$100 off $155.88 Minimum Spend (Excluding Delivery, First-Time Customers Only, Excludes NT) @ Naked Wines

20
MOBC262

On the voucher it reads:

[FRONT] A special gift for you $100 Wine

Voucher Code: MOBC262

Password: JNW15PJ3

Claim within 30 days by mobileciti for naked wines
[BACK] $100 Wine Voucher
How to spend your voucher:
1. Go to www.nakedwines.com.au/mobc262
2. Enter code MOBC262 and password JNW15PJ3
3. Choose your wines from our tasty range.

The boring bits: To use this voucher you must be 18 years or older. This voucher entitles first time Naked Wines customers $100 off their initial order of 12 bottles. All orders must be a minimum of 12 bottles, with a minimum spend of $155.88 (not including delivery). Not to be used in conjunction with any other offer or promotion. We offer fast and convenient delivery Australia-wide (but sadly, we can't ship to NT). Offer is subject to change. See website for full Terms and Conditions.

Naked Wines Referrals

Referral: random (25)

Referee gets a $50-$100 credit, referrer gets a $30 credit after first purchase by referee.

Related Stores

Naked Wines
Naked Wines

Comments

  • +7

    Subscription scam

  • +1

    You might as well use the random referral system, it gives you the same $100 off. Long running.
    The only difference is that this is MobileCiti referral code.

    Note that by default your account is set-up to auto renew, remember to cancel it if you don't want to be charged again.

  • We fund independent winemakers directly, cut out any unnecessary costs and give them free rein to make magic just for you.

    I know a lot of people don't understand their business model.

    It's part retailer part funding up and coming winemakers. Even ozbargain fave Bec Hardy has been aligned with them.

    When I was subscribed there were far more hits than misses, but you are often taking a chance on a wine by a winemaker you've never heard of before.

    • +1

      My dislike of them is their incessant advertising, and acting like they are better than everyone else because there "is no middleman", when in fact this means they maximise their own profits.

      If people are genuinely interested in treating wineries well and not giving money to corporations, then they should be buying directly from smaller family run wineries.

      • Agreed. I also found a lot of their stuff was more fair-average quaffing standard. A little disappointed - and I keep getting sent more $100-off vouchers by every Tom, Dick and Henrietta!

        These days I get offers from Winestar that have proven both reliable and firm favourites with my adult children.

  • @CheapandUsed
    Happy to hop in with a producer’s view but with the caveat that I don’t have experience with the front-end sales side, so can’t comment there. We’ve worked with Naked for around three years and they’ve been great to deal with. They genuinely care about and support producers, and their approach is collegiate and collaborative, which can be pretty rare in the world of global distribution.

    From a pricing perspective, I can only speak to our own experience, but comparable wines of ours from other ranges would generally retail for more in traditional bricks-and-mortar stores. :-)

    EDIT: Just added an association with Naked Wines as a supplier.

Login or Join to leave a comment