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Tesco continues to suffer purchasing problems

We all believe that supermarkets have the slickest, most amazing systems for processing products and delivering them to the public at competitive prices. Recently, the emphasis has been less on ‘price match before purchase' and more on ‘refunding the difference after'.

But what if parts of the Tesco purchasing team gets it so wrong that you can't even make the comparison? KitGuru puts £1 in a trolley to investigate.

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We could run this kind of story on a daily basis, but would take far too much time and the conclusion would not change.

While crucifying farmers and food production companies when it comes to regular produce and ready cooked meals, it seems that the major supermarkets fare less well when it comes to electronics.

To be specific, they regularly get arse-mastered by the main resellers like eBuyer, Scan, Aria, Overclockers, TechNextDay and the like.

We knew it happened again this morning when a deal for a high speed, 32GB, Patriot Class 10 CD card came to our attention.

Patriot is a serious memory company. They were chosen by Intel to manufacture the special memory for the official Intel Extreme Masters brand.

So what was the offer?   Well the 32GB high performance card is just £14.99 from stores like eBuyer – but Tesco's noname bastard version is 33% more expensive at almost £20.

It's bread might look good against, say,Waitrose - but when it comes to technology... Ooops.
If eBuyer can do it - why can't Tesco?

KitGuru says: The only reasons available for the huge discrepancy in price and brand value, is that either Tesco's purchasing team is getting rogered when it comes to buying technology products – or they could be doing much better, but prefer to hand out a rogering of their own in the ‘price to consumer' market.

Comment below or in the KitGuru forums.

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