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homebrand vs brand name 380x249 Why Ill never buy Home Brand

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70 per cent of us won’t buy cereal unless it’s brand name. We like some cute cartoon characters and a bright and colourful cardboard box with your morning treat.

More than 60 per cent refuse to buy generic brand toilet paper either. We like to feel the smooth softness of expense when we wipe our behinds.

However, reports show that we are more willing to accept home brand milk and eggs as home brand products come to take up more and more space on supermarket shelves.

Home brands are back in the news this week after research agency Colmar Brunton found that there are certain things people will not compromise on when choosing between home brand and traditional labels.

This from the Herald Sun:

Home-brand products are forecast to snare a third of total supermarket sales in five years, topping $31.8 billion.

Project manager Andrea Stephen said opting for home brands, also known as generic, was typically acceptable in such categories because items were more homogenous.

“You don’t often pick up your milk and have a look at the brand,” she said.

“Whereas with breakfast cereal, it’s all about the box and what that says to you.”

IBISWorld predicts cost-of-living pressures will push home-brand sales to $21.6 billion or 25.2 per cent of supermarket sales this financial year.

Senior industry analyst Naren Sivasailam said established brands that connected with shoppers were best placed to endure.

Coles spokesman Jim Cooper said more than three-quarters of goods on shelves were branded.

Woolworths said more than 90 per cent of its grocery sales came from established brands.

Editor of Mamamia Publishing, Bec Sparrow is a Home Brand buyer. She wrote for us previously that:

I got outed last week. As a home-brand buyer. And now it seems that my preference for buying home-brand flour and sugar and washing-up liquid and jelly (actually, I thought the jelly was a bit crap) means that I’m guilty of crippling the Australian economy or destroying people’s livelihoods or eating small puppies. Or something.

Like most people I live on a budget and my family’s grocery bill (and there’s just three of us) isn’t getting any smaller. I also feel like I can’t win. I’m busting my you-know-what trying to buy fresh. And less packaged foods. And more fruit and veg. And more Australian made products. And and and … three million other things the media helpfully like to point out in their bid to drive me bananas.

I’m also a leetle bit tired of the sneaky increases in food items from the big multinationals and the sneaky down-sizing in quantity of the major brands (yes, Cadbury, I’m looking at you). Look we have new packaging! And a new logo! And try not to notice that we’re 30g lighter but charging you more! Is it any wonder so many of us are trying to save a dollar or two when we can? Hmm.

Managing Editor of iVillage and former MM-er, Lana Hirschowitz has a different point of view.

Lana writes:

I have always been a supporter of the under-dog. Give me a sports match, ask me to choose a side and I’ll pick the team with the least chance of winning. It’s not because I like losing, it’s just that I like competition. Clear winners are great but less so if there is no opposition. It make the game boring.

This very line of thinking is the reason that I don’t buy homebrand. It’s not because I don’t like their products or that I try spend as much money as I can, it’s just that I think competition fuels our market and no place as strongly as on our supermarket shelves.

Competition gives consumers choice. I don’t object to having homebrand on the shelves, I just choose not to buy it – and I feel comfortable knowing that different suppliers operate within the same market promoting competition and giving me the right to decide who I want to support and what I should buy.

But looking at the shelves of my local supermarket my choices are eroding. In fact, in some areas there is no choice at all. Insidiously wrapped to look “non-generic”, the shelves are full of homebrand products – there is no other option.

Yesterday at my local Coles (which is HUGE) there was not a single competing brand in the health food section – I wanted to buy quinoa, flaxseed and chia. The only option I had was to buy the Coles homebrand. That’s not competition, it’s not good for me, it’s not good for small business and in the long run I don’t believe it’s good for the economy.

With no choice, the supermarkets will be able to charge anything they like, they will be able to dictate what we purchase and they will force people out of business. And I will never be able to find the quinoa that I like.

Here’s a gallery of Coles and homebrand lookalikes, via Mumbrella. They’re remarkably similar in layout, shape and even colour choice…

So what do you think? Do you buy branded or homebrand products? Why?

Comments

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201 Comments so far

  1. Andy

    Home brand products are usually the same as brand products (packaged in the same factory) so why the hail would you buy brand products?

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  2. Louise

    Whether you buy Homebrand or Generic or whatever, please, as much as you can, buy Australian made and grown. The long term goal of the Big Supermarkets is to gradually delete all other brands but their own from the shelves. They will then source all of their products from the cheapest possible places, ie. China, Mexico etc. Their very point of existence is to maximise market share, and to then make every cent they can out of it. If our Australian Agricultural and Manufacturing industries don’t get support now, when your children grow up there will be no such thing as locally made or grown. So please do what you can, when you can.

