Just go and get it yourself.My Tesco home delivery this evening has just been cancelled 'due to store issues', whatever they are. That's never happened before :-/
Just go and get it yourself.My Tesco home delivery this evening has just been cancelled 'due to store issues', whatever they are. That's never happened before :-/
Just go and get it yourself.
Good luck, last time I went to Morrisons cafe almost all the hot food was out of stock!If any one fancies half price on certain breakfasts Morrison's last day is this Sunday 26th. I had a lovely small one earlier today and a pot of tea for about £3.22!!
No wonder if those low prices were being charged. Shoppers see bargains in all parts of a supermarket.Good luck, last time I went to Morrisons cafe almost all the hot food was out of stock!
Damn, I should have walked over to my local Morrisons.I’ve heard of lots of reductions at supermarkets over today and yesterday, caused by queues for petrol stations blocking access to the main shop car park.
I know this has been mentioned before, but as well as shortages is anyone noticing very poor shelf-life at the moment?
At the moment Coop are (with notice from the suppliers and where sensible) allowing in shorter life stock than normal on the basis that anything is better than nothing
Sainsbury's own-brand equivalent of Shreddies has just reappeared in my local branch after an absence of several weeks. The real thing from Nestle was available throughout, but at three times the price for a rather smaller box; and since I can't tell the difference, I was reluctant to pay that. Otherwise I haven't encountered unusual shortages of anything recently.Sainsbury’s shelves at the Pound Lane store in Norwich where all reasonably full in the two occasions I called in this week. Oddly however on both visits the only item I couldn’t get was Domestos bleach. This has been ongoing for a few weeks although it’s been plentiful in Wilko & others.
Sainsbury's own-brand equivalent of Shreddies has just reappeared in my local branch after an absence of several weeks. The real thing from Nestle was available throughout, but at three times the price for a rather smaller box; and since I can't tell the difference
It’s a slight variation on the above – they will produce more of the branded lines so they don’t have to turn the production lines off to swap out the packaging etc. to a different supermarket’s colours. The named brands can be sent to any supermarket.I suggest that with a shortage in the supply chain the brand offerings are going to get simplified. It would follow that a manufacturer with limited distribution camability will produce their most profitabe lines as a prioity. An alternative theory would be that the supermarket branded products get sold in larger volumes and so normaly get re-supplied more often. But that then means, when the supply chain creakes, it is the faster moving products that run out first and more often.