The code on domino's ozbargin page did not work for me today. This one was just given to me by the store staff. Try it out. 9.95 for domino traditional pizzas.
Domino's Traditional Pizzas $9.95 Pick up Only @ Domino's
Last edited 06/10/2022 - 20:38 by 2 other users
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Op is right
Our old $7.95 codes don’t work anymore..
none of them work on my local store
I've just checked a couple of stores and 103883 didn't work at any of them. The other two works at some.
its sad this is now considered a deal. they are barely worth this price as RRP tbh
Yeah, should be $7.95. That's what used to be the going rate for a coupon for a traditional.
934119 worked for me tonight for $8.95 pizzas
I'm not gonna neg the deal coz it'll be pointless as removed soon after BUT. I saw this and thought it was THE OPPOSITE of a deal. I was confused at how Domino's pizzas got to $10.
Original rrp is around $15 for traditional pizzas.
Since the old codes don’t work anymore, $10 would technically be considered a deal, right ?
So under your reasoning, $14.90 is a deal for Domino's traditional pizzas as it's still a saving off the original price? Presuming there's no codes to get it under $14.90.
A discount on a high price does not equate to value.
lol you are tripping.
In my comment above I said and I repeat, that if a pizza that’s priced at around $15, can be bought for $10 via promo code (op shared it). It would technically still be classed as a deal.
You can make a seperate argument that it is/isn’t a very good deal. But it’s still a deal.
Btw this isn’t even semantics, just basic comprehension of what’s happened here.
Get some sleep my man.@Gervais fanboy: My point still stands. Btw I think the word you're looking for is "discount".
$14.95 to $14.90 is still technically a discount". This could still be posted as a deal because it is a saving.Seems like you're the one who failed to grasp the basic comprehension of what happened.
I think the word you're looking for is discount
No I am not lol. Watch me write another comment without it.
$14.95 to $14.90 is still technically a discount
Okay…. ?
So is $14.95 to $10, thanks to the promo code provided by the Op.
It seems like we are in agreement here, so what’s the objection here with the Op posting this as a deal ?I think this is what’s happened here
You were confused and wrote this last night:-Presuming there's no codes to get it under $14.90.
When the op explicitly gave us a promo code to ‘get it under $14.90’ (202596 - $10)
You have now realised that error from you and would rather double down out of pride or something else ?
It’s all good my man, it’s just the internet and it was quite late when you wrote that comment. So chill.@Gervais fanboy: Again it seems you fail to comprehend. Presuming there's no codes to get it under $14.90, is $14.90 from $14.95 a deal?
I really did not think that was hard to understand. You had two attempts to realise that, one with "adequate sleep" because it was "late at night" and still couldn't.
Presuming there's no codes
Why I would I presume that ?
When there is a code up top to get a ‘discounted’ price of $10..I am questioning my own sanity at this point.
@Gervais fanboy: Yeah I'm questioning both your sanity and intelligence. You can't see context, you can't even copy a full quote.
There was a code to get $7.95 pizzas. Another code was released to get $8.95 pizzas.
A third code gave $9.95 pizzas.Do you have troubles seeing this pattern? Need it explained with blocks? Or would you prefer counters?
Please tell me you're trolling and not this stupid..
There was a code to get $7.95 pizzas. Another code was released to get $8.95 pizzas.
And you didn’t see my response to it ?
Those codes don’t work a lot of stores anymore…
So currently, that $9.95 code is the only widely accepted promo we have got got at this point.Btw, it was some tongue in cheek stuff from me. I didn’t want you to get this worked up over something this inconsequential. Relax,
@Gervais fanboy: Now you're just taking the piss lol. If people support price increases, they will continue. If people don't, they won't.
I hope somewhere in this thread that point has come across because I don't have the mental strength to continue rewording it tbh 😂
If people support price increases, they will continue. If people don't, they won't.
You think the corporate doesn’t know that we prefer lower prices over high ?
No more $7.95 coupons means lesser orders coming in.. obvious.
Surely, that’ll be a more effective indicator of what people support rather than me making a little comment here about how this post by the Op is still ‘technically’ a deal.You think the corporate doesn’t know that we prefer lower prices over high ?