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  3. Gilly

    Im a university student so i cant work full time . I also live in student housing with that said i cant afford to think about the damage im doing to farmers ect as homebrand is all i can afford . i will say home brand cheese is amazing but yes there are things i try to budget in that are not home brand like toilet papper and non generic mac n cheese ……. Because mac n cheese is a uni kids dream , i do respect both sides of this argument and say good on you for sticking up for the little guy

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  4. Nitty Brown

    I agree with iVillage, have you seen the cheese selection at Coles, and no you cant trick me with your packaging….I have chosen to go instead with Great Ocean Road Cheese which is absolutely beautiful….now lets talks about milk…the only milk that is decent is Aussie Farmers Milk…every other milk tastes crap and are very watery…compare and you will know what I am talking about.
    Home brand is ok for somethings but you need to read the labels carefully as alot of it is made overseas (a big no no in my household)…I noticed that Oreo’s are now made in China…kraft you sneaked up on me with that : (

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    • Calziel

      Oh no guys…..Great Ocean Road is home brand too….just a Coles designer label…..

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  5. Leon

    As a single male (for 7 years now) it’s all about the price! That’s why Aldi is shopping heaven for blokes. Peanut butter…1 choice, Aldi brand, Tuna…1 choice, Aldi brand……you get the picture. Why are people so anti-supermarket, anti-homebrand on this site? Remember, if it’s made in Australia there’s an Australian making it, whether it’s from Nestle or Woolworths Select. Besides, most people will have super invested in Coles/Woolies without knowing it (and the banks for that mattter) so stop bashing them people. Besides, how many kids got their firts jobs on the cash registers of the “evil corporations”.

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  6. Nikki

    I buy a lot at Costco. Non generic brands in bulk and it’s really paid off for me as my husband has been out of work for 2 months and we are living off pantry staples. Food shop has gone down from 200 to 30 per week. I know the profits goes overseas but something as to give to pay the mortgage!!

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  7. Anon

    I think the real issue here is not that buying generic products is bad, it’s that supermarkets are using this as a justification to push out competitor brands and replace them with their own.

    Let’s be very clear – there is a big difference between a ‘generic’ brand (e.g. home brand/no frills etc) and ‘house brands’ (e.g. Woolworth Select). I quite happily buy generic for the basics, but what really irks me is when Coles and Woolies replace other brands and their generic products with their house brands, done in similar packaging to ‘brand names’ to try and fool us, and then claim it’s what the consumer wants. Yes Woolies, I would like to buy generic flour. No, I would not like to buy your house brand flour that is exactly the same and costs almost as much as the brand name, and significantly more than the generic. Just give me my damn home brand flour and stop thinking I’m too stupid to notice that you’ve replaced it and every other option with Select branded flour!!!!

    They are using this as an excuse to fill their shelves with their own brands and rake in even more money whilst screwing the poor suppliers who have to keep dropping their prices or face being taken off shelves all together – or worse, having the big supermarkets decide that they can get an offshore supplier more cheaply.

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  8. anna

    i tried the coles rice puffs (featured above) and it tastes like styrofoam with sugar.

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  9. Micha

    As a student, some weeks I find it hard to afford food at all, let alone branded products. So yes, I probably buy too many generic products. Saying that, I get all of my fruit and veg fresh at the farmers markets and I refuse to buy generic eggs or milk. I guess we all just have to do what we can, and as soon as I get a ‘real’ post-uni job I’m determined to improve my shopping habits :)

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    • CBR

      Honey, there is absolutely nothing wrong with buying generic if it’s what you can afford.

      Who here always gets the generic brand for medications when available? *waves hand*

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  10. Nicky

    I buy whatever saves me money. It’s that simple. With a decent sized mortgage and 3 mouths to feed I am happy to buy whatever brand keeps the most money in my pocket. Certain things I won’t compromise on (peanut butter, canned fish, Tim Tams!) but for the most part I just buy whichever brand offers the best cost:taste:healthiness. I’m not fussed on whether they are home brand or not.

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  11. Loftyanne

    I am tired of consumers having to cop guilt for buying generic. Sometimes some families don’t have a choice. With a husband in uncertain employment and two young kids to feed, as well as a modest mortgage to pay, we do the best we can to stretch our money further. We buy a mix of generic and branded foods and I am not going to apologize for that. We also buy a hell of a lot of fresh fruit n veg and meat from both the stupermarket and other places, reducing our reliance on packaged/processed foods.

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  12. Cady

    Just looked in the cupboards and the only home brand item I have is … bleach. I occasionally buy home brand flour. And that’s it.

