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Claim up to $100 Worth of Dymocks eGift Cards [Purchase 2 or More Kelloggs Products in 1 Transaction = $10 eGift Card]

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How to Claim:
During the Purchase Period:

  • Purchase any two (2) or more Participating Products in one (1) transaction from a Participating Store,
  • Keep your receipt and then complete the online claim form.

For the avoidance of doubt, only one (1) claim can be submitted per purchase receipt regardless of whether more than two (2) Participating Products are purchased in the Qualifying Purchase.

Claim Limit:
There's a limit of one (1) claim per household per day and ten (10) claims per household during the Promotion, equating to a maximum combined Dymocks eGift Card value of $100.

Redeeming your eGift Card:
Eligible Claimants may claim a limit of one (1) Dymocks eGift Card in the Promotion.

Once an entitlement to redeem a $10 Dymocks eGift Card has been validated and recorded you can either redeem it or add additional claims (up to $100 worth).
Dymocks eGift Cards are redeemable at any of Dymocks stores for residents of Australia only, and at the online store for all Eligible Claimants.


Participating Products:
Participating Products are any Kellogg’s cereal or snack products specially marked with “Free Books” Promotion messaging.

Participating stores:
Stores participating in the Promotion are all stockists of Participating Products located throughout Australia & New Zealand.


Full Terms and Conditions

Related Stores

Kellogg's Australia
Kellogg's Australia
Dymocks
Dymocks

closed Comments

  • What cornflakes aren't Eligible

    • +1

      To answer your question, I'm pretty sure the home brand cornflakes aren't eligible.

    • +1

      Looks like it's mostly cereal targeted at kids eg no All Bran haha

  • +13

    It should be apparent to everyone by now, judging by results, that starting off your day with a load of cheap, refined carbohydrates is a recipe for gaining weight that will cause early death and loss of a lot of money to enterprises such as Kelloggs.

    • What do you recommend?

      • +4

        Coffee !

      • -1

        Drugs

      • +2

        Water

      • +9

        Smashed avo on rye

      • +2

        Real foods, less carbs is what everyone should be eating.

        Bacon, sausages, eggs, tomatoes, capsicum, cheese (fried halloumi is amazing), zucchini, mushrooms, spinach, cauliflower all fried up in butter makes for a healthy, delicious, nutritious breakfast that won't leave you feeling hungry a couple of hours later!

        • +1

          @freemoneyhunter:

          https://www.heartfoundation.org.au/healthy-eating/food-and-n…

          Nothing wrong with eggs. Learn some biology first before you defame people.

        • -7

          @fefris: Lots of things wrong with them, they contain the cholesterol of 4 bigmacs. The study they used to show eggs were safe was conducted by the egg industry. Do you know when scientists study heart disease, they induce heart disease by feeding animals eggs. Cholesterol is bad, anything higher in the blood than 140 Cholesterol will cause heart disease in humans. It is also associated with gout, glaucoma, high blood pressure and many other illnesses. It even causes gall stones. I can't believe you are promoting this bad diet.

        • +2

          @freemoneyhunter:

          You enjoy your Big Macs and I'll enjoy my eggs and all their delicious cholesterol or perhaps you could actually get up to date on actual dietary science and not the latest buzz article from news.com.au.

        • -1

          @baycie: As I said before, eggs are the standard practice used to induce atherosclerosis in test animals. The data is over 50 years old, if you eat eggs you will rapidly develop clogged arteries. One study on egg consumption showed no increase in cholesterol is because they fed their patients an already high cholesterol diet and then they gave them an egg and cholesterol didn't change, that is because the cholesterol at high levels starts precipitating out of the blood at high levels, like trying to add more salt to a alt saturated solution. It was a total fraud.

        • +2

          @freemoneyhunter:magic studies that you haven't quoted. 50 years ago they thought carbohydrates were the best thing to eat. Times change studies get redone and data get proved false.

        • What? Real foods? Bacon and sausage are heavily processed. They are also high in fat and salt.
          Bacon, sausage, and other processed meats increase your risk of colon cancer by 18%….
          We have known this for a few years now.

          "The analysis of 800 studies from around the world by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) found "sufficient evidence in humans that the consumption of processed meat causes colorectal cancer".
          "Each 50-gram portion of processed meat eaten daily increases the risk of colorectal cancer by 18 per cent," it said in a statement."

        • @fefris: Do you know where the heart foundation gets their funding from?

          The egg based recipes on their site have this down the bottom:

          "Recipe and image provided courtesy of the Australian Egg Corporation."

        • @freemoneyhunter: while possibly true, that would because a big mac has no food value besides carbohydrates. its basically sugar on bread.

