ALDI Reviews

3.4

56% would recommend to a friend

(14,581 total reviews)
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Atty McGrath

51% approve of CEO

51% positive business outlook

ALDI has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 14,581 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The ALDI employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Retail and wholesale industry (3.4 stars).

Reviews by job title

15K reviews
2.0
26 Aug 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Experience, responsibility and the pay.

Cons

Extremely long hours for the sector (70+ not uncommon) and stress created by steep performance expectations with few resources available to run operations. Aldi is a discounter wih increadible prices for the quality but achieves this in a number of ways, not least by keeping staffing levels very low and driving productivity rates to levels not seen elsewhere. This all sounds fine, but in reality it makes for a tough working environment where your hours make up for the lack of colleagues - a convenient cost saving for the company, which employes well motivated individuals to achieve this. At store level breaks are often not taken, or simply cannot be taken if the store is too busy because there is simply no back up. Some stores may be staffed by only two people and both may be required on the cash tills if the store is busy, to the detriment of all other tasks that need to be undertaken in the store. This is fun and a buzz to begin with but the fun palls as the reality of your working life sinks in! The turnover of staff is prodigious - both self selecting and by the axe for those who can't keep the pace. At Area or District Manager level, keen, ambitious, motivated people are selected to join the training programme with a healthy carrot of promotion opportunities and sector beating pay. If you are attracted by this do a bit of due diligence before accepting! The sector beating pay comes in annual increments - it doesn't start off fantastically. This gives Aldi a chance to vet you in role first. Fair enough? Area Managers in training are used to run stores in preparation for their promotion to fully trained area manager - this gives Aldi a fantastic resource of ambitious thrusters to be used to run difficult and often failing stores for less than the price of a fully trained store manager. An additional company benefit is that AM's in training voluntarily work any hours required (store managers often do not - mindful of employment laws!) to run their stores and will travel to wherever the company requires them to work without complaint unlike store managers. The loyalty is one way however - a large number of area managers in training are needed at any stage to fill roles in stores and because few will make the grade. A few from any intake will make full Area Manager and a few from this group will be promoted to Director in time. However the rest will usually 'leave' after a few years providing advancement opportunities for the next group of ambitious hard working talent. In my 3 years I saw in excess of 30 people come and go to service 10 area manager positions. The clue is in how frequently Aldi advertises in the recruitment pages for these roles!

1.0
30 Aug 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Amazing Salary - Great Car - Store Team were great!

Cons

First day they take you for lunch then you drive over to the stores you'll be 'training' in. My 'mentor' told me I wouldn't need the postcode of the stores 1hr away and proceeded to drive off down the M1 at 80mph leaving me inevitably lost and stressed, a great way to start! Training is non-existent, they'll drop you into a store and expect you to just know how to do things and complete tasks at the same speed as people with years of experience, just madness. I was asked by my 'mentor' to reprimand a Store's Assistant Manager with 10+ years experience on my 4th day. Because I did this tentatively (as I think most people would!) I was told 'you've been here for a while, you need to toughen up'. Generally work 60+ hours weeks which was expected given the salary. HOWEVER the way the shifts are spread out (6am or midday starts) means your sleep pattern is ruined. Once did a shop inventory and worked 6am-11pm then back in at 5am to finish at 5 that afternoon. A healthy 29 hours worked with 6 hours between shifts (2 of which driving!) As other people elude to the other Area Managers are fine, except from the ones who have been there for a few years. One told me with pride how he had worked a 110hr week which gives you some idea of their mindset. Once had to drive for 6 hours on my day off as a store manager had locked the key in the safe so backwards and forwards from the head office. Led to me falling asleep whilst driving (you need the days off to catch up!) and nearly crashing which ultimately made my decision to leave much easier.

1.0
14 Feb 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Nothing other than the pay - not that you get to spend your money as you're always at work

Cons

Where do I start? I was looking for a change in career and after a lot of research, thought and analysing I decided to apply for Aldi as they appear to be a great company to work for. I applied for assistant store manager and was surprised at how lengthy the whole process was - I saw that as a positive, thinking the company invest a lot into their staff. Nope, that was completely wrong. I left my already good job to go onto Aldi (which I thought would be a great move for me). From day one I realised it was the biggest mistake of my life. Firstly the hours are a joke - as an assistant store manager you're expected to work a MINIMUM if 48 hours and then everything else on top. Aldi will tell you over and over again at interview, in their books, in their manuals that you get all this time back - IT IS COMPLETE RUBBISH, DO NOT BELIEVE IT. You also get a day off: if you class your day off as sandwiched between finishing at 11pm the night before and starting at 4am the day after. I came from a job where I worked 12 hour shifts and worked hard - I am NOT afraid of hard work, however Aldi is a complete joke. There is no way (unless you're Superman) you can get everything done. Oh and on your day off, you're expected to trek all the way to the store to hand over the safe key, which takes over 2 hours in total - which you're not paid for. This happens at all of the stores, so just bare that in mind if you actually have a life outside of work. Also the bullying culture is horrendous, you are told as a manager to micro manage all of the store assistants and watch them on CCTV constantly to try catch them out. The store manager left me on my own to close up the store after I'd been there for less than a week, then the next day decided to watch my every move on CCTV in fast forward and show me where he felt I went wrong. It was awful - constantly criticised for everything. Whatever you do it isn't good enough. The poor store assistants are given impossible tasks to do just so they fail, this is meant to be some kind of character building exercise but I fail to see how it builds anyone's character other into wanting them to leave. I left without a second glance - I'd rather sweep the streets in a snowstorm wearing nothing than work for Aldi. It was the worst experience of my life and even if you want to raise a complaint on how you're treated, they won't let you. Hence why they can say their staff are so happy - they literally will NOT let you complain about anyone senior. Area managers are a joke and are all straight out of uni, have no social skills and talk to other human beings like dirt. So, if like me, you were looking for a change of career - keep scrolling. Aldi will run you. Don't do it.

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