Office, Karriere und Technik Blog

Office, Karriere und Technik Blog

Anzeige

Transparenz: Um diesen Blog kostenlos anbieten zu können, nutzen wir Affiliate-Links. Klickst du darauf und kaufst etwas, bekommen wir eine kleine Vergütung. Der Preis bleibt für dich gleich. Win-Win!

The discount trap: Why supermarket apps don’t give us anything for free

A quick scan at the checkout, and the discounts start tumbling. The apps from Lidl, Rewe, Edeka, Kaufland, and others have become a constant companion while shopping. They promise exclusive discounts, free products after your tenth purchase, and digital scratch cards with enticing prizes. The promise is clear: those who use the app save money.

But this exchange is too good to be true. In the digital economy, there’s an ironclad rule: if a service is free, you’re not the customer, you’re the product.

Supermarkets aren’t non-profit organizations. They’re profit-oriented companies in one of the most competitive markets in the world. Every “free” pack of butter and every cent discount is a calculated investment. The currency we’re really paying with is invisible, but far more valuable than the euro saved: it’s our data and our future purchasing behavior.

die-rabatt-falle

Topic Overview

Anzeige

What’s really behind the apps?

The apps aren’t just discount booklets. They are sophisticated tools for data collection and behavioral control. The “gift” is merely the bait.

1. The Transparent Shopping Cart: The End of Anonymity

Previously, cash purchases at the supermarket were one of the last anonymous spaces in our daily lives. The retailer didn’t know who had bought the milk, the chocolate, and the laundry detergent.

With the app, this changes radically.

As soon as you scan your personal QR code at the checkout, the entire shopping cart is inextricably linked to you. The supermarket now knows:

  • WHAT you buy (brand names, generic, organic, vegan, alcohol, diapers).
  • WHEN you shop (Friday evening? Monday morning?).
  • HOW OFTEN you shop (weekly, daily shop?).
  • WHERE you shop (always at the same store? Or do you switch?).
  • HOW you react to prices (Do you only buy product X when it’s on sale?).

Over several months, this data builds into a highly detailed profile. The retailer knows whether you are single, have a family, live a health-conscious lifestyle, are short on cash, or tend to make impulse purchases.

2. The goal: Behavioral management instead of saving

This data is not collected out of curiosity. They are the foundation for personalized marketing, whose sole aim is to maximize your “Customer Lifetime Value”—that is, the total amount of money you spend with this chain over your lifetime.

  • Push for Own Brands: Have you always bought the expensive name-brand soda? The app will give you an “exclusive” discount on the almost identical, but more profitable for the retailer, own brand. You save 50 cents, and the retailer earns an extra euro thanks to the higher margin.
  • Test Price Elasticity: Person A is offered chips at a 30% discount because the app knows they wouldn’t normally buy them. Person B, who buys the chips regularly anyway, doesn’t see this discount. Why would they? They buy them regardless.
  • Increase Frequency: Haven’t bought anything in a while? Suddenly, you receive an “Just for You!” coupon for your favorite product, valid for only 48 hours. Goal: To get you to abandon your planned shopping trip to the competitor and immediately return to “your” store.

Triggering impulse purchases: The app lures you in with a discount on milk (a basic product). But once you’re in the store, you “just quickly” pick up some chocolate, wine, and cheese – at full price, of course.

Why we don’t actually get anything “for free”.

The idea that we can shop more cheaply through apps is a psychological trap.

1. The discount is the price for your data

The 10% coupon for the yogurt isn’t a saving. It’s the payment the supermarket gives you for your complete data set from this purchase. This data set is worth many times more to marketing, strategic planning, and negotiations with manufacturers than what the yogurt discount costs the company.

2. The illusion of saving

Apps use “gamification” elements (e.g., digital scratch cards, “You saved €4.50 today!”) to give us a sense of accomplishment. We feel clever because we’ve “outsmarted” the system.

In reality, these apps often lead us to spend more money. They entice us to buy things we wouldn’t have put in our cart without the “exclusive” discount.

3. The Mixed Calculation

Does anyone seriously believe that corporations absorb their millions in losses through discounts? No. The discounts that “app users” receive are already factored into the overall prices of all products.

In other words: Customers who don’t use the app and protect their privacy are essentially paying for the app users’ discounts through higher regular prices. The app is the key to (perhaps) getting the price that was normal before the app was introduced.

