Monday, January 30, 2017

Buying Gift Cards at a Discount to Save on Everyday Expenses

Living in Hawaii is expensive.  There is no getting around it.  When I last looked at my spending habits, I noticed that groceries for a family of 4 is my single largest living expense.

While we often think about reducing our cable, cell phone or electricity bills (all still worthwhile endeavors), getting your everyday discretionary and none discretionary spending under control is by far the best way to save money and to afford paradise living.

Using Discounted Gift Certificates For Discretionary Expenses

To help me save money on my discretionary spending, about a year-and-a-half ago, I found Raise.com, a web-based marketplace, a secondary market really, for people to buy and sell unused gift cards and gift certificates at a discount to their face value.

In Hawaii, where almost everything costs more than their equivalent on the mainland, you need to extend your purchasing power to buy the same clothes, food, etc. for less.  Purchasing gift cards at a discount on Raise.com and using those certificates to spend on your everyday purchases has saved me hundreds of dollars.

Before I go further, if you click any of the Raise.com links in this post, you will receive an exclusive offer of $10 off any purchase of $50 or more if you sign up for a new account.  This offer ends March 31, 2017.  If your discount isn't applied at checkout, use promo code NEWRAISE50

How it works

Sellers of these gift cards are often people who received them from friends or family but who don't value them -- for example someone who got a $100 Cabela's gift card yet has not interest in camping.  For such people, a $100 gift card to Cabela's is worthless ($0).  With Raise.com, they can sell that gift card for $90 to someone who shops at Cabela's regularly.

The seller benefits by monetizing something previously worthless to them that they'd rather not keep unused, and the buyer ends up increasing their spending power by getting a $100 gift card for their favorite camping supply store at a $10 discount.  Win-win.

Riase offers physical gift cards, eGift cards (usable on websites) and voucher certificates (cards you can print out and have the cashier type in to their terminal to apply the payment.

Finding the best deals

While there are thousands of gift cards and certificates being sold on Raise.com, like any marketplace, you will find some certificates are in greater demand than others -- the greater the supply, the greater the discount.  The greater the demand, the lower the discount.  For example, you will very rarely find Costco, Safeway or Amazon gift cards readily available.  And when they do show up for sale, they are sold at a very low discount of perhaps half a percent and get scooped up extremely quickly.

On the other hand, CVS, Kmart, and Ross stores often have a multitude of cards available for sale at decent discounts.

Best Gift Certificate Deals On Raise.com
When you return items at a Ross store, they typically give you your refund in the form of a paper gift certificate.  Many of these Ross gift certificates are available for sale on Raise.com at a very decent discount of around 15%.  Because these are paper certificates, the seller will mail them to you directly which may take a little time.

CVS (around 11% discount) - you can save on your pharmacy costs by buying CVS cards at a handsome discount of around 11%.  These are usually sold as voucher certificates, meaning, you can print up your card immediately.  When you shop at CVS, they clerk will have to manually enter the card number at their terminal to process the payment.


Starbucks (around 6%) - Starbucks gift cards are often only sold on Raise as a voucher.  I found it easiest to just load the card number to my Starbucks iPhone app and then use that to purchase my coffee using the app's scanning feature.
There are of course many others available.

Some Caveats

Many stores' own internal policy is that gift cards and certificates cannot be bought or sold to people other than the original customer.  I personally came across this problem when I bought a Starbucks card on Raise.  I loaded the value of the card to my Stabuck's Gold Card and subsequently had my Gold Card deactivated by Starbucks for violating their company policy.

Raise gave me my money back but the damage was done.  Starbucks wouldn't reinstate my Gold Card.  The good news though was that despite my physical Gold Card being deactivated, my Gold status was still active on my Starbucks iPhone app and I just learned to add the cards I purchased from Raise to the app and to use the app to process my purchases.

What do you think?

Monday, January 23, 2017

Shaving Phantom Loads - or- DVRs Use More Electricity Than a Refrigerator

Yes, you read that headline correctly.  If you subscribe to a cable service with a DVR box, according to a 2011 report by the National Resources Defense Council, that box consumes more electricity than an Energy Star rated refrigerator -- approximately 446 kWh/year (with your refrigerator running at about 415 kWh per year).  This makes your DVR the most power-hungry electronic device in your home after electric water heaters and air conditioners.  And some homes have multiple DVRs.  Most homes definately have other set-top boxes and electronics plugged in at all hours of the day, wasting hundreds of dollars a year.

Phantom Loads

With Hawaii having some of the most expensive electricity in the country, saving electricity in your home has a real effect on your wallet.  Your DVR's power consumption of 446 kWh/year costs you about $134/year (at $0.30 per kWh).  While, this may not seem like much, consider all the devices at home you keep plugged in all day in standby mode when you are not home, each drawing kilowatts and costing you money.  In fact, another NRDC report from 2015 shows that "idle load electricity" -- the power consumed by computers, TVs, DVRs and other electrics left plugged in throughout the day when not in use, account for about 23% of your electricity bill.

