Shopping & Style2 mins ago
Ocado. Favour, Please
19 Answers
Could you please check out the Ocado site and let me know how much they are charging you for a side of sockeye salmon? I believe they use dynamic pricing and is trying to charge me more as I buy a lot of it.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by barry1010. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The pricing, for anyone not logged into the site, is shown as £16.50:
https:/ /www.oc ado.com /produc ts/leap -sockey e-salmo n-side- 4117900 11
https:/
That's the same price as that being picked up by Trolley.co.uk, which gives prices for all UK supermarkets:
https:/ /www.tr olley.c o.uk/pr oduct/l eap-soc keye-sa lmon-si de/ZBW1 17
https:/
If you click my link at 1817 above, you can run your cursor over the prices at Ocado for the past year. (See 'Price History'). You'll see that it was the same price as now a year ago but dropped to £12.79 for a couple of periods last summer and to £13.59 in the run-up to Christmas. It was priced at £14.50 for a while a month or so back.
That price history tool is very useful for checking out whether supermarkets' 'special offers' are actually really that special at all. Asda, for example, will advertise wines at reduced prices but using that tool shows that they've simply put them up for a couple of months or so, allowing them to drop the price back down again later and claim that it's a discount.
That price history tool is very useful for checking out whether supermarkets' 'special offers' are actually really that special at all. Asda, for example, will advertise wines at reduced prices but using that tool shows that they've simply put them up for a couple of months or so, allowing them to drop the price back down again later and claim that it's a discount.
>>> I think Tesco has it on Clubcard offer at present
Well spotted, Rosie!
https:/ /www.te sco.com /grocer ies/en- GB/prod ucts/27 1340240
Don't trust all their Clubcard prices though. For wines, for example, they're often no lower than the regular prices in Asda and Morrisons.
Well spotted, Rosie!
https:/
Don't trust all their Clubcard prices though. For wines, for example, they're often no lower than the regular prices in Asda and Morrisons.
>>> Chris, do all supermarkets allow you to see the price history?
The supermarkets themselves might well not but Trolley.co.uk tracks prices exceptionally well. Where a product is sold in several supermarkets though, it will only show what the lowest price was at any particular time, rather than indicating the individual prices for different supermarkets. For example, if you take a look at this wine, you can see that the cheapest current price for it is £6.50 in Sainsbury's:
https:/ /www.tr olley.c o.uk/pr oduct/c asiller o-del-d iablo-m erlot/J QK438
The price history function though shows that it's been available for £6 in at least one supermarket at a time for much of the past year, except for a couple of brief periods when you couldn't buy it for under £7.50, as well as for the past month or so (when it's also been at least £7.50 everywhere).
The supermarkets themselves might well not but Trolley.co.uk tracks prices exceptionally well. Where a product is sold in several supermarkets though, it will only show what the lowest price was at any particular time, rather than indicating the individual prices for different supermarkets. For example, if you take a look at this wine, you can see that the cheapest current price for it is £6.50 in Sainsbury's:
https:/
The price history function though shows that it's been available for £6 in at least one supermarket at a time for much of the past year, except for a couple of brief periods when you couldn't buy it for under £7.50, as well as for the past month or so (when it's also been at least £7.50 everywhere).
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.