1. Compare prices.
Use Cnet.com’s “Compare Prices” search to see multiple store prices on tech products. For everything else, Google’s Froogle.com generates the most results. It’s not infallible, so check Amazon for specialized products from small retailers. Yahoo Shopping’s “Compare Product”
function matches specs.
2. Take consumer reviews with a pinch of salt.
A happy customer tells ten friends; an unhappy one
tells 25. And who knows how savvy the reviewer is?
3. Click through.
When manufacturers don’t want to advertise the lowest price, Websites like J&R and Best Buy
hide the real sale price until you put the item in your shopping cart.
4. Read the fine print.
Online retailers often skimp on service.
E-Cost, for example, has amazing bargains but charges a 15 percent restocking fee on returns.
5. Let Websites do the work.
Consumerist.com lists Web deals daily,
and Shopzilla.com has
a special-offers menu. Avoid coupon sites; they require subscriptions
or force-feed ads to you.

Email
Print

The Discovery Channel Finds Its Playboy

David Edelstein on Trouble the Water
Raising the Bar Lowers It Further
The Best of the Rest of the Summer
The Look Book: 
Jean-Georges's New Haute Soba Joint
How to Sell an Apartment With an Odor
A Case Against Tennis Uniforms
The Liberation of Christie Brinkley

Rafael Nadal’s Unique Tennis Fashions
Who Will Be America’s Next Top Fashion Editor?
Why Brett Favre Is No Joe Namath