Anonymous wrote:I used to work for someone who is quite well off, multiple homes, nice vacations, kids in expensive colleges, and her engagement ring is from Costco. Truly rich people don’t care about this stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never bought anyone a gift from Costco. Different class/wealth circles, I suspect.
There’s a specific % of Costco card members who are millionaires. It’s high too
Costco's core customer is well-educated and affluent. It's particularly popular among the well-educated and affluent in places like Silicon Valley.
Ha! I was first introduced to Costco in HS when staying w a boarding school friend whose very wealthy father was HS legacy, legacy double-HYP, and joined a very major Silicon Valley tech company when the stock price was just pennies. Makes sense that early on it would appeal to rich, practical nerds with storage space who didn’t care about appearances!
My sibling who is an early FAANG employee loves Costco. Their local Costco in Northern CA is like a gathering place for tech rich people, and that location has amazing stuff. It's apparently where a lot of the big ticket items are introduced.
Anonymous wrote:I used to work for someone who is quite well off, multiple homes, nice vacations, kids in expensive colleges, and her engagement ring is from Costco. Truly rich people don’t care about this stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you know if something is from Costco?
Because we are all at Costco every weekend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never bought anyone a gift from Costco. Different class/wealth circles, I suspect.
There’s a specific % of Costco card members who are millionaires. It’s high too
Costco's core customer is well-educated and affluent. It's particularly popular among the well-educated and affluent in places like Silicon Valley.
Ha! I was first introduced to Costco in HS when staying w a boarding school friend whose very wealthy father was HS legacy, legacy double-HYP, and joined a very major Silicon Valley tech company when the stock price was just pennies. Makes sense that early on it would appeal to rich, practical nerds with storage space who didn’t care about appearances!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My MIL was upset my BIL and kids brought her items from Costco.
So ungrateful. I don’t mind them. Chocolate is chocolate
I don’t mind gifts from Costco. However, chocolate is not chocolate.
Good chocolate is worth it. Bad chocolate should be thrown out uneaten.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you know if something is from Costco?
Because we are all at Costco every weekend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I got my son an iPad at Costco. We got my dad an Apple Watch at Costco for Christmas. And I got my college aged daughter electric hand warmers from Costco for her stocking.
Those sanders sea salt chocolate covered caramels are so good. I don’t think I’ve tried the other ones.
I agree with PP that if you got your mom one of the random gift boxes from Costco, that feels a little lame and impersonal — like what you get your co-workers or neighbors. Unless it was something like a tea themed basked and your mom is crazy about tea.
Tjmaxx has them with pecans