    I’m fussy about what I use, and I would rather do without than buy the ‘wrong’ brands – but the brands I use are the ones I prefer, not the most expensive (and I bulk buy them when they’re on special).So now that the local Woollies is only selling generic and John West tuna, for example, I’m shopping one week in 3 at the less convenient Franklins because I LIKE Greenseas tuna (and it goes in the basket with the Sprayfresh deoderent, and small tins of chickpeas, and Ardmona tomatoes, and Dairy Farmers Lite White, and SPC tinned fruit, and … and … and …). When I have bought generic, I’ve regretted it. Homebrand milk goes off before the use-by date, the custard powder is gritty, and tinned anything is mush with extra liquid. I don’t need to look at cartoons over the breakfast table, and I don’t care how plain the packaging is – but while the contents are substandard I’m not buying.

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  13. MTF

    My boyfriend refuses to buy the “premium homebrand” products, to help save companies and their brand name products from being forced out. Coles and Woolies are already greedy enough, we don’t want to see a day where their “own” brand goods are all we have to choose from!

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  14. Mickie

    Haven’t read the all the comments yet, but milk is one thing I would never buy generic I only like one brand of milk, sometimes I have had to buy something else, but when I stock up the next day the kids drink the other stuff and I go back to what I like.

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  15. Ra

    I buy a bit of both, but I prefer to buy non-home brand when I can. I don’t like the idea of the supermarkets pushing out smaller suppliers in the long term.

    Also- at Coles and Woolies I’ve noticed a shift towards offering both “budget homebrand” and “premium homebrand” choices! Or rather, creating the illusion of choice.

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  16. mumof4

    I buy home brand , sugar, bread , eggs ( I know I should buy free range, but I just can’t afford to), milk and cream. I used to buy home brand peas, but they now source them from China, so I won’t touch them. I won’t buy produce grown in China or food products manufactured in China either. I choose not to for my own reasons.. I also try hard to buy Australian made and owned, but that is getting increasingly difficult to do. But I only buy Australian grown produce, and really baulk at by buying food that hasn’t been made, manufactured or processed here .

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  17. Stephanie

    Whilst I believe in supporting australian farmers/dairy etc, it’s important to be realistic about the times. My husband and I have a few select products that we buy branded because we either are used to them or are our favorites, the rest I decide based on specials and reason ( home brand eggs, milk and bread do us fine) some branded genuinely taste better, and whilst we can afford to buy branded- I prefer to save for other things than splurge on those not-so-important items to our dietary lifestyle. I’d love to support local grocers, but I’m a full time working mother who also just needs to do my shopping as quick as possible. Love my farmers market, local butcher etc- but it’s a treat for when I have time to shop and browse. Sorry, but home branded is not that bad!

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  18. Linda

    I buy homebrand milk, some bread, sugar, flour, honey, pasta, dishwashing powder and a few other things.

    If it’s a food item that I add to other foods, I’m happy to homebrand it as long as the quality isn’t compromised.

    I tried peanut butter but it was very oily. I was reminded of the kraft ad from when I was a kid ‘never oily or dy, just so easy to spread, allll the way to the bottom of the jar’. :)

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    • guest

      What a powerful ad that was! I buy homebrand almost everything, but NOT peanut butter.. and now that you mention it i realise its totally because of that ad.

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  19. SuziQ

    I will always buy Australian products, where possible, even though we don’t have a large grocery budget, I feel morally obliged. I wish more of the big brands were Australian owned, though. I do not feel all warm and fuzzy supporting the Kellogg’s empire.

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    • Faybian

      There’s a buy Australian app. You can check on the website too. It gets to me supporting Arnotts (tobacco company is parent), Nestlé (amoral marketing of formula in the 3rd world) and even uncle Toby’s is not longer Australian owned.

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  20. ly

    what a bizarre concept that a bigger organisation is a ‘monster’ if it can afford to produce and sell items at much lower cost.. this is business! ( and quite possibly shares in those monster companies provide a major component of many superannuation investment funds) If you need curtains you can buy them from a local curtain provider or from Spotlight, If you need baby growsuits you can go to the designer store or to Kmart or Target, If you want to swim you can go to the small private pool or to the local YMCA .. this is about choices and your conscience choice is not my personal battle.
    I make small painted craft embellishments. They are handpainted, designed by me and gorgeous. They are also more expensive than those made in bulk from Asia.. Some can’t justify the expense. Some don’t think the improved quality justifies the cost. Some just want a blue bird button and don’t mind where it comes from, and some only have $2 and they will happily take what they can get. Some don’t believe they really are handmade.That’s ok. That’s business. Thats budgeting.
    Yes farmers are asked to sell at lower costs.. they have the choice of saying no.. and the challenge of finding alternative buyers. Just like every other producer on the planet…

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  21. Lisa

    I am finding at our local Coles and Safeway there are less homebrand available and more ‘brand’ itt is all well and good to be rooting for the underdog and concerned about the Aussie producer but with 4 kids (3 being teens) I just need to be able to get food on the table within my budget. If that means buying homebrand then so be it.. If I can buy a branded loof bread for $3.20 or a homebrand loaf for $1, then I am a homebrand shopper all the way! To all those who can choose to make the “politically correct” choice in their trolley while feeding 4 growing kids, all I can say is, your food budget far exceeds mine, most middle income Aussies are just trying to make the dollar stretch to provide food, clothing, schooling and housing for our kids… oh yes, my kids are dressed 90% Kmart .. sorry

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  22. justanotherfabulousday

    i’m with you Lana Hirschowitz..great article..

