More Smoke and Mirrors.

Discussion in 'The Village Square' started by Doghouse Riley, Jan 17, 2026 at 1:25 PM.

  1. Doghouse Riley

    Doghouse Riley Hardy Maple

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    Barclays are seeking to recover lost customers.

    I photo'd this from a TV advert.

    [​IMG]

    They are trying to entice new business by promoting their "cashback" benefit.
    On some, not all, general Barclaycard purchases, you'll get .25% back added to your Barclay's bank account, on what you spend.
    Of course, they don't mention that if you don't clear your balance at the end of the month, or even pay off the lot a couple of days late, you'll pay 24% interest on what was outstanding on the due date.

    "So whose money is working for whom?"
     
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  3. Anniekay

    Anniekay Shovel Kicker

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    1/4 of a percentage point back?

    :smt044

    Even Amazon gives 5% back for Prime members. I have a Citi card gives 1%-3% dependent upon what you purchased and from whom.
     
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  4. Doghouse Riley

    Doghouse Riley Hardy Maple

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    That's true, of Barclaycard, but on the bulk of purchases people make, just general food, household items from high street stores it's only .25%. On some it's nothing at all.

    Another thing that amuses me is price comparisons.

    Sometimes a high street chain will present a basket of items and say each item is cheaper than a particular competitor's price.
    Of course to get a bigger difference they'll include a couple of items, of which they don't sell many and reduce those. "Firelighters," comes to mind.
    But it's fraught with danger. They'll state in a thin lettered strapline at the bottom of thescreen, the exact date when the comparison was made, as some store prices are changed weekly, so they daren't get it wrong, given the time the advert was produced and how long it takes to get to the screen.
    The advertising agency will actually go out and buy the products at the competitor and hang on to the receipt, to protect themselves.

    To avoid all this, Tesco's are presently stating in their TV commercials that they, "have thousands of items cheaper than Aldi and Lidl."

    Err.. Which?
    How are customers to know?
    Advertisers sometimes do think the public are stupid.
     

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