All About Safely Finding Coupons Online. Also, New Gift Card Info.
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Introduction
This is both a pragmatic and cautionary article. The phrase “free coupons” is one of the most dangerous search terms you can use. Because this search term is so popular; all the hackers, ID thieves, and con artists are all over it. If you go to the wrong website, your computer is toast; and if you have any personal information (including passwords) on your computer, so is your ID.
The objectives of this coupon page are to:
Show how to reduce the odds of becoming another victim, and yet still be able to find the absolute best coupons out there.
Teach ways to search smart, search fast, and get the best deal.
Review brand coupons, store coupons, printable coupons, coupon codes, rebates, and getting the best sales prices.
And it should be mentioned that there are more than 10 top-ten items here.
[Editor's Note: This article gets stolen from time to time; so the information in it must be good. The original author and source of this article is paradigmsearch at HubPages.com. If you happen to run across a stolen copy of this article, we'd like to hear about it.]
December 2011 Update re: Gift Cards
Every year the sales & marketing departments have some sort of new mantra, fad, or other bright idea. This year it is gift cards. Not the kind you buy to give, but the kind the store gives you to entice you to make a purchase.
There are two types of these kinds of gift cards.
- One kind is really just a coupon called by another name, as in "Here, have a gift card. Now go buy something. Restrictions will apply."
- The other kind of gift card could be described by the words "kickback" or "rebate", as in "Hi. If you buy something from us, we will give you a gift card you can use to buy something else later for free or at a reduced price.
The bottom line is that one now wants to include the search phrase "gift card" as part of the word-search repertoire.
Security Software
It’s a sad fact of life security software is mandatory in this day and age. If you don’t yet have security software on your computer, now is the time to get it.
Some of the most popular products are Symantec/Norton, ZoneAlarm, McAfee, and AVG. Some security software versions are free. Just type “security software” into your favorite search engine; the first few pages of results will include security software reviews from several well known PC magazines and websites. These sources will also have lots of general security information for you.
Read them and you will easily know what you need to know. This is consumer software; you don’t have to be a rocket surgeon to use it.
Free Coupons: It’s All About Image
A string of data about you is given to every website you visit. Among other things, this data string contains the address of the previous website you just visited. For that matter, it is not unheard of for a website to go trolling through the cookies on your hard drive (cookies are “calling cards” your previously visited websites have left behind). Websites can be programmed to respond to this information. The keywords used in a search query can also be used by websites to determine what information they will display.
The image you present can affect the price you get. A person coming from a high-end, luxury item site will get one price. A person coming from a competing discount store site will get another price. Which price do you think will be more advantageous? It gets even better. What kind of price do you think a website will set for someone using “coupon” in their search query? They know you are smart, aware, frugal, and probably a serious buyer. The act of doing a coupon search will not only result in finding coupons; many times it will result in displaying the best sales prices.
Are there a bunch of ads and links surrounding this article? They all know you are reading an article about coupons, doing smart searches, and getting the best prices. As such, they have adjusted their coupon amounts and sales prices accordingly.
Free Coupons: Constructing Your Search Query
You will avoid a lot of trouble by simply not using the standalone search phrase “free coupons”.
A primary search rule is to never pluralize your search words. Doing so will limit your search results, but not in the way you want. Always use the singular. The singular will automatically include all the plurals, but the plural will omit all the singulars. For example, if you are looking for coupons for printers, you would enter “coupon printer”, not “coupons printers”. While you’re at it, you might as well include rebates in your search. So your search string is now “coupon rebate printer”. For this article’s purposes, do not put your searches inside quotes.
You want competition. You want to include two or three brand names in your search query. You want the websites to come up having the competition factor happening. To continue the previous example, your search query would now look like this: “coupon rebate printer kodak canon lexmark”. The brand names you use are the ones you came up with when you did your previous homework as to quality, rating, price comparison, and other how-to-buy-a-printer research. Note the use of lowercase in the example. This illustrates the use of another primary search rule. Never use uppercase in your search words. Doing so limits your results the same way as plurals do. Always use lowercase. The lowercase will automatically include all uppercase, but not vice versa.
Omit the search word “free”; it is not needed.