      • +4

        oats, wheat-bix (whole wheat grains), fruit and veg smoothie

        • +1

          Water, oats, egg whites, banana and coffee every morning.

    • +2

      I bought too many kit Kats few years ago when people were getting nexus tablet. In the end I ate most of them and didn't win any tablet. Diji1 is absolutely right.

      • I've never been able to eat another Kitkat after that promotion! I didn't win a tablet either but won way more Google Play credit than I spent on the bars so all good!

        • +1

          The problem is the kind of money i spent on kit kats, I could have purchased the tablet outright.

        • +1

          hate to be that guy, but, me personally, I won 2, my brother won 1.

    • +2

      Kelloggs was originally designed as a special diet for people living in mental asylums. An interesting fact is that Cornflakes were designed to alleviate masturbation amongst these patients.

      • +12

        I've been having Kelloggs everyday mate and haven't noticed any changes. Still going strong lol

      • +5

        Isn't that sanitarium

      • I have read Kellogg's books, they will make your head spin until it falls off literally.

        Have a read of this chapter from Plain facts for old and and young. http://web.archive.org/web/20020228060943/http://etext.lib.v…

        "Wicked Nurses. — In those cases in which the habit is acquired at a very early age, the work of evil is usually wrought by the nurse, perhaps through ignorance of the effects of the habit. Incredible as it seems, it is proved by numerous instances that it is not an uncommon habit for nurses to quiet small children by handling or titillating their genital organs. They find this a speedy means of quieting them, and resort to it regardless or ignorant of the consequences."

        Woah

    • -6

      Corn Flakes is a very good health food as long as skim soy or other cereal milk is used instead of dairy. It is an approved cold cereal. https://www.drmcdougall.com/health/education/free-mcdougall-…

      Corn Flakes won't make you fat because it has no fat, fat is what makes you fat.

      • +5

        fat is what makes you fat.

        I lol'ed.

      • +1

        Interesting hypothesis. So carbs play no part? How about added sugar? Time to throw out all that lipogenesis guff I suppose. As Dr Richard Bernstein once said: "Eating fat will make you fat is about as scientifically logical as saying that eating tomatoes will turn you red".

        • "Excess Starch Does Not Turn to Body Fat

          A widely held belief is that the sugars in starches are readily converted into fat and then stored unattractively in the abdomen, hips, and buttock. Incorrect! And there is no disagreement about the truth among scientists or their published scientific research.5-13 After eating, the complex carbohydrates found in starches, such as rice, are digested into simple sugars in the intestine and then absorbed into the bloodstream where they are transported to trillions of cells in the body in order to provide for energy. Carbohydrates (sugars) consumed in excess of the body’s daily needs can be stored (invisibly) as glycogen in the muscles and liver. The total storage capacity for glycogen is about two pounds. Carbohydrates consumed in excess of our need and beyond our limited storage capacity are not readily stored as body fat. Instead, these excess carbohydrate calories are burned off as heat (a process known as facultative dietary thermogenesis) or used in physical movements not associated with exercise.9,13

          The process of turning sugars into fats is known as de novo lipogenesis. Some animals, such as pigs and cows, can efficiently convert the low-energy, inexpensive carbohydrates found in grains and grasses into calorie-dense fats.5 This metabolic efficiency makes pigs and cows ideal “food animals.” Bees also perform de novo lipogenesis; converting honey (simple carbohydrates) into wax (fats). However, human beings are very inefficient at this process and as a result de novo lipogenesis does not occur under usual living conditions in people.5-13 When, during extreme conditions, de novo lipogenesis does occur the metabolic cost is about 30% of the calories consumed—a very wasteful process.11

          Under experimental laboratory conditions overfeeding of large amounts of simple sugars to subjects will result in a little bit of de novo lipogenesis. For example, trim and obese women were overfed 50% more total calories than they usually ate in a day, along with an extra 3.5 ounces (135 grams) of refined sugar. From this overfeeding the women produced less than 4 grams (36 calories) of fat daily, which means a person would have to be overfed by this amount of extra calories and sugar every day for nearly 4 months in order to gain one extra pound of body fat.10 Obviously, even overeating substantial quantities of refined and processed carbohydrates is a relatively unimportant source of body fat. So where does all that belly fat come from? The fat you eat is the fat you wear.

