whatmeworry
Established Member
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- Jan 22, 2007
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I take the points but I use the receipt, and get a discount on my shop at my local supermarket.
Yes but if the value of the discount is pretty much irrelevant then so are the number of points, as there are half as many! Given we are up to 41 posts not sure everyone agrees its irrelevant though.I generally take the points if I buy the coughpy fuel from woolies. Comparing to the value of the discount is pretty much irrelevant. The points gained from fuel purchases are so few in the overall equation that the cost averages down pretty quickly.
Yes but if the value of the discount is pretty much irrelevant then so are the number of points, as there are half as many! Given we are up to 41 posts not sure everyone agrees its irrelevant though.
For me QF points are worth (at most) 1c a point so 4c discount should equate to 4 points but they only give too.This thing about "there are half as many" doesn't even make sense.
I hate myself for even reading this thread seeing as the differences between the 2 options are so miniscule but would like to add that the equation does change if you were to spend more than $5 in the shop. You get the bonus 4c p/l if you take the discount, however still only get the 2 points p/l. ICertainly f you take the points, in effect the points start costing you 4c per point
Sorry but your logic is wrong here, 60 litres would give you 4c off but only 2 points per litre =120 points.I think totally different.
60 litres @ 4 points = 240 points.
To actually go shopping for the same points = between $480 (1/2 point cc) & $170 max. (1.5 points).
Instead I spend less and get the points I want.
Yep, totally agree, however very rarely (extremely so) you can actually buy goods which of themselves are worth say $3+ so you are spending $5 to get $5.40 ($3 for the goods and $2.40 for the discount). In this case it may be worth it.I would never spend $5 in store on overpriced products I don't particularly need, especially if taking the points option. I'm not sure I would spend $5 to save $2.40 either, assuming the 60L tank in the car is empty.
I have a work issued Motorpass card and fill up my company vehicle at least every 4 days. Motorpass will not accept the discount loaded on my rewards card but they will allow me to swipe my rewards card and issue double points if there is any loaded. Works very well!!
Sorry but your logic is wrong here, 60 litres would give you 4c off but only 2 points per litre =120 points.
I also think your logic is wrong regarding shopping. I never shop for points! I will use my CC to get points if it is for something I already want to get and it doesn't cost me any extra to use my CC, i.e. the points are free. If there is any surcharge I usually wont use the CC if possible (and certainly not if > 1%).
Clearly only a total idiot would spend $170 let alone $480 to get 240 points but that's certainly not what I am doing and I suspect there are very few people spending just to get points.
Yep, totally agree, however very rarely (extremely so) you can actually buy goods which of themselves are worth say $3+ so you are spending $5 to get $5.40 ($3 for the goods and $2.40 for the discount). In this case it may be worth it.
(I need to do shopping, I just get bonus points (fuel voucher) on top of using a cc.
This is the bit I don't get, saving $5 per month means nothing but 250 points a month is somehow great? Would saving $500/month mean something or would you rather get 25000 points because the ratio (i.e. comparative value) is exactly the same in these two cases, and personally I'd be keeping the money if offered this deal. Plenty of cheaper ways to get those 25K points.Diesel in the car: I don't really care what the "savings" may be (4c, 8c, per litre), notlr the conversion into points (half the cost/amount).
I will still be spending $ to be able to drive to and from work for another month. Saving less then $5 per month means nothing to me.
But since I'm purchasing something required (I don't intend walking 40km each day return between home and work!), I would rather the extra measly points then some measly cash savings.
If you were to get those points purely via buying petrol an economy flight to London (144K points) would cost the equivalent of $2800, hardly cheap let alone rapid (it would take forever at 250 points per month). But as you note, different folks, different strokes, if it works for you, go for it. For me there are better ways to effectively "buy" points.When the total points are used for more overseas trips in U class, or maby One World trip for like 580k for 2 people; I think Im saving even more on the rrp of original airfairs.
If you were to get those points purely via buying petrol an economy flight to London (144K points) would cost the equivalent of $2800, hardly cheap let alone rapid (it would take forever at 250 points per month). But as you note, different folks, different strokes, if it works for you, go for it. For me there are better ways to effectively "buy" points.
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Yes but while I agree to a degree with this statement there are a least a couple of reasons I don't agree with in this instanceThat's probably the more important point. It's not how you earn them but how you use them that counts. That is why we're on AFF, I assume.