I am American and have worked in two different grocery stores. Once when I was a teenage and once about five years back. Neither time were we over staffed, in fact both time and in both stores we were understaffed. Because we were understaffed all employees worked various parts of the store not just one area. Now this might not be true of every store in the US but many stores are under staffed and employees work more than one area. Depositing 25 cents for a cart really isn't a bad thing and it makes sense why stores do it. I think the main reason it would be annoying is that most people do not carry cash/coins at all. Also almost everything we use now is going toward cards, even vending machines. I completely agree with cashiers being able to sit. There is absolutely no reason they need to stand for their whole shift. This is definitely something that does need to change. Maybe this is because I am American but I like it when the cashiers make small talk. This to me is more of a culture thing as we do tend to talk to strangers more often and enjoy conversation. I do understand why Aldi has it's cashiers not make small talk and I wouldn't rate it lower because of it. Bagging your own groceries is kinda hit or miss for me. I've had cashiers put my bread at the bottom of a bag with cans on top, soooo yeah sometimes I really want to bag my own groceries. However, my first job was bagging groceries (and other duties) and I was grateful to have that job. It was also my job to get the carts from outside. I actually really loved that part because I got to go outside. So even though those things may make Americans seem spoiled and/or lazy to others, for me it gave me a job and a paycheck. I did not mind doing either and it was a great first job. Also got to help little old ladies take their groceries to their cars, had great conversations, and meet really cool people. I do not understand why being able to ask employees a question makes us stupid and/or lazy. Granted some people are entitled and lazy, I have met them while I working in grocery stores. Then again I have met just as many people who have really tried to find an item and just can not find it. She even says in her video that we have much much more product. Being able to get assistance while in any store should be a bonus not a negative. I think the thing that makes me feel sad about all of this is that the comment section is just filled with a whole lot of hate and negativity. So what if our cultures and stores are different? Why should our differences make others feel superior or right? This goes both ways.
German person here, "I do not understand why being able to ask employees a question makes us stupid and/or lazy", I don't think it does, either :D It's often enough I run around the store trying to catch some employee to ask something! But of course it comes at a price, Aldi probably couldn't be as cheap as they are if they employed enough people to reliably have someone available to answer customer questions.
The reason for the coins is that Germans love their cash money. Everyone carries it around. So it's almost never an issue in Germany. They fail to realize that the world is changing around them though. Cash is becoming more and more of a legacy product. So yeah, I can fully understand the complaints in those reviews.
@@g3n3r3x Absolutely. Plus - I think lumping all the german grocery chains together is not correct. REWE & EDEKA for example are much more like the typical american grocery store. Well - minus the small talk ;)
I worked at a regular grocery store and was a Bagger and got carts and it is true alot of times we were short staffed also liked getting carts but I prefer so much working at aldi even though I do feel like I break my back there the extra services grocery stores give to customers in América made me feel like it goes way over there head they become spoiled want the World from you and make request alot of times in a rude way like your their servant and I don't miss bagging but eventhough my old store was under staff it does not compare to the pressure of aldi and I like your point of view but being in both set ups I prefer the European set up much more
I agree. Anyone like me who has ever had back problems knows it is torture to stand still for hours! If I walk around I'm not so bad but if I stand up long in one spot I'm dead meat.
My sister worked at a grocery store in the US for a summer. They were forced to stand during their whole shift, they weren't even allowed to lean on anything. She was complaining every evening that her back hurt, despite being a young adult with no prior back problems. US unemployment rates are low compared to Europe, but the price is laborers' rights...
My friend works in an Australian grocery store and does the self serve area. They have to spend the entire stift walking around in a figure 8 pattern seeing if people need help. Gets the steps in at least. I do love aldi though
Laura you have a bit of that in the UK and it’s quite nice actually. That’s the one things that I would bring from the US. I don’t like vendors to talk to me while I am browsing but when it comes to ask or to pay it’s very nice and you feel connected to people around you.
But why fill the air with sensless talk, that has no deeper meaning attached to it anyway? Never made sense to me, im not making friends there, i'm buying food. Nice, quick greeting and a smile should be enough for both sides.
@@JGirDesu Absolutely. Nothing frustrates more than to go an entire day working around people who never speak to you at all. It makes you feel like a lower-class person unworthy to be spoken to. I also hate when people give you their money or take their change as if they're afraid to touch your hands at all.
I live in London and while the big shops always have different employees working there and whatnot, the smaller tesco express or co-op down the road is staffed by a handful of people that you see often and you might talk a bit and know them by name.