          Fat Is the Metabolic Dollar Saved for the Next Famine

          After eating, dietary fat (from lard, butter, meat, cheese, nuts, olive oil, etc.) is absorbed from the intestine into the bloodstream and transported to the millions of cells designed for storage—the body fat (adipose) cells. The metabolic cost for this transfer is relatively inexpensive (3% of the calories consumed).11 No pricey chemical conversion is required, so this is a routine metabolic movement after every typical meal. When samples of a person’s body fat tissue are chemically analyzed the results reveal the kinds of fats which that person commonly eats.14-17 For example, the consumption of margarine and shortening results in high proportions of “trans” fats in a person’s fatty tissues. A diet with large amounts of cold-water marine fish means omega-3 fats are deposited and stored in the body fat. The saying “from my lips to my hips” expresses the real life effects of the fat-laden Western diet. Fortunately, starches contain very little fat for us to wear."

          https://www.drmcdougall.com/misc/2009nl/mar/passionate.htm

          Hope that clears it up for you.

        • @freemoneyhunter: So what you really meant was that excess fat intake predominantly leads to increased body fat although excess sugars also play a lesser role?

          No doubt the role of carbs has been overplayed but the overwhelming evidence is that excess calories (from any source - not excluding carbohydrates) will almost invariably lead to an increase in body fat, as your reference above specifically states. There are are numerous qualifiers (metabolism, insulin etc) and not all carbs are equal but broadly that's what current science says.

        • -1

          @Possumbly: Correct thanks. A high carb diet won't put on excess weight and will reduce it over time, a normal western diet high in fat will pack the pounds on. The body when fat is consumed in the diet when there are carbs, the carbs will be burn't as fuel, and the fat goes straight to your gut. After a few days if you do not eat carbs and only fat and some protein your body will start to burn fat but it is unhealthy. Best to eat carbs and limit fat and it is a far easier diet too and sustainable. The food you eat is rice, potatoes, corn, other starches and some fruits, no added oils to cook them with. Avoid meat, dairy and eggs. You will become very healthy and lean quickly..and your risk of heart disease and other related illnesses associated with high fats and high cholesterol foods will drop to almost zero.

        • +1

          @freemoneyhunter:A high carb diet won't may not put on excess weight. Fats are important in your diet.

        • @Possumbly: The problem currently is overweight and obesity in the west, it is stupid talking about how important fat is in the diet, it is not an issue, 99% already have enough or too much.

      • What the f….. Fat does not make you fat….

      • Must be a troll

  • By one claim per household per day, does that mean I can still buy multiple Kellogg’s in different transactions in same day except I just have to claim the separately on different days?

    • that has worked in past - i.e. 6 boxes on a receipt, claim 3 vouchers/books/fitbits etc.

      I scan the receipt then draw circles around each 'pair' for different submissions, never had queries.

      and only ever buy when on special

  • +6

    $100 of dymocks gift cards, so like $50 of books from Book Depository?

  • mark

  • +1

    Ah. FreeMoneyHunter: thanks for your information: so if we take your examples to the limit, we can eat inordinate amounts of sugars with weight increase impunity?
    Sorry but that doesn't cut. Please research the biochemical pathway that fructose takes in the human body. It is invariably converted to fat. It follows the same pathway as alcohol. Have you ever noticed the beer gut? The fats are evil debate is four decades old and built on total rubbish science. Research cardiovascular risk from full cream milk products versus low fat milk products: the cardiovascular risk is greater for low fat! This is only weird if you believe the "fats are evil" tripe. From your laboratory example of "simple sugars" what simple sugars are you talking about?
    Real life example: go to Burma and ask if there is diabetes (type 2) Surprise surprise there is big time. Guess what it is attributed to? Rice. What is rice? Simple sugars.
    One question: do you work for Nestle, Kellogg's or General Mills?

    • You are welcome for the information I provide. No over excess of calories in the diet is not good no matter where they come from. Yes I understand the problems with fructose, they are an issue when the body is overloaded with them quickly in the forms of juices, they go to the liver and are quickly converted into fat, fruits are still healthy as long as they are consumed in moderation and in their natural forms with the fibre, not juices. If you like to drink alcohol, avoid high fructose foods.

      For the Cardiovascular disease in relation to full vs low fat milk products, what happens is the bad proteins in milk become a higher portion of calories than the saturated fat in whole milk which surprisingly is even more damaging to health.

      Eating fat is not good for you especially saturated fat, it induces diabetes and raises cholesterol.

      The "fats are evil debate is four decades old" the truth does not change, fats are still evil for human health. If you have time over the holiday's, I have some audio programs by Nathan Pritikin who himself discovered how bad cholesterol is for the human body. It's a 8 part audio program.

      https://www.drmcdougall.com/health/education/podcast/nathan-…

      If you learn from that program recorded in the 80's, you will understand the meat, dairy, egg and health services industries are just fooling you to make money off you and ruin your health along with the environment and animal cruelty.