Of course they do. What they're doing is trying to find a typical code user consumer's willingness to pay (WTP). They've likely done market research to determine they'll be as/more profitable (short term losses are okay if they result in long term profits). The results say yes, they put their prices up, they lose money. Execs wonder why. Turns out their isolated sample isn't very representative of the typical consumer. Bring back the old price as a "limited time special". Watch as more people ordered than what happened before the price went up.
Scarcity and FOMO creates demand that wasn't there before. Either that, or enough consumers are happy to pay the increased price. Some consumers will count the special as a "win" and those are exactly the kind big companies like. Either way, company gets more long term profit.
TLDR: Big business has a lot of money and data to analyse consumer behaviour and use it.
@pennypincher98: See, if we both get into discussing how a company decides to market/price it’s products, it would be an interminable conversation.
Some consumers will count the special as a "win"
Okay,
Just saying I didn’t do that.
I didn’t upvote this deal, didn’t compliment it.
Just made the distinction that it’s technically a ‘deal’..@Gervais fanboy: Yes, but providing free marketing and implied consent for the umm economically illiterate isn't exactly in the best taste either.
Not saying, assume everyone is stupid but rather, don't assume everyone is knowledgeable.
@pennypincher98: Got it 👍🏻
And with that, I’ll let you have the last word.
Nice chat.
33% off isnt bad.
Also, $10 is less than you pay for a frozen 'brand name' pizza at Coles or Woolies (yeah you can get sparse, coles brand), so I'd say it's value to get it for a tenner, cooked and ready.
$10 is less than you pay for a frozen 'brand name' pizza at Coles or Woolies
33% off isnt bad.
So they increase the price to $20 a pizza and discount it to $10. That's a better deal, because it's 50% off right?
@pennypincher98: Correct. If $20 becomes the new permanant norm, and its 50% off, yes $10 is better than $20 and thats 50% off.
@MasterScythe: Interesting. Next question, if $20 becomes the new norm, and it's $12 with a 40% off code would that be better than the current 33% off?
People can operate in strange ways and I'm curious as to how their minds work.
@pennypincher98: Of course, anything thats cheaper than the current retail is better than full retail.
You'd be amazed what we used to pay for a bottle of milk in the 60's compared to now, and it used to include delivery.
You'd be amazed what we used to pay for a bottle of milk in the 60's compared to now, and it used to include delivery.
50+ years of inflation and (unequal) wage price increase does that.
Plus the fact we as society said "I wanna buy everything in one place", created an oligopoly, and then got surprised when they colluded and made prices more expensive.@pennypincher98: Yet Dominos has more than HALVED the prices of their basic pizzas in the same time. And their 'premium' ones have only gone up by $1 roughly.
I know this, because I still have a SILVIOS brochure pinned to the fridge, from before they changed their name.
I'd say it's pretty good that they've managed to 'beat inflation'.Though, admittedly, they charge more for delivery (used to br $4. is now $8), so I assume peoples lazyness plays a larger part in their bottom line, than the cost of their pizza.
@MasterScythe: Yeah, it's called a loss leader*. The average consumer (hopefully not the average Ozbargainer) will buy more or overpriced sides to bring in profits.
*Technically not a loss leader because they're still making a little money off them (around 50c-$1 apparently) but nowhere near the margins of their other stuff.
It's also possible they just did things like increase franchise royalties to bring in profits, but that's just speculation based on profit maximisation strategies.
ridiculous. Dominoes isn't worth more the $6.
At these prices no one will buy from them.It depends on the store.
If it's a corporate store, where the 'huge deal coupons' work, then they're very regulated.
If it's a franchise store, then it's at least slightly up to the manager how good the pizza is.My local Dominos gives you enough topping that it's hard to keep on the base; He's a good owner and ensures repeat customers.
The local pizza hut on the other hand; the opposite.
Regardless; where are people getting $6-8 pizzas you don't need to cook yourself?
Coles does $4 for some very sparse pizzas, then you have to travel home, and cook, to make it edible.
Ever since EagleBoys closed down, finding a reliable cheap slice has been tricky.Well you've got to explore your neighbourhood a bit. I know around me Golden Crust does select 12" pizzas $5.99 and more gourmet ones $8.99 on Tuesday.
