In the M-Restaurant the drink costs Fr. 3.50.
In the Coop restaurant Fr. 2.95.
Why this price difference?
In the M-Restaurant the drink costs Fr. 3.50.
In the Coop restaurant Fr. 2.95.
Why this price difference?
Guest
It is also incomprehensible to me why Migros has a different price for each drink: Cafe Creme Fr. 3.30 ... Latte Fr. 3.40 and Caotina Fr. 3.50 ...
I would also find it more logical to charge Fr. 3.30 for everything, if only because of the children and old people, for whom caotina and latte are simply more digestible than café crème....I only want to limit myself to these 3 basic drinks and not include the more elaborate latte macchiato etc.
Price comparison: The 2.95 at Coop is a net price - the 3.50 at Migros is a gross price - the net price is then also 50 Rp lower.... Thanks to the stamp card for coffee and hot drinks. The Migros app and Cumulus can also be installed on a grandchild's cell phone, they activate the coupon from Grosi every week or two weeks :-))
Coop and Miros are two independent, autonomous companies. It is therefore logical that they set different prices.
Why do you think that the drinks mentioned should have the same prices in the Migros restaurant as in the Coop restaurant?
Guest
@AlMiDeCoLi I' m not talking about the same prices, but the pricing of a) Café creme b) Latte and c)Caotina/ Ovo. I would welcome it - regardless of Coop - if these 3 drinks also had the same price.
If a family with children goes to the Migros restaurant on a Saturday morning for a Zmörgele... yes, the free syrup is not necessarily the first choice for nutrition-conscious parents... and maybe they'll take the grandma with them, whose stomach is more likely to tolerate the latte ... ;-)
Guest
Koenigspython speaks exclusively of Caotina and Ovomaltine; two independent branded products.
It is therefore not unreasonable to ask why two wholesalers sell an identical product at different prices.
The sales price is not the same as the cost price of the respective product - i.e. how much a retailer paid for Caotina/Ovo - because all the subsequent costs for transportation, storage, order picking, personnel costs, etc. of the retailer are added.
And these are different for every company.
@marcoti
Yes, that's right, you don't want to know why the prices for Caotina/Ovo in the Migros restaurant and Coop restaurant are not identical.
But the questioner who opened the thread.
Guest
@marcoti
Because every drink has different ingredients with different prices and is also offered in different quantities.
Or would you find it logical, for example, if every sandwich in the Gourmessa cost exactly the same, every chocolate bar from Frey? Every M-Classic yogurt?
Guest
@Kurumi I'm talking about those 3 basic drinks now - where the kids and old people's drink is the most expensive. I'm not talking about ALL drinks. and right - Coop does it this way, I noticed this too.
The comparison with Gourmessa is obsolete - I'm not even arguing for the standard price of 2.90 for the cold buffet, where in Ticino people pounce on the roast beef at 9am and it's all gone by 9.05am. ?
It's more along the same lines as the discussion many years ago, when it was criticized that a pint of beer was the cheapest drink in the restaurant ...
Guest
@AlMiDeCoLi I suspect the price difference is because Coop charges the same price for these drinks (Cafe creme and Ovo).
Are you really surprised that Caotina or Ovaltine are more expensive than a coffee crème? But you don't really seem to know much about the cost of a product, do you? A coffee crème is a mass product, a bit of coffee with lots of water, plus 1-2 crèmli. With Caotina or Ovomaltine you have the product in a sachet, which probably has a proud purchase price. It is then topped up with milk, which is more expensive than water. The system with the milk also has to be laboriously cleaned every evening.
Just to argue that a product should be cheaper because it is for old people or children is quite adventurous.
Guest
@stecki you may be right about the pricing. Coop is simply incorporating a social component into its pricing when it does not set the prices for children's hot drinks higher than those for adults,
Customer loyalty is said to be a factor: it's also available at banks, SBB and many other places ....