Now why would greedy cooperations do something silly like that?
Also, even the TVs aren’t on sale. Those specific TVs were jacked up in price for at least a month before put on “sale” to artificially inflate the price. You’re not getting a good deal.
The other one is they actually make a slightly different model where it’s using cheaper hardware like a slower cpu and nobody really notices or cares because it is cheap but they probably won’t last that long. You can verify by looking at the long model string and see if you can find any info online. If it matches the regular one great, but sometimes it’s not.
This is commonly parroted and while it does happen it isn’t the case for literally every single deal.
My roommates and I bought a TV in September and paid the extra $50 or whatever to be able to get a refund if a better price came up. For Black Friday, that TV is ~$250 less than we paid for, and we’re getting our money back.
Black Friday/ Cyber Monday can be great times to pick up on deals and many items reach yearly lows for these sales, you just need to not blindly purchase things or fall into the hype. The way I look at it is, if I already know I want/ need it, I’ll look around on Black Friday for a good deal. But I won’t let deals on these days be the thing that tells me I want or need something.
There’s also the deals that are in super short supply. I waited in line at a best buy for one of 20 TVs that were actually a very good deal. You pay with your time though in those situations
Now why would greedy cooperations do something silly like that?
Also, even the TVs aren’t on sale. Those specific TVs were jacked up in price for at least a month before put on “sale” to artificially inflate the price. You’re not getting a good deal.
The other one is they actually make a slightly different model where it’s using cheaper hardware like a slower cpu and nobody really notices or cares because it is cheap but they probably won’t last that long. You can verify by looking at the long model string and see if you can find any info online. If it matches the regular one great, but sometimes it’s not.
“I read this online and so now I repeat it online to others to seem smart and give myself a smug sense of satisfaction.”
Where’s the lie?
This is commonly parroted and while it does happen it isn’t the case for literally every single deal.
My roommates and I bought a TV in September and paid the extra $50 or whatever to be able to get a refund if a better price came up. For Black Friday, that TV is ~$250 less than we paid for, and we’re getting our money back.
Black Friday/ Cyber Monday can be great times to pick up on deals and many items reach yearly lows for these sales, you just need to not blindly purchase things or fall into the hype. The way I look at it is, if I already know I want/ need it, I’ll look around on Black Friday for a good deal. But I won’t let deals on these days be the thing that tells me I want or need something.
There’s also the deals that are in super short supply. I waited in line at a best buy for one of 20 TVs that were actually a very good deal. You pay with your time though in those situations