5 Surprising Things You Didn't Know About the Dollar
Store
The dollar store is a great place to
shop for deals...right? Well, sometimes. You might be surprised to learn that
it's not always the cheapest place to shop. Read on to learn more about
unexpected dollar store facts.
1. A dollar store shopping spree can
satisfy your shopping craving.
Thanks to the way our brains work, a
dollar store shopping spree can satisfy our shopping craving even better than
shopping at a more expensive store. "Dollar stores are a great option for
shopping sprees because of the way the mind translates purchases into
pleasures," says Jeremy Shapiro, an adjunct professor at Case Western
Reserve University's Department of Psychological Sciences. "We get a
little kick from each purchase we make, and the size of the purchase makes less
difference than the number of buys."
As he explains, we get more
enjoyment from a bunch of small purchases than from one big buy. So the next
time you want to splurge, try doing it by heading to the dollar store.
2. Not everything at the dollar
store is cheaper.
Earlier this year, a Fox reporter in Idaho found that out of 10 items
she bought at the Dollar Tree, eight of them were actually cheaper at the local
grocery store. One way to avoid this is to keep a running list of stores in
your area that have the best prices for products you use regularly. That way,
if you see a product you use for sale, you can quickly and easily know whether
or not what you see is actually a good deal.
Another trick is to pay attention to
sizes and the price per ounce - not the price overall. Often, dollar stores
will sell smaller sizes of products, so the cost appears to be less, but if you
look at the price per ounce, you might discover that it's actually less expensive to buy a bigger size at another
store.
3. You can get brand names at dollar
stores.
If you haven't been in a dollar
store recently, you might be surprised - the shelves aren't just stocked with
off-brand Irish summer soap. Rather, many dollar stores have started carrying
name-brand items. But be wary - these name-brand products are often the
products that you can find cheaper at other stores.
4. Off-brand products could be just
as good as the name brand.
Think that you're above advertising
and product packaging? Well, you probably aren't. Shapiro says that even wine
experts - people who make their living tasting differences between wines - are
influenced by how products are presented. "Blind taste tests have found
that both ordinary people and wine experts like what they drink much more when
they see it poured from an impressive bottle than a cheap-looking
container," he says, "and something similar probably happens with the
items we buy from different types of stores."
If you're shopping for food, cleaning supplies or health
and beauty items, a quick way to see if you're influenced by your perception of
products is to compare the ingredients between a name-brand and generic
product. If a name-brand and a generic glass cleaner have the same ingredients,
for example, you should be good buying the cheaper generic.
5. A new dollar store opens every
six hours.
Many people thought that after the
Great Recession started to taper off, the popularity of dollar stores would
taper as well. But they're still going strong. In fact, according to the
brokerage firm Sterne, Agee & Leach Inc., so many new dollar stores opened
as of July 2013, that it equaled a new store every six hours.
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