These "phantom loads" not only cost you money but cost the environment as well -- that electricity has to come from somewhere, doesn't it?  And in Hawaii, that electricity is mostly produced by burning fossil fuels.

Thus reducing these phantom loads are doubly green -- they save you greenbacks and reduce your impact on the environment.

So what can you do?

Go through your house and identify any electronic device that you use for only a few hours a day (like your TV set, audio equipment, etc).  This should also include any cell phone charging plugs or any large "box" plug.  A simple reminder, if the plug is warm to the touch when plugged in, it is drawing power and costing you money, even if the device it powers is "off".

Use Digital Timers - Programmable For Different Days of the Week

Put your DVR on a timer.  I have mine set to shut off my DVR at 12:30am and wake up at 6am.  So I am roughly cutting its power consumption by about 25%.  While I might not watch TV in the morning, I might want to record something at odd hours, and this schedule seems to work for me.  Basically, the more you keep your DVR off, the more you save electricity.

If your entertainment center (TV, DVD player, audio equipment, etc.) is NEVER in use during the day while at work, there is really no need to keep them powered in standby mode 24 hours a day.  Put all those devices on strip and plug them in to a timer set to only turn on during the hours you are home.  I recommend using a digital timer that you set a weekly schedule -- if you work Monday through Friday, but are home on the weekends, you can set your timer to power you TV all day on the weekends, but perhaps only in the evening on work days.  Here are a few timers I recommend:



I like these timers because they are easy to set, can be customized with various schedules throughout the week and even have a battery backup to keep the time when power goes out.

Use Analog Timers - For Regularly Scheduled Usage

You can of course use a more traditional analog timer for other devices that are used on a regular schedule.  For example, I sleep with a CPAP, a medical device that pumps air into the my nose via a mask a wear to bed that stops snoring and sleep apnea .  CPAPs typically have a heating element that warms distilled water to keep the air humid.  Since I don't need to use the CPAP at 3 in the afternoon, I have my CPAP set on an analog timer from about 10pm to 8am every day, preventing the heating element from wasting electricity during the day when it is not in use.



Use Countdown Timers - Great For Cell Phone Chargers

Leaving your cell phone charging cable plugged in (even without the phone connected) draws power and wastes you money,  For your cell phone recharge cables, I recommend using Belkin's Conserve a Socket Timer - an outlet countdown timer.  I personally use this one for my iPhone charging cable.  I can keep my cable plugged in without drawing any power until I click the little grey button on the top of the box.  A switch on the side determines the countdown time, either 30 minutes, 3 hours or 6 hours.  When the time is up, the power is cutoff, ensuring your iPhone plug is not drawing a load when not in use.



Use Power Strips

While timers offer automation of your power saving, you may just want to use a power strip which you can just easily flip on or off as needed.  Belkin makes a higher end power strips under their Conserve a Socket line of power-saving products with a remote that allows you to turn it on without having to lean over and back behind your entertainment center.



Return on Investment

If you just plug your DVR into a $16 digital timer like I did, set to keep your DVR off when everyone is asleep from midnight to 6am, you are saving about $33.50/year, or an approximate ROI of 209%.  Multiply this across your household with all your electronic devices and you can save several hundred dollars in your electricity bill.

Not too shabby.

Thursday, January 19, 2017

Welcome to My New Blog

Aloha!

For many a mainlander, the thought of moving to Hawaii is like a dream come true -- they imagine themselves enjoying a tropical vacation 24/7.  But for those of us or are from here or have moved here, we know first-hand that paradise costs money, often necessitating working multiple jobs and maintaining a few side-hustles to pay for living in paradise.

Nearly major consumable has to be shipped to the islands, increasing the costs of all goods, and indirectly, all services.  And if you live on the outer islands, there are yet even more additional shipping costs to transport goods from Oahu.

Just popping into my local grocery store in Lihue, regularly finding $8.99 gallons of milk kind of makes me want to give up drinking dairy.

Electricity is about 3 to 4 times more expensive than average rates on the mainland, while gasoline, propane and natural gas are also sold at a premium in the islands - again, due to shipping costs.

So what's a boy or girl to do?  Having lived here for nearly 12 years now, I have found some creative ways to save on daily living expenses to make the cost of living in the islands more bearable.  Many of these are fairly simple and straight forward while others might be something you haven't heard of.

It is my hope you enjoy this blog of money saving tips and tricks to help saving you money living in the most beautiful islands on the planet.

Me Ke Aloha Pumehana (With Warm Aloha),

Andrew