry on hand, how it’s keeping people secure, how it’s putting food into the community food system, and how smart shoppers are using it as a low-finance, wealth creation tactic to stay ahead of the recession.


Hotcouponworld mentioned in the Wall Street Journal

Monday, March 8th, 2010

Hard Times Turn Coupon Clipping Into the Newest Extreme Sport

Coupon clipper Erin Libranda of Katy, Texas, after she saved more than $1,000 on a midnight shopping trip to two supermarkets.

Under a futon in her Charleston, S.C., apartment, Stacy Smith has stashed boxes of soy bars, bags of potato chips, bottles of vitamin water, canned vegetables, soup, barbecue sauce and antibacterial wipes. Her bedroom closet is jammed with soda and shampoo, her bookcase with garlic salt and meat marinades.

No, Ms. Smith isn’t stocking up for a hurricane. The 39-year-old’s apartment is stuffed with groceries because she’s one of a growing flock of “extreme couponers.”

These discount devotees have formed vast online communities that collectively unearth and swap digital, mobile-phone and paper coupons. The cleverest shoppers combine dozens of coupons and go from store to store  buying items in quantity, getting stuff free of charge.
read more »


Hotcouponworld ranked 15th in the nation for Mom-Entrepreneurs

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

Hotcouponworld is owned and operated by two mom with eight kids.  Many of the Hotcouponworld moderators are also moms as well.  So it’s only fitting that Coupon Girls, the parent company to Hotcouponworld and Organic Grocery Deals took 15th in a nationwide contest held by Start-Up Nation this spring. 

With over seven thousand entries, our Hotcouponworld members voted us one of the top mom businesses in the country.  Coupon Girls is an Oregon-based company, and there were a handful of businesses from Oregon in the top 200 businesses profiled. 

However, was an extreme honor to come so near to the top of the list.  We’re appreciative of our members, mods, and our families, and we thank everyone who has helped us reach this success.

This video is a recent news story about our win!  LINK TO VIDEO


Owner Julie Parrish Interviewed on KATU Portland OR.

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

PORTLAND, Ore. – Savvy shoppers know they can bring just about any coupon to Albertsons and save tons of money on their grocery bills but all that is about to end.

Starting Wednesday, the grocery store chain will no longer accept competitor coupons, a move that is already beginning to send  coupon clippers into a tailspin.

Julie Parrish, who runs www.hotcouponworld.com out of her home in West Linn, said consumers are writing in and complaining about the move.  Many of them were saving hundreds, even thousands of dollars a year by taking all their coupons to Albertsons.

“I think on average you could easily cut 50 percent of your grocery bill,” she said.

According to a company spokesperson, the big change in strategy is meant to avoid problems like running out of inventory for items that other stores are offering big savings on.  But when we called the regular customer service number, a representative said it’s simply that more people are using coupons these days and they are just losing too much money.

Albertsons said it does still have several ways for customers to save money, like its preferred savings card and gas rewards program.

By Angelica Thornton KATU News and KATU.com Staff