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  23. Happymum

    I try to buy Dick Smith foods where I can, so I support fellow farmers and local manufacturers. I don’t know if Coles and Woollies have his brand on the shelf?

    There are some pretty misguided, uninformed people on this post. And that is all I have to say about that!

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    • Faybian

      I heard this week that dick smith complained the Coles were not giving his products space on shelves, so they apparently shunted some other Aussie brands off the shelves to make way for his brand.
      Nice move Coles!

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      • Happymum

        It would be funny if it wasn’t true Faybian!

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    • Kris2040

      I was wondering if you’d have the energy to respond to some of the claims here, Happymum!

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      • Happymum

        Yeah, comments keep getting chewed up and spat into space by the site. So really can’t be bothered at the moment! :)

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  24. Ana

    Hubby and I was ‘discussing’ the budget again this week. There are 3 of us, the budget for food/non-edible groceries is $80 a week. I nearly have a brain haemorrhage every time I go into the supermarket. The local independent grocer (not an IGA) is no better. So I buy home brand on anything that still tastes OK in home brand packaging (milk, flour, butter, fish, bread, cheese -actually, the Coles cheese is quite good).

    I understand the economic implications on a national scale of my insistence on buying store branded stuff, but if I don’t my families economy crashes. This way I can do better than ‘air’ for half the meals of the week. My toddler is much happier for having food in the house. Sadly that’s just the way it is. I would love to buy better, locally etc etc.

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    • Ozlicious

      I loooove the Coles brand cheese! :)

      We have three teenagers to feed so I don’t feel one ounce of guilt about buying home brand.

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      • Gilly

        Reading the comments all i could think of was how ammmmaaazing homebrand cheese is no one believes me its nice to see im not the only one !!!!

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  25. Anon for this

    Unfortunately in Australia their are two supermarkets who have the vast majority of market share. They are in a unique position to dictate to food manufacturing companies what will be available to the consumer and at what price point. Australian manufacturers can not fight back as their product will be removed from shelf and they will suffer considerable losses, which results in closure of Australian manufacturing sites and loss of jobs in mostly regional areas.
    Buying home brand benefits the supermarket and in the long run adversely affects the economy due to the downsizing or closure of food manufacturing sites in Australia and disadvantages the consumer as in the long run it leads to limited competition, which enables the supermarkets to dictate what you pay and what products you can purchase.
    Homebrands are currently targeting lower socio-economic consumers but the supermarkets are expanding in to products aimed at middle to high income earners as this is where they will make their money.
    If people don’t stop buying Homebrands, and start supporting australian manufacturers then in a few years the only products you will see on the shelves will be made by the supermarkets and the food manufacturing industry in Australia will be non existent.

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  26. Guest

    From my local fruit and veg shop today I bought:

    4 apples, 2 oranges, 1 cucumber, 2 tomatoes, 1 iceberg lettuce, 1 carrot, 1 watermelon. Total cost: $11.00.

    In the supermarket that would cost me a lot more. The farmers cry out they are being screwed by the big 2, yet the fruit and veg is still so expensive but my local just down the street does it for peanuts. I don’t care what brands they are flogging I try to stay away from the big 2.

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    • it's beans but I can't be fussed logging in and out again

      See when I look at your list, those prices seem way too high for the little you bought.

      From my Coles shop on Thursday: 1kg of carrots $0.99, bag of 12 mandarins $1.98, iceberg lettuce $2.49, 6 Roma tomatoes $2.16, 6 Granny Smith apples $2.84, 3 Lebanese cucumbers $1.26. I didn’t buy watermelon this time but the following week when I did it was $0.99/kg for seedless.

      It’s strange how the prices vary so much from store to store.

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    • Jimmy's Girl

      I agree with ‘beans’ – that seems awfully pricy for your short fruit & veg list… maybe it’s a matter of store size. I buy from our local fruiterer but it’s a big place, like a great big barn, and I reckon I’d get a lot more than that for $11!

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    • Loop

      Agree with other repliers – a whole kilo of carrots at my Woolies was $1.27, cucumber was $1.37, lettuce was $3.48, 1/4 watermelon was $1.50 or so, 7 bananas were $3.68 … I think both your supermarket and your local fruit and veg are screwing you :(

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    • Anonymous

      I think that is a great price, watermelon isn’t in season so I’m guessing it would have cost a fair bit of that $11??

