The Big Bazaar is a useful place to find cheap household items, clothes, and food all under one roof. However, the chaos and crowds often make shopping there a challenge.
Description:
Outlets in around 60 locations across India.
Sells furniture, electronics, clothes, cookware, cosmetics, household items, food, gifts, jewelry, and books.
Also has special Food Bazaar outlets.
Most stores open from 10 a.m. until 9.30-10 p.m. daily.
There was a time not so long ago that large department stores were a completely foreign concept in India - but not anymore. The Big Bazaar is one such department store to have set up shop across the country. Since its first outlet opened in Kolkata in late 2001, the Big Bazaar has spread to towns and cities at an alarming rate.
These multi-level shopping meccas stock everything from food to fridges, and cookware to clothes. However, the Big Bazaar isnt your ordinary department store. Its been especially designed to appeal to the Indian consumer. You may be thinking, what does that mean? In short, organized chaos.
With a slogan of "Is se sasta aur accha kahin nahi!"("Nowhere cheaper or better than this!"), the Big Bazaar targets itself directly at the average Indians love of following the crowd and scrambling for a good discount.
You wont find neatly ordered aisles at the Big Bazaar. Instead, stores are laid out to replicate a market environment, with items all thrown in together. Promotions such as "Sabse Saste Teen Din"(Cheapest Three Days) and "Purana Do, Naya Lo"(Give Old, Take New) result in shoppers flooding the stores, to the point that some stores have become so overcrowded theyve had to close.
If you visit the Big Bazaar in the daytime during the week, it is possible to have a deceptively pleasant and hassle free shopping experience.
However, dont make the mistake of going there during a sale, on holidays, evenings, or on Sunday. When I did this, I had to wait for almost an hour just to be served at the checkout. Forget about getting the all items I wanted, I was happy to get out of there in one piece!
Ive also found that the full price is all too often charged on sale items, so do check your receipt to make sure that discounts have been properly recorded.