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MP Dunleavey

Women in Red

Are outlet malls for suckers?

Factory stores' price markdowns are alluring, but those 'deals' are often less than they seem. Getting your money's worth takes a little legwork.

[Related content: shopping, savings, bargain, retail, hot deals]
By MP Dunleavey
MSN Money

Americans have a long-standing love affair with bargains. Look no further than the warehouse clubs, discount stores and outlet malls that carpet the country.

But in a persuasive new book, "Cheap: The High Cost of Discount Culture," Ellen Ruppel Shell, a correspondent for The Atlantic, describes the web of marketing and manipulation that discount retailers use to drain cash from your wallet.

Outlet malls are among the worst offenders, Shell says, with their glittering promises of "the very best quality, at the very lowest prices."

Ironically, she asserts, they offer neither: Outlet malls are like fun houses that play on shoppers' distorted perceptions of luxury, value and price.

"People are not questioning the quality at these designer outlets; they're not questioning the 'low prices,' so it's a bonanza for retailers," Shell said in a recent interview.

To truly get your money's worth, it pays to learn more about the outlet game.

20% off? I'll take it!

You don't have to tell me about the perils of outlet malls. I live about an hour and a half from one of the biggest: the famed Woodbury Common, home to 220 "premium" outlet stores.

On my first trip there, about 10 years ago, I was single and shopping under the influence of the "Sex and the City" culture. I loved it.

My second trip, about a year and a half ago, left me baffled.

Where were the designer deals? The steals that made you gasp and race to the cash register? Every price seemed steep, from the Coach bags to the DKNY coats to the $60 Banana Republic jeans that I bullied my husband into buying.

"I've never spent $60 on jeans in my life," he said, fuming.

"Well, they look great on you, and they're marked down from $75. And, for Pete's sake, we've come all this way," I argued back.

Little did I know, I was just another sucker who had fallen for some classic tricks from the outlet mall handbook.

The outlet trap

What makes people shop? Economists, marketers and psychologists have written volumes on this topic, and outlet malls have used that knowledge for their own gain. Shell says the outlet allure is based on two key factors:

1. Location. You might assume that outlet malls are situated far from urban centers because they need the space. But that inconvenience is also designed to create in shoppers' minds what economists call the "sunk cost fallacy."

The 55 million people shopping at outlet malls each year, Shell says, drive a total distance that "equals 440,000 circumnavigations of the globe."

The extra time and resources sunk into the trip encourage a ready-to-spend mind-set even before your car is parked. "Psychologically, all this (effort) must be repaid in terms of purchases made," Shell writes.

That's how "Well, we drove all this way" turns into "Maybe I need a new toaster oven after all."

2. Value confusion. Not so long ago, factory outlet stores primarily sold the real McCoy, Shell says: off-season or slightly damaged -- but still genuine -- designer merchandise at reduced prices.

Today, the merchandise at most outlet mall stores is a mix of actual designer items and products created specifically for outlet stores and outlet shoppers. The system is deceptive because it preys upon people's inability to identify the true quality that marks a designer item.

Thus outlet shoppers put their faith in items that carry a certain luxury brand name, without understanding whether the items in hand are worth the money they're paying.

This value confusion sets the stage for how outlet malls snare your business.

Seductive marketing

People are so seduced by the words "sale" and "discount," according to a study detailed in "Cheap," that they will buy an item that's "on sale" even when they know that the same thing is selling for less elsewhere.

Video: Layaway makes a comeback

It's not the asking price that gets us to spend, researchers believe, but the amount "saved."

MRIs of shoppers' brains have shown that spending triggers discomfort. Discounting helps alleviate that, Shell says, "so we associate more with the money we saved than the money we spent."

Outlet malls exploit shoppers' discount cravings by setting artificially high reference prices, then marking them down. At one jewelry store, for example, Shell examined a necklace with an asking price of more than $3,000 and a discount price of $800. Its actual value: about $300.

Few of the "original" prices you see in outlet stores are real, Shell says. The sleight of hand is designed to create a discount illusion so powerful that it drives you to buy.

What you're buying is yet another issue.

Continued: Is what you bought what you thought?

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Wednesday, September 09, 2009 3:54:44 AM

This article is so true. If you go and look at the real product in those stores, that most of us blue collar folks can't afford,  really look hard at the stiching, fabric, weight, attention to detail, price and overall size and appearance. Try on the 8,000 leather coat and see how it really feels.

 

Then when you go to the outlet malls you have a real comparable. Having that 1 rule pounded into my little brain from childhood from mother has made the real bargains just jump out.

