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Do you get what you pay for?



Is what you pay what you get?

The short and easy answer is

No

Sometimes, you pay a lot more than you should for a product that isn’t all that.

Take designer clothes for example. You could go to a designer shop and buy a jumper for say £80, or you could go to a mid-range shop and get a top and jumper for £80 or to a different shop and get a full outfit for £80. Don’t get me wrong. The quality may not be the same, The cheap might not keep you as warm in the colder months and it may not wash the same. But they’re all clothes, right?


What if I told you I could get you top quality, with the mid-range

price tag, and Guaranteed satisfaction?


Why all this about clothes? You’re a pet shop?

Because until you put it into perspective you will struggle to see the reality of it.


I could sell you dog food for £70.34 for 12kg, but you will get 44% rice and the meat is 24% chicken meal,

I could sell you a bag for £14.69 for 15kg. but it will be Mostly all cereals with 4% animal derivatives and you have to feed more to fill as they aren’t getting much out of it.

Or I could sell you a bag for £45.15 for 15kg, made with 29% fresh and dry meat and 26% rice. The meat is what we would eat ourselves. And it goes onto a deal that when you buy 8 you get one Free.


£45.15 FOR DOG FOOD? That’s expensive, isn’t it?

No

You need to stop looking at price tags and start looking at the quality, look at the ingredients, and how long it will last. A 30kg dog for example would last 34 days. That’s only £1.33 a day. Less than a cup of coffee.


Would you think twice about buying a cup of coffee?


The quality you feed also affects what comes out.

Feed quality, pick up less

Feed cheap, pick up more (if it’s not too sloppy to do so)

Give your dog what They deserve

Give them quality

Give them the better option

Give them I want pet foods

 
 
 

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