You want aggression. You want websites who are aggressive in their coupon activities. In other words, they are constantly updating their pages with the newest offers. Besides, who wants to sort through a bunch of obsolete information and expired coupons? To do this you need to use a search engine having advanced search options. The search option you want is the date range. Select “past week” or whatever is closest.
Free Coupons: Results Time
You’ve entered your search words, you’ve picked your date range, you clicked Safe Search ON (why not?), and you even remembered to click the search button. You’re now looking at your list of websites and ads. The entries may include brand coupons, store coupons, printable coupons, coupon codes, and rebates. You will also notice a bunch of sales prices.
Now you’ve got to sort through them. Generally speaking you will be looking for two coupons, a product coupon and a store/website coupon/code, your objective being to combine the two. Some coupons will let you do that; some will not. It will depend on the fine print. The “may not be combined with other offers” exclusion sometimes will only mean you can’t use two product coupons or two store coupons; using one of each may be perfectly acceptable. You won’t know until you try. Once you’ve found your coupons, you then check for the best outright sales price.
Now it’s just a matter of deciding whether to make the transaction or not. See the security notes below.
Security Notes
Are you thinking of doing business with a website name you have never heard of? It is strongly recommended you first go to a search engine and enter the website’s name and the word “scam”, "ripoff", etc. If there’s a whole bunch of complaints, you might want to reconsider.
Does the website want you to click and agree to a multi-page, fine print contract? If so, it is recommended you immediately leave the website. You don’t have to sign multi-page, fine print contracts when buying something at a brick-and-mortar store; why should you have to sign a contract on a website? Whatever the contract is, it most assuredly is not designed to be in your best interests. The same applies to coupon sites; there is no legitimate reason for you to have to agree to any sort of contract before receiving your coupons. Giving a coupon site your primary email address isn’t that good of an idea either.
What with the internet being the internet, there are lots of coupon scams to go along with all the other scams. Never buy a coupon, coupon code, rebate certificate, etc. Sure, maybe it only costs $1.00 to buy $30.00 worth of coupons (which may or may not be valid), but now they have your debit/credit card number. And if you then clicked agreement on a contract, you will probably regret it. The risk/reward ratio just isn’t worth it. Don’t do it.
Safe and Happy Hunting!
Some Basic Reminders
How is your Windows (or other OS) firewall doing? Is it on and running and active; is its exception list the way you want it to be? If using Windows, how is Windows Update doing; has it been used recently to get all the latest free security updates from Microsoft? Both items are located in your Control Panel (or wherever).
Have you recently downloaded and opened a bunch of new files? Might not be a bad idea to do a system security scan at the end of the session.
A Note about Senior Citizen Discounts for Dining, Travel, etc.
If you are age 50 or over, this Senior Discounts article is a must-read. There are all sorts of national chains out there that give standard discounts for seniors.
[Editor's Note: This article gets stolen from time to time; so the information in it must be good. The original author and source of this article is paradigmsearch at HubPages.com. If you happen to run across a stolen copy of this article, we'd like to hear about it. Also, if you are reading a stolen copy, then more than likely you are not reading the latest version.]
CommentsLoading...
This hub was packed full of important tips and useful information. Thanks so much. I learned a lot here. I didn't realize that capitalization would matter so much in a search, along with plurals. Bookmarked for future reference.
This was great! I have always sucked at finding good coupons online, but I've made most of the search errors that you mentioned. This is really handy info to have, especially for those mad bargain hunters out there.
This is just chock full of good info that I can use-- and so well presented-- bookmarking this and voting up up up
I agree with all the posts, perfect timing. Just looking into couponing myself...
I bookmarked and tweeted. Lots of stuff in here that people don't know, especially the security issues.
great hub. thank you!
Are those green bars images or a HubPages tool? I like how they look and the function that they serve...
I agree you have to be really careful when signing up on various sites. I've had to unsubscribe to a several sites that sent me email I never signed up for.
I've had good luck with couponcabin.com and thekrazycouponlady.com. All the coupons I've printed from these two sites have worked and I don't get spam or junk mail from them.
gotta say that i enjoyed this one. wonderfully put together for those novices just getting started. great info. definitely voted up
paradigmsearch, this is the best insight into the world of coupons that I have ever come across. I had no idea there were so many scams. Great information!


















Printable Coupons 10 months ago
Everything about coupons is the BEST because it can actually make you shop more and save money.