Yes - the point of the brands in Aldi is to make 'transition' easy for new customers; it just looks strange when you're pitching that straight against the brands AND own-brand equivalent(s).Pete wrote:I think it was an attempt to deal with Aldi, however people are not stupid. They can tell that Aldi is cheap because it has no staffing costs and is hyper efficient in a pallet-truck-tastic manner and not because they use brands you've never head of.
They probably should just bite the bullet and get shot of the stuff. Things like Daisy never sell. Especially since they improved Value.
The Tesco & other non-Morrisons supermarket thread
- tillyoshea
- Posts: 371
- Joined: Sun 23 Nov, 2003 14.34
- Location: Newcastle upon Tyne
- Contact:
I assumed that this was a ploy to let Tesco claim their own-brand milk is sold at a fair price that supports farmers etc., but that this wouldn't apply to the Creamfields fake brand. I thought they were simultaneously targeting the "values conscious" and "value conscious" sectors of the market. But that might well be bollocks.WillPS wrote:Amazing how many people purchase the green 4pts of Semi Skimmed though, given it is (I assume) exactly the same as the purple.
And if you're looking for the country's sole purchaser of Daisy laundry products: that's me. They're cheaper than and indistinguishable in quality from standard own-brand, whereas the value range is noticeably poorer.
-
- Posts: 764
- Joined: Thu 01 Apr, 2004 15.36
- Location: Edinburgh
So hungry I could eat a... etc.
Interesting. They're straight out of the British stock chain, i.e. not made/packaged specially for the foreign market, as they've had they've had an imperial weight sticker added to comply with US food labelling regs.
*That's assuming they are made in Britain. Knowing Tesco it could be somewhere like Slovakia.
They've missed a trick - they should have plonked a big Union Jack and "Made in Britain" sticker on them*. Tesco Finest probably doesn't mean anything to most Yanks.cdd wrote:Talk about selling ice to Eskimos. Unsurprisingly they are not selling.
*That's assuming they are made in Britain. Knowing Tesco it could be somewhere like Slovakia.
Yes - produced in Cheshunt. The entire back has a sticker covering the English stuff (including the Tesco Satisfaction Guarantee).
"Biscuit" to Americans mean what we would think of as scones.
The shelf pricing font seems to be copied from Tesco. The self checkout terminals run the same software and the receipts have the same codes on the bottom. But my clubcard wasn't accepted. They wanted a "friends" card instead.
"Biscuit" to Americans mean what we would think of as scones.
The shelf pricing font seems to be copied from Tesco. The self checkout terminals run the same software and the receipts have the same codes on the bottom. But my clubcard wasn't accepted. They wanted a "friends" card instead.
-
- Posts: 1447
- Joined: Sat 08 Nov, 2008 19.48