Coupons' role shifts as market, buyers evolve
In the heart of the recession, the United States became a coupon-crazy country, clipping, printing and downloading billions of coupons a year.
That remains true, but the coupon industry is rapidly evolving, attracting younger users and more men, as well as zapping out more digital and mobile versions of the classic cents-off paper coupon.
“Years ago, coupons were mostly for grocery items, like cereal. Now it's almost everything you're buying, from clothes to restaurants to drugstores,” said Jeanette Pavini, household savings expert with Coupons.com.
Last year, the number of manufacturers' coupons issued — for everything from diapers to dog food — was a staggering 305 billion. That's a lot of coupons to be clipped, printed or downloaded.
Yet the number of coupons cashed in by U.S. consumers in 2012 slipped 17 percent compared with the previous year, according to NCH Marketing Services in Deerfield, Ill., which tracks annual coupon use.
It's all part of subtle shifts in couponing, said Charlie Brown, NCH marketing vice president.
While paper coupons clipped out of the Sunday paper still dominate, digital coupons on websites, mobile phones and retailers' loyalty cards are attracting a younger audience. At the same time, manufacturers are offering more nonfood coupons, which may affect demand.
Despite the recent dip, coupon usage is well above what it was before the recession, according to NCH data.
That comes as no surprise to “frugal bloggers” such as Ashley Thompson, 29, of Sacramento, Calif., who got hooked on couponing after college as a way to pinch pennies.
Thompson, who posts at NorCalCouponGal.blogspot.com, said couponing crosses all ages, incomes and genders. “It's not just a female-centered phenomenon anymore. More men are conscious about (spending). It spans a whole spectrum, from minimum wage to those who make hundreds of thousands a year. Everybody can save money.”
The couponing craze was fueled partly by TV shows like “Extreme Couponing” and savings-minded bloggers, websites and workshops.
As the recession eases, consumer attitudes may be adjusting, said Darrel Ng, who has been blogging about Sacramento-area restaurant news and deals on his CowtownEats.com site.
“People have moved from finding the absolute cheapest deal to finding the most value,” said Ng, noting the shift in his site's online traffic since 2009. Whereas two years ago a $2 beer might have been the most popular deal on CowtownEats, today it's higher-end offers, such as website coupons for $30 three-course dinners at some of the city's priciest restaurants.
Factoring into the mix are so-called online “daily deal” sites, like Groupon, Living Social and Dealsaver.
Last year, more than 140 daily deal sites popped up. At the same time, 560 globally shut down, according to Daily Deal Media, which tracks the industry.
Ng feels they've “peaked and oversaturated” the market. “They aren't as good as when they first started. The quantity of deals is much bigger, but it's questionable if you want them or not.”
Boyan Josic, Daily Deal Media's founder and CEO, said the crowded daily-deal marketplace has contributed to a bit of “coupon fatigue,” especially when companies that are bought, sold or merged sell their subscriber lists. Suddenly, a consumer who signed up for a local deal site is getting bombarded with unsolicited email offers from other companies.
Nevertheless, Josic and others say digital couponing, especially via smartphones and mobile devices, is making inroads.