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  27. it's beans but I can't be fussed logging in and out again

    It’s interesting that some of the brands featured in the gallery are massive worldwide conglomerates with questionable ethical practices. Yes in Australia Wesfarmers and Woolworths are huge but they’re tiny compared to Kelloggs, General Mills, Proctor & Gamble, Kraft (Cadbury), Nestle or Campbells (which I was surprised to find owns Arnotts) for example. How much of the money we pay for a box of Rice Bubbles or Tim Tams stays in Australia?

    Australian farmers don’t always have the ability to supply enough fruit and veg to keep up with demand of the big chains for various reasons. People calling in to talk radio were furious when bananas reached almost $20/kg because of Cyclone Yasi last year. “Why not import them?” “It’s my right to eat bananas but I can’t afford to any more”…

    From the Age article “Cheap Food Comes with a Price”:

    “Pineapple grower Les Williams said producing pineapples for canning was in decline and the floods were a big setback. ”We’re not happy,” he said. “But the supermarkets are in business … It’s hard to throw rocks at them because we haven’t been able to supply them.”

    Woolworths head of own brand Gordon Duncan said: ‘You’d be surprised how many times we get no one responding in Australia to our invitations to supply.’”

    And we should be accepting home brands of milk, eggs, cheese, etc. They’re often the exact same product.

    “One industry source told Crikey he “didn’t think for a minute” there was any difference between the premium and generic milk: ‘How do you change the recipe? Add water? That would affect the fat content. They’re the same.’

    National Foods, the suppliers of Pura Milk and Woolworths Home Brand generic milk, seems to agree. Last year, former executive Conor O’Malley told the Senate Economics Committee that Pura Milk and Woolworths generic milk are “broadly the same”. And Challenge Dairy executive chairman Larry Brennan said: ‘The national health standard … sets the standard and you cannot adulterate white, liquid, fresh milk.’

    In its 2008 report on grocery prices, the ACCC also heard evidence from suppliers which suggested, when it comes to milk, eggs, cheese and bread, there is no difference between home brand and branded products. The NSW Farmers Association reported private label and branded milk and eggs are “identical” to one another. And when it comes to milk, it said, the products often come from the same factory.”

    So why should we pay more for the same product? It seems very wrong to me that identical products can have different labels slapped on them and we’re charged varying prices.

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  28. Ky Mack

    I just learned something new 2 days ago and I’m going to share it with all of you here. Never, I repeat, Never purchase homebrand sanitary pads! That is all.

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  29. I heard....

    A nutritionist friend of mine told me that the chocolate companies downsized their chocolate bars because of the enormous pressure on some of them from various health sectors. As Australia is now to home to more fat people than any other nation in the world and with that dubious distinction comes a raft of costly associated health issues.
    I asked her about why the cost didn’t decrease with the size of the bar and she said it was because the company in question had to totally re-fit it’s production gear….like sizes of moulds, size of equipment etc and this was a hugely costly exercise for them.

    On the home brand/not home brand issue…..I buy whatever’s the cheapest of the stuff I like to eat, at whichever shop has it. There is so much pressure on people to do what they’re told to do…..(buy this, it’s better for the farmers…buy that, it’s Australian made….buy this….it’s better for your health…..) I just try to control my own choices and buy what I like to eat.
    I drink tap water.
    I get VERY TIRED of seeing Australian made products for sale all around the world for MUCH LESS than they’re selling for here!! Surely shipping all these products to other countries is as costly as shipping them to Coles/Woolies….why do Aussies have to pay more for them than foreigners?

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    • Loop

      I think we have to pay our supermarket staff more than in other countries … might be a factor?

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  30. princesstan

    Using quinuoa, flaxseed and chia as an example is really quite silly. Surely if you wanted choice in those items you would go to a health food shop not your local Coles. That’s not a fair example.
    I shop at Aldi but I also shop for what tastes best and what works best. If it tastes better in a home brand then I will buy that or if it works better in a proper brand I will get that.
    We are paying far too much for any groceries anyway. Compare our prices to the UK for general grocery items and we are paying through the nose.

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    • really?

      These items have been available in Coles & Woolworths for ages….I would expect that they would be more expensive in a small, specialised shop than they would be in a supermarket? I don’t think they’re unusual items to want to purchase, I buy them every two weeks.

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  31. the Original Camille

    home brand all the way, baby .
    (except for tinned salmon).

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  32. Kelly

    I refuse to shop at Aldi due to the large majority of their profits going overseas and the poor individual contracts they encouraged when they first arrived in Australia. I find as much as the big two try and monopolize the market. Woolworths in many aspects are the more ethical of the two. I aim to buy Australian made and owned wherever possible. However, in the end if the more generic item is more affordable and it doesn’t matter about quality then the home brand ends up in my trolley.

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  33. res

    My first experience with buying from Aldi was toilet paper and cereal. The toilet paper was terrible and not even the dog would eat the cereal!

