I applied online. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at ALDI in Jun 2022
Interview
More lengthy than some of it's competitors, but worth it if you get the job in the end and much of it is fairly simple. Had to do a video interview with 3 basic questions, given 60 seconds to answer each. Then I was invited to an in person "Individual assessment", which is basically just a one on one interview. The interview involved several standard questions, followed by 2 scenarios which I had to respond with what I would do, followed by a numeracy test that I was given 10 minutes to complete.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Tell me about yourself
What skills would you bring to Aldi
Give an example of when you had to multi task
Scenarios : One involved a situation in which I had stock to put away but was called to the till when it was busy
Another involved me on a till while it was busy and a customer who had a Lamb leg that she argued was reduced, but actually wasn't because she picked the wrong one up.
Numeracy test: Basic Additions/Subtractions/Multiplications of prices and stock etc.
I applied online. The process took 5 days. I interviewed at ALDI in Jun 2020
Interview
I firstly applied to the job online and then I received an email telling me I made it through to the next round and then I got sent a video interview link to complete but never made it past that stage
I applied online. I interviewed at ALDI (Leicester, England) in Jul 2022
Interview
The interviewer was really friendly. I would describe it as professional but somewhat informal at the same time. The questions asked weren't too bad, it was a combination of general interview questions and situation based questions. Nothing that you can't prepare for. To answer the situation based questions common sense is key, don't try to overcomplicate the actions you take.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Tell me about yourself
What keeps you busy
What do you think Aldi did quite well
What do you think Aldi didn't do quite well
What hours can you work