 

it's just fun to find a bargain!!

Wednesday, September 09, 2009 5:36:20 AM
I agree with Domics mom.  You have no business walking into one of these outlet stores without first examining the real thing.  Also, I have had a salesmen at Woodbury Common's Donney Bourke Store tell me that defective goods marked, "Irregular" had to be stamped that way because they were being sold at the outlet store. 

Don't let anyone imply that irregular or seconds are marked that way as a technicality.  They do have something wrong with them--in this case, crookedly sew zippers.
Wednesday, September 09, 2009 5:46:47 AM
Thanks for the timely article "MP". I have noticed for some time the steady decline in bargains at the "Outlets". Our Family has a tradition of going the day after Thanksgiving..."Black Friday"...to the Outlets to catch the bargains. Been doing it probably 15 years and we have been buying less and less each year as products and the deals have become inferior. Drove to the Outlets last year about 1 and 1/2 hours away only to discover our local Kohls less than 10 minutes away had better bargains, better selection AND an excellent return policy!
Wednesday, September 09, 2009 6:39:50 AM
outlets can sometimes be a good deal.  Like with anything you have to know what you're buying.  when shopping for kids clothing, I can do well stacking sales and coupons getting items of clothing for less than $3 each.  These are the same clothing, same styles, same quality I've seen at other stores.  Like MPs husband, I never would have bought jeans for $60 so that would have never been a deal to me.  But unlike MP, I would never buy something just to buy it.  I would have no problem leaving empty handed.  I actually have once, drove an hour to outlets, didn't see anything, had a waffle and then came home.  It was still a nice day out and I saw it as entertainment.  Open-mouthed
Wednesday, September 09, 2009 6:56:25 AM
When we go to outlets, it is because the store sells just one brand of something.  If you go to the Carter's children outlet, you know that all you are going to find there are Carter's clothes.  If I go to the Playtex/Bali/etc... store, it is easier to purchase all of my underwear there.  Instead of going into a nice dept store and having to walk back across the store to pick up an additional 2 bras to try on, I can have everything there within my reach.  Again, it goes back to being an informed shopper.
Wednesday, September 09, 2009 7:52:25 AM

I found great luck in Outlet Shopping, but one must be wary of the "other brand names" offered in, say, a Liz Claiborne outlet.  The smoke and mirror effect generally throws the consumer off -- to the point, whereby the salesperson will bring over similar "better quality items" and direct you away from the "big sale item" on the table.  Careful, careful, careful! 

I am a shopper; henceforth, I look for quality first.  Always shop at the regular stores before heading out to the outlets, zero in on the exact items you need, then go for it.

I did buy an identical black knit hoodie and pants for a fraction of the retail price at the Claiborne store, as well as some first rate quality sweaters.  But, I got snagged on some high-priced jeans and a dress, without checking the price reduction.  Got back to the hotel, and realized, I paid 95% of the retail -- Oh, and I did take those items back, much to the dismay of the store manager.

A tip:  Always ask for a promotional giveaway.  In expectation of a "homerun" sale, the store manager gave us each a free piece of luggage that doubles as a gym bag or a garment bag...Very cool construction -- and the best part:  Free!

Billie Fraser, Virginia Beach, Virginia

Wednesday, September 09, 2009 9:10:38 AM
I beg to differ with you on all aspects of the "Outlet Malls" My wife goes to one in Hagerstown, MD, about a 2 1/2 hour drive from home. She specifically goes there for me. They have a Ralph Lauren store where she purchases long and short sleeve polo shirts. She gets the shirts, that cost, in retail stores, $75, for $45 and if she purchases 3 shirts she gets an extra $10 off the total bill. That, to me, is a bargain when you can save $120 and get what you want. She also finds great deals on items for her. So, I don't know how your outlet treats you, but ours is worth the trip.
Wednesday, September 09, 2009 10:08:34 AM
She always does such great articles. Bargain hunting is a project in itself. But with some perserverence, dubious notation, and comparison shopping without running all over you can find a great bargain out there!
Wednesday, September 09, 2009 10:29:20 AM
I do not usually go to the outlets because the ones in our area, at least to me, don't have very good deals.  I end up shopping at the Goodwill or Value Village where I can find great quality at a decent price. 
Wednesday, September 09, 2009 10:42:42 AM
The only things at an outlet mall I like are the stores you can't find everywhere, as in I was able to buy a new Pyrex lid to replace a broken one, in a cookware outlet.
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