  • Just realised that Dymocks high costs comapred to other sites plus shipping makes this not worth taking the effort for. I will just pick up $20-30 vouchers which is something I can actually consume and buy a cheaper book with it.

  • +3

    Just FYI Woolworths has $5 boxes of Nutrigrain, Cocopops, Froot Loops and Crunchy Nut, so these vouchers are free if you eat these cereals anyway.

    Sultana Bran 420g is 4.99 not on special too.

    • +2

      I picked this up yesterday 2 x 805g Nutrigrain @ $5ea from Woolworths. If I'd rememebered to have egift would've only been $9.50. Woolworths customers get to choose either $10 Dymock voucher, or First Space Encylopedia (https://www.bookdepository.com/First-Space-Encyclopedia-DK/9…) which saves me the effort of going to a Dymocks.

      • +1

        how did you get the First Space Encyclopedia?

        • +1

          Option is available if you shopped at woolies

        • +1

          @Limitless: Where did you select it? In the claim form all i see is NZ stores.

        • +1

          @Savas: that is a bit odd…when you select woolies in the drop down the option pops up for you to pick. Not sure why NZ is showing for you

        • +1

          @Limitless: Oh shit that's weird

  • +3

    Can't believe there is so much crap talk in here about diet and not about the promotion.

    Who cares!!!

    My husband buys Coco Pops by the truckload so this promo is great! (If he is killing himself that's his business…)

    Anyway - on special for $5 a box this week at Coles - so effectively FREE money at Dymocks which is free even if their books are slightly more expensive (and you can use in store so you do NOT have to pay postage).

    • +2

      i'm excited about this promotion, i just realise they sell the uni textbooks i need.

  • +4

    Woolworth's have LCM bars on special at the moment $3.60 which entitles you to a $5 voucher.

  • what's stopping someone from buying a heap of these then returning the cereals a few days after makin the claim??

    just curious… as for me i happened to buy the sultana bran and nutri gran 850g and 805g respectively the other day in coles anyway.. they dont' have marked on the box the free egiftcard thing, yet by weight and product they're the eligible products. WIll it matter? I assume they only need the receipt - which can anyon econfirm does not show the dymocks eligibility on the boxes, just the product themselves? perhaps i got old box stock?

  • claim 1

  • +1

    Purchase any two (2) or more Participating Products in one (1) transaction from a Participating Store,

    Really??? Here I am with just 1 product each on several dockets…..That actually pisses me off so much.

    • +1

      sounds painful. hopefully you can return them or something. i didn't read it properly either, i would've bought them all in one transaction.

      • +1

        Unfortunately they are already open otherwise I would've :(

        • +1

          I feel so bad for you, maybe call Kellogg's

        • +1

          @Savas: Yeah might do that. Rip me :/

        • +1

          @pennypincher98: haha how many did you buy?

        • +1

          @Savas: 4 boxes - 1 of LCM's, 1 Sultana Bran, 1 Just Right and 1 Nutri Grain. At the moment, 3 are open :((

        • +1

          @pennypincher98: sounds awful! im not sure whether to buy now or wait for half price, this promo is starting to be annoying.

        • +1

          @Savas: This promo is starting to be indeed very annoying. It makes me want to just buy 2 boxes at 10 random stores and then return it :P

          Lol jokes but seriously, I buy just as much of their products but get zilch in return.

  • Special K 535g on sale at Woolies for $3.64 (half price) this week

    • yes!!

      • +1

        Yay, free money! Now to wait for some other kinds to go on half price special.

  • +2

    looks like more Kellogg's half price at Woolworths

    • +2

      Am I right in saying that it's 2x LCM Boxes for $4 to get the $10 voucher??

      • +1

        it looks like it

        • +2

          Damn that's awesome!

  • +1

    was the dropdown menu for claim all NZ stores except for Other? i was worried i was on the wrong form

  • +1

    Woollies has Kellogg's cereals…. on special for 1/2 price eg Froot Loops 500g $3.70

  • +1

    Looks like LCM's $1.99 at IGA from Wednesday (in NSW catalogue)

  • Eligible Claimants may Cash Out a limit of one (1) Dymocks eGift Card in
    the Promotion. Once an Eligible Claimant Cashes Out a Dymocks eGift
    Card in accordance with this clause, they will no longer be able to add
    additional value to their account or Cash Out another Dymocks eGift
    Card in the Promotion.

    • this is confusing - so, do not cash out, keep adding to the initial $10 until promo ends is what it appears to mean- just a heads up for everyone to not cash out..
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