    Apart from that I buy a mixture of home brand and branded products. Sometimes the generic is the same as the branded but cheaper so that’s when I buy it. Sometimes the generic is such bad quality that it’s worth spending the extra on a branded product.

    Still can’t get past the point that the kids AND the dog wouldn’t eat the cereal!!

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    • Rose

      You just have to be selective about what you buy from Aldi; I’m finding I shop there more and more.

      Their organic stuff is very good (especially the toasted organic muesli); their butter, cheese, yogurt is exactly they same as Coles, and my teenagers say their steak is better than Coles or Woollies (I hardly eat red meat so can’t comment).

      Does your dog normally eat cereal?

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  34. Tash

    Living in WA I try and choose produce from WA rather than the eastern states or overseas. Am happy to pay a little more for this. I rarely shop at Coles as there is just no variety. And I find the applies homebrand products better than the coles homebrand products! And let’s face it, you dont see ANY coles homebrand products in the masterchef pantry which is stocked by Coles!

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  35. chellebelle

    I buy homebrand bread (IGA one is lovely), flour, nuts (how much cheaper are the Coles salted peanuts than the Nobbys?!) and milk all the time.

    But for me the biggest winners are the Aldi brand nappies and the Coles licorice allsorts. After extensive market research hubby and I have decided those allsorts are the bomb!

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    • Loop

      Same with the home brand nappies … never had a leak, and they’re 1/3 the price!

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  36. elle

    I am not a fan of massive supermarkets (Coles & Woolies) and prefer to shop at farmer’s markets, co-ops and privately owned fruit & vegie shops & grocery stores. I don’t agree with the ethics of Coles & Woolies and know they do not pay farmers a fair price for their produce. The farmers at my local farmer’s market make more money selling their produce direct to the public than they do in Coles. We also benefit as they are selling it at a much lower price..sometimes half as much as in a supermarket. Which is funny because many people tell me they ‘can’t afford to shop at markets’ yet in reality it is much much cheaper than heading to Coles!
    I do of course sometimes buy things from Coles/Woolies due to convenience but never do a big shop and am really careful about what I buy.

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    • Loop

      I would love to do the same Elli, but I find the running around and the petrol cost for me outweighs any savings. The quality is unpredictable and I often feel like I’m paying too much when things aren’t much cheaper than the supermarket!

      I wish somebody would start a major chain that dealt only in fresh foods – if I only had to go to one place to get all my veg/fruit/meat/eggs/milk I’d be happy!

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      • elle

        Where do you live? I am in Inner West Sydney and there are loads of places around here. I don’t drive and live within walking distance from a farmer’s market. There is also a co-op 5 mins away by bus and many independent fresh food places. I used to live in suburban Canberra where there was less selection, but still fruit & vegie markets and the best and biggest farmers market in Australia. There are PLENTY of great places to buy fresh food (veg/fruit/eggs/milk) in main cities at least.

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        • Loop

          Ah, lucky you … I live in a farming community of about 10,000. You’d think that we’d have more access to fresh food than people in the city, not less!

          But the only farmer’s market around here is a 25 minute drive away. There’s a fresh fruit and veg shop about 5-10 minutes away by car, but in the opposite direction from the usual supermarket so if I go to both places there’s quite a bit of extra petrol. There are several roadside stalls around where I can buy direct from farmers, but it just takes some planning to get fresh food when you on the way to or from somewhere else

          On the upside, I have all the fresh oranges I want about 10 metres from my front door. Have now gone off oranges though~!

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          • Ozlicious

            Yep, I live in a regional centre too and it’s quite difficult to get hold of fresh produce at farmers’ markets at a good price and at a time that’s convenient for me. Our markets are on twice a week and, quite frankly, all the good quality stuff is gone by about 9am. Too early for me.

            My time is worth more than getting up early on my day off to go and buy carrots. The coles ones are fine by me.

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    • Kate

      Wholeheartedly agree with everything you’ve said

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  37. Anon

    MamaMia, where’s my comment??

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  38. Michelle C

    Because they don’t make it in Triple Length!! which you need in a family of 6.

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  39. JustMe

    I can’t stand the big 2 chains, their greed knows no bounds. Unfortunately they are a neccesary evil as everyone has to eat and not everyone can afford to shop at local independant stores….and dont those bastards know it!!

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  40. Kaz

    Here’s my logic:
    Let’s say homebrand milk costs me $1 and brand name costs me $1.50.
    If I buy homebrand then I’m 50c better off. If I buy brand name then I don’t save anything. Either purchase means that a company profits. However, if I buy homebrand then I save, the farmer still gets some profit and the big supermarket also makes a profit.
    If you really want to help the farmer then buy direct. In today’s society there is little you can do to help the little guy so you may as well just look out for yourself.