The quality of the pizzas are miles ahead of Domino's and size is actually decent.
Even Pizza Hut has their $7 unreal range which you can a lot more at than Domino's. Today with CR it'll only be $3.50.
In Canberra, a city of 450k+ people, the option you describe doesn’t come close to existing, let alone at that price. A lot of suburbs don’t have much going on at their ‘local shops’ at all and the ones that do have cooked pizza are usually a no-name all-grease takeaway. I imagine that’s the same in a lot of places that isn’t Melbourne and Sydney.
@hetzjagd: 1) That's not my problem
2) Why don't you start your own pizza joint? It's clear you don't have much competition.
There is a pizzahut and a dominos in my neighborhood.
There is also a family pizza shop about half an hour away, but I need to really want expensive pizza to travel half an hour out of town just for pizza.
An hour round trip at the current fuel prices adds up too.
@MasterScythe: Well there's your problem. Your neighbourhood collectively gave local business the middle finger and now have to deal with the duopoly of Pizza Hut and Domino's.
Seeing as they're the only pizza shops in a hour round trip, they can sell low quality pizza at a high price and people will still buy it.
@pennypincher98: How do you figure?
There has never been an independant pizza shop here.
I have no issues with supporting a local community member who owns a franchise.
And Ive already explained our dominos manager makes some very high quality pizzas, often what id almost call "overloaded".
Its more like you're projecting, than reading peoples experiences.
@MasterScythe: Firstly, not franchise owners. Mum and pop businesses.
Secondly, even mum and pop businesses do market research to determine if it's viable to open up. The neighbourhood gave the collective middle finger in the planning stage.
Thirdly, without living in the specific anonymous local neighbourhood you're referring to, it's hard to know exactly.Going back to the second point, it's almost if the local Domino's is trying to capture the entire market. Hmm, wonder why he would want to try make it harder for another independent pizza place to open?
@pennypincher98: I think the planning stage falls short for most because you need a sizable population to support a restaurant of any sort.
Ideally several thousand within driving distance.I think franchises "won" in the planning, because they handle logistics, which is a killer cost to a small business. I know what it costs to rent refrigerated trucks from a city to a remote suburb.
As for capturing the market?
Hopefully!
That would mean the 'nice' owner has good business sense.He certainly works hard enough to deserve it.
@MasterScythe: It sounds like it's a great store to get a pizza and he knows how to try retain his customer base. Only problem is he has to do what Domino's says whether that's increase prices or somehow diminish quality/quantity. As nice as he might be, auditors on a routine check can judge a pizza having more than standard toppings as wasting money.
At least being in a remote suburb, it likely costs more than it's worth to audit the place without good reason.
how does one find out if its a corporate or franchise store? Box Hill & Balwyn stores are my local in VIC, the BH one is terrible, Balwyn ok but not consistent
Bit off track but the one in Oakleigh is a corporate store and offers good quality servings.
i am struggling to understand, how is a $10 domino's pizza a deal?
Also these darnpizzas are getting so small
im sure the diametre hasnt changed but 'deep pan' from dominos is always less than 1cm thick, and toppings are sparse as. if i want fast food pizza im going pizza hut at least it still feels substantial
im sure the diametre hasnt changed
Diameter has definitely decreased. What they've done is modify the box so it maintains the same pizza:box ratio and it isn't as obvious.
I don't know if the recipe has changed for the dough to make it less filling (at cheaper cost) but even an extra large pizza I can eat no problems in a single sitting.
Thankfully $8.95 is still working at my SA local (303250)
OK I'll be the one to neg this - there are better coupon codes already, so this is not worth using.
Invalid neg. The better coupons you mention do not work on my local. This one does.
But but ‘tHe wHoLe uNiVeRsE Is cEnTrEd aRoUnD mE’
Ordered from them recently.
Didn’t think they could shrink their pizzas and more…
The pizzas are not worth it anymore, prefer to spend $15 at Costco and get a massive meat lovers which is probably 3 times the size.
Also these, from https://www.ozbargain.com.au/pages/pizza-coupons