Why Aldi is Americans Fastest Growing Grocery Store |Reaction

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I am British and live in the UK, I shop in Aldi. Great for prices. Trader Joe's is owned by Aldi Nord, which was once the same company as Aldi, but the 2 brothers seperated the organisation and it became 2 seperate companies. Aldi Nord and Aldi Sud. Aldi Sud dropped the sud and became Aldi when it expanded outside Germany. Aldi Nord as not expanded as much. When Aldi Nord moved into the US they bought out Trader Joe's

iancomputerscomputerrepair
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You pronounced it correctly, it's Aldi with an open A as in "after" :) The "Oldi" is the American version

LucaSitan
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Ah Aldi... in a work week I do my early shopping there around 8 ante meridiem, it's just around the corner from my place of work, well there or at it's darker blue twin Lidl, but that's Germany for you, we have grocery stores in city centres and interspersed in dormitory areas in your standard run-of-the-mill communities and as others in the comments have stated: whatever I don't get at Aldi (south btw. here, so the one you know in the US, Aldi North *is* Trader Joe's on your side of the Aryth Ocean😉) I just get on my way back or to work in other grocery shops on the way, there's a ton, but Germany in general is one of the world's, and certainly Europe's) most competitive markets for groceries...so...yeah.

Best regards
Raoul G. Kunz

RaoulKunz
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Aldi split in the sixties in Germany, to Aldi North and Aldi South (Two similar but different logos). Since both have expanded and become international, you now have Aldi South in the US. However, you may be surprised that "Trader Joes" parent company is Aldi North?

johnp
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I've been feeding my husband [ a real food snob] Aldi products for years!😀 He has no idea!

MarkLeeds
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In Germany (where Aldi orininaly comes from) most people go to Aldi to get the basics and the they go to a supermarket to get the few things Aldi don't have.
In Germany it's easyer to do because the grocery's and supermarkets are often in residential areas too, So it's not a big deal.
It's a little bit of mote work but it saves a lot of cash

thomasstroh-uumj
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Fun fact: often enough those "store brand" items at Aldi are actually the name brand stuff in cheaper packaging.
specially here in Germany where their dairy products are kinda famous for this.

Lnclt-tcln
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I buy almost everything at Aldi. Besides being cheaper, I have one right next to me. Initially I didn't know their products, but I tried them and now I know everything.

linabmoniz
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Trader Joe‘s is Aldi Nord (North)

In Germany we have 2 Aldis
In North of Germany we have Aldi Nord (North). In South of Germany we have Aldi Süd (South)

There were two brothers who founded Aldi, who did not agree like with Puma and Adidas, which also emerged from one company.


One brother owns Trader Joe's and the other Aldi. For Americans it would be strange if Trader Joe's was called Aldi Nord

michel
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You pronounced it right! In Germany and Austria we call it like you said!

WienerVL
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Aldi in the UK advertises itself as our cheapest supermarket chain. So much so that the other chains now offer many prices checked 'at the same price as Aldi'. Quality is quite good too, but the limited choice, especially when it comes to the range of goods and brands is a deterrent to using Aldi for every shop. So I alternate each week between Tesco and Aldi. I also use smaller local convenience stores in between for things like fresh bread or the odd items I forgot at the weekly shop, even though they are dearer. Aldi has been here a few decades now and is presently slowly expanding in the UK - but is still behind their German model where there seems to be far more of them in smaller communities. Interestingly, I would say Aldi does not just appeal to people on lower incomes. Lots of more well to do people shop there too.

frglee
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The quality is also pretty good. Asda was bought out (AGAIN), and the prices have shot up, but quality as gone down. So I'm shopping around.

adrianboardman
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Hello from Germany! Aldi's own brands are mostly branded products, just with different packaging and no name. If you look at the manufacturer If you look at the packaging and compare it with the branded products, you will see that they are the same manufacturer! Greetings Nephilim

nephilim
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I normally shop at Aldi here in The Netherlands. (I think your pronunciation "ahl-dee" is better than the "ohl-dee" in the video, but then again, I'm not an American)
I buy most of my daily groceries at Aldi, and only for specific things that they don't have I go to another supermarket, Nettorama, which is conveniently located nextdoor to Aldi.
There are actually two independent Aldi chains in Europe: Aldi-nord and Aldi-süd, which serve respectively the north and south of the continent. Trader Joe's is owned by one of them (nord), and Aldi (America) by the other (süd).

qazatqazah
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Trader Joe is also Aldi, Aldi North, same as in Northern Germany, Belgium, France and the Netherlands. Aldi in the US is the same as Aldi South, operating in the South of Germany.

theonijkerk
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With how many stores they are opening, it might be worth checking to see if there is one nearer you that has opened up!

LoricSwift
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Aldi South is in the US. Aldi North (the other brother) owns Trader Joes. In Germany, we just have the two in the north and south.

daseteam
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The comparison between Aldi and Trader Joe's is appropriate because they're literally related. A(ldi stands for "ALbrecht DIscount", a very successful convenience store chain in Germany (and then Europe). Herr Albrecht then bought Trader Joe from its original founder, and later passed on the two businesses to his two sons. And both of them get highly rated by employees.

Aldi (:all dee", like "ball three") is very very efficient right down to the clerks, the fastest anywhere. Mine is not that close either but if I'm in the area I usually go in.

Peace Tysheen

notvalidcharacters
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When Aldi first opened here in the UK the cashiers had to learn the prices and put them in the tills/ cash register, they had to be very quick as well

michaelriordan
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10:16 - It is pronounced with an “A” and not an “O” because it is the abbreviation for AL-brecht DI-scount.
You should also look for another German discount market. It's called LIDL (pronounced Leedle) and it's just as good as ALDI.

nomaam