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    • elle

      I don’t believe that at all! There is PLENTY you can do! All milk brands are not equal and when you are paying $1 how much do you really think the farmer is getting after the supermarket has taken their cut? Even in supermarkets we have choices about which milk to buy. The majority of dairy companies in Australia are also foreign owned so profits go overseas.
      http://www.abc.net.au/rural/wa/content/2012/07/s3537118.htm?site=southwestwa
      http://www.abc.net.au/landline/content/2012/s3536466.htm

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    • Liz

      Your logic is seriously flawed. The big two supermarkets are forcing dairy farmers to sell their milk at below cost just so you can buy cheaper milk. At least branded milk is paying the farmer market price. Not every farmer is able to sell their product at farmers markets – the distances are just too great.
      Unbranded milk is sold at ridiculously cheap prices to lure you into the shop so that you will then purchase other items at full or inflated prices.
      I will never buy unbranded milk, or any other product, for that matter.

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      • Kaz

        Meh. Not my problem. I shop at the market mostly as I have issues with packaged food. For anything else I’ll buy homebrand as I’d rather the money in my pocket.
        As for milk, well I buy soy milk. Cow’s milk is for baby cows not humans. I’m against all types of livestock farming so I’d be happy for the farmers to go broke. At least then the environment will be treated with respect.
        If people actually want to be guilt free then they should become vegans and grow their own fruit and veg. Homebrand or brand name is only a small issue in comparison to what our food consumption is doing to the environment.

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        • CBR

          I drink milk (in my coffee) and eat meat and I have no guilt whatsoever :D

          Maybe curb your superiority next time!

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        • Liz

          Wow, just wow. Your attitude is breathtaking to say the least. I was going to address your points, but as you would say, Meh.

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        • Faybian

          Do you realise what size chunk of land you’d need to farm all your own food?
          Your superiority complex is wrecked by your casual wish for some people to go out of business too. Appalling attitude.

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    • Kirsten

      Hi Kaz. Here’s my logic – keep buying your $1 milk. Eventually Coles and Woolies will push out the brand names which means goodbye milk at $1! There will be no choice and they will put their prices up because they can. But that’s ok keep looking out for yourself because the big two certainly won’t!

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  41. Jef

    Do you people realize that a lot of those home brands are made in the same factories as the big brands?? Just some food for thought :)

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    • KLS

      Yes, but the point is that the manufacturers receive a larger margin for selling their branded products, and are more likely to be sustainable into the future.
      Profit is fine, but I should be shared around.

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      • it's beans but I can't be fussed logging in and out again

        Ok but as I mentioned above, why should we who live in Australia want international behemoths like Kraft, Kelloggs, Nestle, etc to receive a larger share of the profit as opposed to Wesfarmers and Woolies which are Australian corporations? I’d much rather my money to go to a 100% Australian company at this point (and this is coming from a N. American expat) as opposed to send my money overseas. Whether I buy branded or home brand, these global companies will do just fine as they have for decades before they even hit Australia shelves. My buying Tim Tams, Cadbury chocolate, branded cereal, etc does not help this country’s bottom line. If anything, by the big 2 creating increasingly comparable alternatives it forces the big brands to reduce their prices to create some parity which is a benefit to the consumer.

        Am I missing something here? (And I cede that I very well might be :) )

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        • KLS

          I guess my train of thought when replying was that the product in question was being made here in Aus.
          In the case of product being made overseas under licence to become generic product here, it would be less likely to come from the large multi-nationals, but from specialist manufacturers in China, Thailand, India etc and able to operate with much smaller overheads.
          I hear what you are saying, and I would tend to agree, but then I would try to substitute for a totally different product altogether.
          I do admire anyone who bothers to educate themselves on corporate ethics. As consumers we have the end say on where our money goes.

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  42. fliz

    I buy a mixture of products, however my preference is for Australian made wherever I can. Staples in my trolley are A2 Milk and Orgran Gluten Free flour for dietary reasons. I also support my local fruit & veg shop and butcher.

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  43. sharons

    I always try to purchase products from independents e.g. Meat from the butcher, Veggies for the grocer, medicines from the pharmacy etc
    I hate having no choice when I go to Coles. I notice it with water, I avoid Coles water at all costs but that’s all I see.
    The only time I buy generics is when i go to the pharmacy because it’s cheaper for the tax payer, the government and supports pharmacies and helps keeps pharmacy out of Coles!

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    • Anonymous

      Just out of curiosity – why do you hate Coles water so much? I see Perrier in Coles and Mount Franklin and Deep Spring and Evian and… the list goes on. Are they better?

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      • Kris2040

        More to the point, why don’t you just use the tap?

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        • water guru

          and you would shudder if you knew where it was sourced from, tapwater all the way

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        • sharons

          Hi Kris,

          I actually purchase Fiji Water. I lived there for a few years and visited the site that they source water from and their factory, Fiji water have done so many positive things for the locals. They provide jobs in a really remote area of Fiji.