Advertisement

Conclusion

Supermarket apps are not charity events, but rather the spearhead of data-driven commerce. They transform the customer from an anonymous buyer into a precisely analyzed and controllable consumer object.

We don’t get anything “for free.” We trade our anonymity, our data, and a piece of our free will for a 50-cent discount on pasta that we might not have bought at all without the app.

About the Author:

Michael W. SuhrDipl. Betriebswirt | Webdesign- und Beratung | Office Training
After 20 years in logistics, I turned my hobby, which has accompanied me since the mid-1980s, into a profession, and have been working as a freelancer in web design, web consulting and Microsoft Office since the beginning of 2015. On the side, I write articles for more digital competence in my blog as far as time allows.
Transparenz: Um diesen Blog kostenlos anbieten zu können, nutzen wir Affiliate-Links. Klickst du darauf und kaufst etwas, bekommen wir eine kleine Vergütung. Der Preis bleibt für dich gleich. Win-Win!
Blogverzeichnis Bloggerei.de - Computerblogs

Search by category:

Beliebte Beiträge

2811, 2025

Google’s nightmare: Perplexity becomes a shopping machine

November 28th, 2025|Categories: Shorts & Tutorials, Artificial intelligence, Google, Internet, Finance & Shopping|Tags: , , |

Traditional online shops are a thing of the past. With its PayPal integration, Perplexity is transforming AI search into a sales machine. Why direct purchasing via chat ("Buy with Pro") is now putting massive pressure on Google and Amazon.

2711, 2025

Die Tablet-Könige: Die besten Allrounder im Vergleich

November 27th, 2025|Categories: Internet, Finance & Shopping, Hardware, Product Tests|Tags: , , |

Das perfekte Tablet für Weihnachten 2025: Der Vergleich der Top 5 Allrounder. Ob iPad Air (M3), Galaxy Tab S10+ oder Surface Pro – wir zeigen alle Vor- und Nachteile. Inklusive detaillierter Tabelle zu Akkulaufzeit, Specs und Preisen. Finde jetzt deinen Favoriten!

2711, 2025

Bitcoin & Co.: Technology, price mechanisms and the market beyond number one

November 27th, 2025|Categories: Shorts & Tutorials, Internet, Finance & Shopping|Tags: |

Bitcoin will no longer be play money by 2025. We delve into the inner workings of the blockchain, explain the impact of ETFs on its price, and showcase alternatives like Ethereum. Plus: The ultimate guide for beginners – from your first ETF savings plan to secure wallet storage.

2711, 2025

Wie J.P. Morgan mit KI die Wall Street automatisiert

November 27th, 2025|Categories: Shorts & Tutorials, Internet, Finance & Shopping|Tags: |

J.P. Morgan startet die größte KI-Offensive der Wall Street. Mit der „LLM Suite“ erhalten 60.000 Mitarbeiter einen digitalen Research-Analysten. Das Ziel: Schluss mit „Monkey Work“ und Excel-Sklaventum. Erfahren Sie, wie die Bank Sicherheit und maximale Effizienz kombiniert.

2411, 2025

Warum dein Excel-Kurs Zeitverschwendung ist – was du wirklich lernen solltest!

November 24th, 2025|Categories: Shorts & Tutorials, Artificial intelligence, Microsoft Excel, Microsoft Office, Software|Tags: , |

Hand aufs Herz: Wann hast du zuletzt eine komplexe Excel-Formel ohne Googeln getippt? Eben. KI schreibt heute den Code für dich. Erfahre, warum klassische Excel-Trainings veraltet sind und welche 3 modernen Skills deinen Marktwert im Büro jetzt massiv steigern.

2211, 2025

Why laptops without NPU will soon be history

November 22nd, 2025|Categories: Shorts & Tutorials, Artificial intelligence, Hardware, Internet, Finance & Shopping, Mac OS, Windows 10/11/12|Tags: |

Forget GHz: The most important chip in your next laptop is the NPU. Without it, you'll soon be missing crucial features. We'll show you why the "AI PC" is replacing the traditional computer and which devices with Snapdragon, Intel Lunar Lake, and Apple M4 are now setting the standard.

Anzeige

Offers 2024: Word & Excel Templates

Anzeige
Ads

Popular Posts:

Search by category:

Autumn Specials:

Anzeige
Go to Top