ALDI reviews

3.4

54% would recommend to a friend

(14,634 total reviews)
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Atty McGrath

51% approve of CEO

50% positive business outlook

ALDI has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 14,634 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 Einzel- & Großhandel industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

15K reviews
2.0
Feb 21, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The pay and benefits...that is pretty much it. They do teach you how to manage your time, right down to the second. Productivity is a huge part of their philosophy and it is pounded into you from the start.

Cons

There is little to no positive feedback to anything you do. Store conditions are always questioned, regardless of how it really looks. District Managers are in complete control of the store (micromanaged) and if they like something at a different store...guess what, your gonna change it in your store. Rules for running the store change from DM to DM. I went through 5 different DMs and each ran the store differently, focusing on completely different parts of the store. It was very hard to get used to. As for the last question of this review goes, I don't think that Charles (Chuck) Youngstrom knows what is happening at the store levels. He is fed whatever the Directors want him to hear (or what Chuck wants to hear).

1.0
Jan 11, 2019

AGE DISCRIMINATION

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

None as ALDI violates USA law and is getting away with hiring only young adults

Cons

Plenty. Let's start with Age Discrimination. Few are hired past their early to mid-20's. I have seen one woman over40 at one ALDI IN ILLINOIS. Other stores have no employees over approx. 35 years in age.

1.0
Jan 5, 2018

Churn and Burn Factory

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Excellent pay right out of college - Fully paid company car - Free cell phone - Great health insurance - 4 weeks vacation - Freedom to write your own schedule I learned more during my Aldi District Manager trainee phase about working in the professional world than I would have learned anywhere else. It was basically executive boot camp. I still use much of that knowledge to this day.

Cons

They OWN you from the get go. They hire you right out of college and throw you into Aldi boot camp. This includes hazing by other District Managers and your "peer adviser." When I worked at Aldi, I complained to my director about the hazing and she acknowledged that that was just the way that it was and had always been. The actual task training is substandard. You are put into the store and given a cursory overview of how to perform tasks, and then left on your own to sink or swim. NEWSFLASH - no one expects you to do a good job as a store manager. They know you're going to fail. That doesn't stop them from berating you for it as it's going on. District Manager training involves following your peer adviser around at all hours of the day and learning by watching what they're doing. These DMs are also overworked and have to do their entire regular workload in addition to training you, so your training is not prioritized. There is no uniformity in training, either. The biggest drawback of Aldi was the culture. It's an environment where you're always in fear of losing your job. You never know when you're going to be fired or promoted. Every tiny thing that you did wrong during the month is brought up by your director at the monthly DM meeting. Just a very negative culture. They want you to drink the Kool Aid and drop the rest of your life for them, and if you don't, they will find some reason to fire you.

Viewing 190 - 192 of 14,634 Reviews

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