          Plus my Dad’s company actually exports Fiji Water so in a way I feel like I’m helping him too.

          I can never find it in Coles any more.

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  44. Zoe

    MM so glad you have addressed this issue. It is so important that the duopoly don’t own all the products on their shelves. Thank you for shining some light on this topic. Now if you can make them not display their product at eye level it might impact the ‘non-thinking’ consumer.
    Oh I also love the Cadbury dig. As a chocoholic this was such a disappointment. The blocks are now not only thinner with larger pieces they are now lighter:(. Grrrr.

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  45. Ladybug

    I have bought the Ethical Supermarket Shopping guide. I avoid all generic labels but have also looked into the ethics of well known brands. Suffice to say I have made a huge change to the products I now buy. It’s time consuming to do the research but well worth the effort in order o support companies that do the right thing.

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    • Shannon

      Yeah, me too. I feel better about the things I buy and use when I know they’re produced responsibly. My favourite find from the guide is Innoxa and Natio cosmetics. E are great, and I feel good using them.

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    • mumathome

      Thanks Ladybug. Have looked up Ethical Consumer Guide and it’s very helpful. I also try to avoid unethical brands like Nestle but need an even more informed, detailed knowledge about smaller companies.

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  46. Dkmum

    I’m with Lana on this one. I just don’t like the idea of being forced to buy one particular brand, and especially when it come to my ‘treats’ in life. Their TimTam equivalent just isn’t as nice as the real deal!
    I’m also not confident that the home brand price hasn’t been forced onto some poor struggling farmer or similar. I don’t know where the ingredients have been sourced from.

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  47. Anonymous

    I only buy home brand sponges and paper towels but I avoid woolies or coles brand anything.

    But, I’m in the position of being able to afford it, so I’m really lucky.

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    • Jimmy's Girl

      Anything that’s disposable, or non-edible, is a candidate for home-brand purchase by me. I refuse to pay premium prices for paper towels, tissues and toilet paper. As they are ‘use once and toss’ the cheapest price works for me. I will also by no-name air fresheners, toilet cleaners and the like, for the same reason. A bit more fussy when it comes to food, but some home brand things are OK when the branded alternative seems way overpriced to me.

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  48. Brand Dairy buyer.

    I have just started to try and buy branded dairy products to support the dairy farmers, they are earning 10 cents less per litre then they were ten years ago and are up against home brands. I do buy home brand staples like soups, pasta sauces etc that I can add herbs etc to increase the flavours, wish I could afford to buy all Australian made brands.

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    • Anon

      Good for you supporting the farmers!

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    • Kirsten

      I will not out of principle buy home brand milk. I don’t even care that I have to pay more. I disagree with how the “big 2″ have treated the dairy farmers and I find it lasts longer than the home brand watered down milk (and tastes better).

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    • Melsie

      Homebrand milk tastes awful too

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      • Melany

        It’s all from the same cow! I suspect the perceived difference is all in your mind.

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        • Melsie

          No, it’s not necessarily from the same cow, and the way it’s processed can be different too. I buy local organic, and I can assure you, it tastes very different to me, and worth every cent more.

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  49. CBR

    This has become relevant to me recently, as a point of annoyance.

    My ‘cereal’ in the morning is pretty much just oat bran and yoghurt. I used to just stick with the Lowan’s brand bran, available from Coles and Woolies – until both stopped stocking it and replaced it with their home brand, which in the most important respect, texture (oat bran doesn’t taste as much), they are just *not as good*. A third of the price, but not as good.

    I now go out of my way to go to an IGA or Superbarn instead where I have at least three different brands to choose from.

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    • elli

      I agree! I like to put nuts/seeds/etc in my gluten free bread mix, but at Coles there’s nothing except the home brand. So I go to a big health foodshop and buy them there (AboutLife in Rozelle, Sydney, if you’re anywhere nearby).

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      • CBR

        Alas, Canberra ;) There’s a good pile of health-foody style shops here though, and IGA carries a fair few of those brands.

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  50. JosieY

    I struggle with this soooo much. I try really hard to buy name brand when I can because it really is better in the long term. Competition is so important! … But some weeks when we are running short on money the homebrand sneaks in….. Does aldi count?

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    • alt ctrl del

      Aldi definitely counts for working against the big two! Low prices, almost all Australian products, breakdown cost per 100g pricetags and cost comparisons between the three of them! I work at one of the big two, used to get Coles Online delivered, have discount cards for both and STILL prefer to shop at Aldi, an excess grocery brands warehouse, an Asian grocery and only then, will I drag myself to one of the big two. Mostly just to save money, but I generally get better produce and I’m sticking it to those duopoly-controlling bastards!!

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