In my neighborhood, I am fortunate to have four grocery stores.
Groceries:
- regional high cost: a ten-minute bike ride; I no longer shop there; it was the nearest grocery store to the apartment complex where we used to live; outrageously expensive but because of its convenience (location to nearby apartment complexes; and right off the highway) it is fairly busy;
- regional low cost: a five-minute bike ride; best choice for inexpensive sushi; prices better than the former grocery store but compared to Target, very, very expensive;
- Target: two-minute bike ride; I generally shop here, visiting almost daily for an item or two; very good prices, in general; beer / wine much more expensive than Total Wine, a two-minute bike ride.
- Walmart: a fifteen-minute bike ride; inconvenient compared to Target, but the prices are incredible
Target :: Walmart
- avocados
- 99 cents each :: 58 cents each
- limes
- 38 cents each :: 18 cents each
- large pumpkins
- $5.68 each :: $4.68 each
- pickled herring: price did not matter. Walmart had it; Target did not.
I had not been to Walmart in a long time but I went yesterday because I couldn't find a product I was looking at the other grocery stores. No, not the pickled herring; something else.
Wow, what a pleasant experience.
Not particularly crowded, mid-day, Tuesday.
Self-check-out: much nicer, bigger area; no line; Target has a very small self-check-out but worse, there's always a line waiting to use it.
But this is what blew me away, why I'm blogging about this.
As soon as I got home, I found an e-mail from Walmart waiting for me.
They set up an account for me which shows everything I bought. That list goes back two years. I had not seen this before. And it's exactly what Amazon does but Walmart does it so much better.
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