Have you ever shopped for clothes online and said to yourself, "Man, I wish this could be more like Priceline, where I could name my own price, but the selection is limited and the deals not all that great?" The Gap is here to help you achieve that dream, with their new "Gap My Price" site. It's as if Gap and Priceline got together and spawned a largely useless but mildly entertaining deal site that generates coupons you can't use online.
The premise is simple: items of women's clothing and their retail prices are displayed. You name a price. Gap either accepts that price or counters your offer with a higher one. If you accept the store's offer, you get a printable coupon for that item at that price at a brick-and-mortar Gap store.
It looks like the most you can save is about 50%, which is great if you're in the market for any of the ten or so specific items offered. But sometimes the bidding process is just confusing, as Jessica Wakeman of The Frisky noticed:
This U-neck stripe tee retails for $19.95 and I offered $16. Gap My Price came back with an offer of $19. Then I offered $18. Gap My Price then said the final offer was $19. So ... I could save a whopping 95 cents by clicking on their website a bunch of times?
It seems that you're punished for low-balling the site: I offered $3 for a t-shirt that lists for $19.95, and the site snapped back with an unimpressive offer of $19. When I offered $10 for the same item, it graciously countered with a more reasonable $11.
I might pick up that t-shirt for $11. But I'm more likely to wait for it to go on sale for an even lower price, then forget it ever existed if it doesn't. Which is how I usually shop.
It is crazy that you have to go to a brick and mortar store to by the item. It seems like many people would forget to make the trip, but if it went into my shopping cart, I'd be more likely to check out and actually buy the item.
I guess they are trying to drive traffic to the actual stores, but it seems misplaced to me.
That is just bizarre. I can't see how this is going to work. It seems that you have to basically "guess" at what the real sale price of the item is and then still have to go into the B&M store hoping that they still have it and it's in your size?
I can see this producing a lot of unhappy customers for the GAP. Not great coming on the coattails of Robinson's firing and the whole logo debacle.
Not great coming on the coattails of Robinson's firing and the whole logo debacle.
It's like they're tanking and just grasping at anything they think might pull them up a little - fire a guy, get a new logo, make some super convoluted sales process...
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Fashion is art you live your life in. - Devil Wears Prada | formerly ttara123
This is so weird, and the site looks so cheap. And it's not like Gap clothes are so hot or coveted that it's worth your time to sit there dithering with bids.
This is so weird, and the site looks so cheap. And it's not like Gap clothes are so hot or coveted that it's worth your time to sit there dithering with bids.
Especially since they all eventually go on sale anyway.