ALDI reviews

3.4

55% would recommend to a friend

(14,603 total reviews)
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Atty McGrath

52% approve of CEO

51% positive business outlook

ALDI has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 14,603 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
4.0
Mar 2, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The culture is strong, consistent, and focused on success. These are incredibly important characteristics in the retail industry, as things are constantly changing and leadership must be the immovable rock in a sea of change. Your coworkers at the district manager level are pretty great people. While you don't spend a lot of time working hand in hand, it's a team of people always willing to help each other out. Benefits are nice, as is the pay and company car. The company is growing, and highly successful. It is a place you can be proud to work.

Cons

You will work some weekends, some early mornings, and some late nights. You can, however, make up for those odd hours by starting late that day, taking a day off during the week, etc. It is a 50-60 hour per week job. It can cause some stress.

2.0
Dec 30, 2015

Unhappiness Guaranteed

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pay. That is all and that what keeps you stuck there.

Cons

Zero work life balance as you must be prepared to make Aldi your #1, #2, and #3 priorities in life. No questions asked. Pay is a pro, but at some point you debate whether it is worth the stress. The strain on store managers is ignored by district managers who only care about their numbers. Typical for most retail jobs, but magnified here. District managers mostly right out of college with no prior experience managing people so they are modeled as robots who are all fighting for a single promotion. If you are off and the store is not in 100% shape that day you are required to come in and fix it. Store managers rarely leave on time as district managers usually show up to evaluate the store a half hour before you are to leave. Required 50 hours per week, but reality is more like 60-80 hours per week. Associates are run through 2 weeks of wasted training at a training center, and must endure more on the job training because they rarely understand the job after training and store managers must perform this training without being removed from their normal duties. Store managers work at least 10 hours a day, and there is no time for lunch EVER. There is so much work by the time you are ready to take lunch a district manager comes in and gives you hours worth of work on your plate. They tell you to delegate it, which you do, then when that person does not complete the task you need to follow-up and do it yourself. District managers are more like the real store manager and store managers are highly paid, over-worked, assistant managers.

1.0
Dec 23, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Fantastic Insurance, structured environment, well known company

Cons

You are given 10+ hours of work to be completed in 8 hour shift. Training is non existent, expect to write your own notes for training. Unrealistic expectations. Socialization with co workers unacceptable.

Viewing 139 - 141 of 14,603 Reviews

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