OK, GroceryBagSavings.com has been going for a year now, covering the Big Island and the Pacific NW. The original idea was to enter, organize and sort grocery store prices in our whiz-bang database and then display it on the web in a way that would make it easy for you to compare prices on the same item between grocery stores. We’ve learned a lot and received many compliments on the site and on the info.

 

The problem is, we’re not making any money. Not even enough to support the host fees to keep the site up.

 

Faced with that, Glen and Henry have to ask: is there a way to make the site more popular and generate more traffic and revenue? Because if there isn’t, then GroceryBagSavings.com is going away.

 

We’ve identified two possible problems:

  1. There’s a lot of data on the site, maybe too much for people to use easily.
  2. We don’t list the prices from every single store in our coverage areas, so perhaps we aren’t covering the stores people would like us to.

 

 And here’s the two-part solution we came up with:

  1. Reduce the amount of data by focusing only on high cost items and items that vary a great deal in price, which would essentially be meat, seafood, dairy and produce.
  2. Expand the number of stores we cover in the areas where we are lacking, specifically in the Pacific NW, adding stores like Metropolitan Market, Top Foods, Haggen, and QFC.

 

 

Before we act on these ideas, we need to get YOUR opinion. Do we really have too many items to make sense of? Are we not covering the stores you care about? Will these changes help you use the site, and make you more likely to recommend it to your friends? Or are we missing the point entirely and need to take a completely different approach?

 

So, tell us what you think of our plan, or how YOU would change it so that YOU would be able to use it more easily. You can leave a comment right here on the blog, or send an e-mail to Henryd@grocerybagsavings.com

 

Thanks for visiting the site, and for taking the time to read this post. We hope to hear back from you.

Earlier this week, I saw the "Good Eats" episode where Alton Brown explains how he lost 50 pounds. Good for him! Really! He made 'scientific' lists of what/how often he could eat, and you can find them (and a lot more) in this article: http://www.examiner.com/examiner/x-867-LowCarb-Lifestyle-Examiner~y2010m1d6-A-50pound-lowcarb-weight-loss-for-Alton-Brown-from-The-Food-Network

Now, don't get me wrong- I'm a big fan of Alton; he knows a lot about food and cooking and creating a successful media presence. His TV show is great, usually, and always informative. But, man, I can't eat like that!

Losing weight is simple in concept: eat fewer calories than you burn. (Calorie definition: the amount of energy it takes to raise 1 gram of water by one degree Celsius. They say there are 9 calories in a gram of fat, 454 grams in a pound, so to lose one pound, 9X454= about 4,000 calories. Now I have a headache. How many calories does that use up?)

The problem is, the food you eat has to satisfy more than just the calorie requirements of your body. Getting all your calories from donuts will satisfy the energy requirement just fine, but (1.) you're not going to get the proteins, minerals, vitamins, and all that other stuff your body needs, and (2.) nobody really wants to eat just donuts, no matter what they say. The lists Alton created probably do provide all the other stuff, being so scientific and all, but they're still not for me.

So, what I'm getting at (and you were beginning to wonder, weren't you?) is that everybody's different. We all like different foods in different proportions and are willing to eat more of some things and less of others to achieve our 'desired' weight. Alton Brown chose things that he was willing to eat more and less of, made a rule to eat breakfast everyday, and for him, those things worked.  

I'd like to lose some weight, too, though not 50 pounds; more like 10 or 15. (It was the holidays. I swear.) So here's the plan: eat less fatty stuff (for example, chips: a small handful with lunch sandwiches instead of a heaping pile); eat less salt (I'm a sucker for the red and white canned chicken noodle soup, but I can live without it, easy); eat more fresh vegetables of ALL kinds (the garden will help with this as it gets bigger); and watch the ice cream (but I just HAVE to have it once in a while). But I won't eat breakfast. Never have, never will. If I eat that early in the morning, I just want to crawl back to bed. But an hour before noon I'm starving, so lunch is a little early at our house. It all balances out, maybe.

That's it. No scientific list. No schedules or frequencies of consumption. No forbidden foods or drinks. Just a few choices to cut down the intake of calories, and keep using them at the same rate. (We're remodelling the 'fixer house' we live in, mostly by ourselves, so that's not going to be a problem.)

I'll report back in a month or so....and we'll see if Mr. Brown's way would have been better.

(Jeez, I hope not. I better do good on this, huh? I don't want to eat 'Brislings'.)

 

 

 

If you're here, you'd probably like to save money on groceries, and that's the goal of our site. We're starting off with Seattle and the Big Island (Hawaii) as our first two regions. Our site has the current weekly sale prices from grocery stores in those areas, organized and sorted in a way that makes it easy to compare prices on similar items between stores. We promise it will be faster and more fun than flipping through all those ads you get every week! And while we're just getting started, we plan on adding more areas of coverage just as fast as we can- the Portland, Oregon area is our next region to add, then on to San Francisco and south through California.

While grocery prices are the primary focus of our site, our overall goal is to make it easier for you to save money on food. We'll also offer information on other ways to save: tips and tricks that, with a little effort (and a lot of fun!) on your part, can save you big money in the long run. Here's a sampling of blog entries we've got in the pipeline: "Bone-in or Boneless-Which is a Better Value?"; "Make Stock, Easy; Use Stock, Delicious"; "Harvest Savings with Foods in Season"; and "Shopper Loyalty Cards: Yea or Nay?". We'll also have a links page that will get you to sites on food history, manufacturers sites, and some recipe sites you may not know about.

The feedback we've gotten so far has been very encouraging. In fact, what most people are saying is, "Why haven't I heard about this site before?" The answer to that is, of course, that we're new! And being new, we'll be trying out some different approaches. We'd love to get your feedback on what works, what doesn't, and what we're missing that you would find helpful in your quest to save money.

We look forward to seeing you here, and remember: "GroceryBagSavings.com is YOUR place to save money!"

Henry