Yeah xD I saw so many videos of people living in other countries and saw videos of people who came to Germany and ooof .... Also some things that didn't got mentioned in this video is the difference to other types of German grocery stores compared to Aldi. I'm from Germany and live here my whole life. We have a lot stores from other chains here like LIDL, Netto,... who are very similiar to Aldi wich means small stores, just a small hand of brand items but many non-brand stuff, random shelfs in the middle of the store who have offers like one week its DVDs, the next week its "As seen on TV" the next week they sell stationary,... you know what I mean and we here in Germany call them "Discounter" and you really see why. It's not only cause the non-brand stuff is cheaper as brand-items but also the brand-items they sell are often (not allways) a bit cheaper. So for example a supermarket has a brand of chocolate for lets say 1€ it could be that the same chocolate in the discounter is 0,98€ and so on. Similiar to Aldi all stores also have a section for baked goods so there will be a small maybe 1,5m tall oven where they head up the whole breads and all 1 or 2 times a day per type of pasty or bread they sell so you get fresh breads in the morning and sometimes even around noon. Other than that you just find shelfs of the different food items and even a small selection on stuff like diapers, periodpads, deospray, shampoo,... some discounter even sell makeup like each piece 1-2€ etc. and a small selection of food for animals and so on. Mostly all stores also have a shelf with cigaretes (depending on it you eighter ask the cashier to open the front so you can grab a pack or you have to press a button on a mashine and than the pack of cigaretes comes out) or single wraped candy like 1 single kinderriegel or bubble gum etc. sometimes even stuff like toothbrushes, condoms, pregnancytests, cheap glasses, cheap colectable toys,... next to the cashregister. Many stores also use the shelfs next to the cashregister to display giftcards or cards for when you have a mobile phone so you can buy the card and than have enough money on your phone to call someone again etc. If we go now away from that there are the normal type supermarkets. First of all : Do not trust the Americans who visited Germany and pretend that ALL supermarkets would be tiny. Sure our stores are not ass HUGE as those in America, but there are still a lot stores that are quit big. You will often find the very large grocerystores in Germany eighter in big cities cause of cause the more people, the more food has to be sold or what I noticed since coming around Germany a bit that the super large stores are also often in the industrial area cause the halls are large that the store can rent or if the city happens to have a big mall outside the city than they place a bigger supermarket next to it cause large malls atrackt many people to visit and mostly such people think at the end of the day "how about I pick up some bread and don't have to go to the supermarket tomorrow when I'm allready here..." The larger supermarkets have often also a big shelf for stuff you can eat on the go (yes people in Germany eat on the streets while walking around and even eat in the train or when waiting for the bus etc. ( you can eat in pruplic transportation only in the train, because its considered rude to eat in the bus. The rule in Germany IDK why is that you might take a long trip in the train and just a short one in the bus so they say its ok to eat in the train cause nobody knows how long you have been traveling allready). Some popular items to take with you from these kind of shelfs are milk coffe drinks, milk shakes, smoothies, small salads, sushi, even single packed boiled eggs sometimes. Also you find in the supermarkets larger areas for baked goods, often even a meat or cheese counter, sections for medicine or stationary, sometimes depending on the store size they might even have sections to sell a small selection of decorations or clothes or even games and toys. Popular for "very large" grocerystores where you find almost everything from food to toys to makeup and even sometimes bycicles would be for example REAL (REAL-Einmal hin, alles drin). The store is so big that you might forget where you got the items last time from or if its your first time going there you think "huh... all this cheese but where do I find some yoghurt?" cause its more as in most stores. Even tho REAL is very big other stores can be big too even tho its not as big as REAL. The biggest store in the town I curently life is a KAUFLAND and its from what I was used to from where I grew up a big change cause the store is larger as the stores in the town I lifed before. BTW if you think German stores had only small selections of items, than you are wrong. Especially when it comes to gummy candy, chocolate, cookies, meat and yoghurt you will find in most stores sooooooo much different types and brands and stuff. Oh and mostly if a supermarket sells stuff like sandwichbread but has no isle for baked goods than there will be often a bakery inside the supermarket too so you can get other types of bread. Also a thing is that some malls here in Germany also have grocerystores inside. In the town I live there is a mall in the city center with like 20 stores in it and one is a grocery store wich is the main reason for people to even go there (other than that the town is pretty dead IDK why but all shops are empty. Some people say its 1) the fault of the people who build the mall cause since it exist all shops closed down and some stores moved inside the mall 2) because a lot cities with 110-500K citizen are very close so people preffer to go shoping somewhere else)
@@ACEsParkJunheeWreckedMeHard Du bist mir ein wenig (that's mean a lot of)(thats i'm editing) zu deutsch! Warum sind wir deutschen so? Ich verstehe es nicht! Du musst nicht immer recht haben! So ein Kommentar ist einfach peinlich! Ich konnte das nicht mal komplett antun! I hate this German Mentality!
@@ACEsParkJunheeWreckedMeHard Though REAL is the biggest kind of store in germany they aren't even as big as a regular walmart in the US. In my town the real is aactually in the buidling that was a walmart back in the day, but there's also a saturn and some other stores in there. Globus is also pretty big.
Walmart ignored working rights and had no idea what customers expected. Germans don't want to be "welcomed" when entering, they are able to pack their groceries themselves and don't need any help. Furthermore, people in Germany don't really like that superficial kind of friendlyness. We are usually friendly to the cashiers by saying hello smiling, thanks.etc. We don't want be be asked personal things like how we were doing as no cashier is really interested at all and it's just an empty phrase although I grew up in an anglosaxon commonwealth country. I have never understood the sense of small talk, especially not when in the Supermarket. I buy what I need and then I'm always very keen to pay and get out as quickly as possible. I go to a supermarket to buy food, no more and no less.
They also violated anti-Monopoly laws with their predatory pricing practices. And in general were absolute clowns who had no idea about the market they tried to enter. Walmart's german venture was essentially a giant pile of hubris, arrogance and ignorance.
Your country is guilty of sending your products to China to have them made. The once great Germany is now leading the woke community and climate change hoax.
@@eduardocruz4341 There is only the costumer to pay for that service, except most of the employees aren't paid a living wage anyway! In the rest of the world people would rather pack their purchases themselves to avoid heavy stuff on top of fragile stuff, frozen stuff with things ruined by frost etc!
@@sablatnic8030 I am just stating what is done in American supermarkets. The bagging of groceries is done by the store employees. And for the most part, they are pretty good in separating groceries appropriately when bagging them at least in my experience.
@Lumiel not really. my mom is Portuguese but my father is Dutch. And Aldi, looks the same in both countries. i avoid it like the plague cause usually its located very far from the city or around. For example, jumbo and Albert heijn look like the typical american supermarket.
You're kidding yourself if you think capitalism exists today. By definition you need to have a free market in place to have capitalism. 'Crapitalism' as we know it today, is in fact just politely disguised socialism.
Watching this cashier be so fast on the one hand makes my german efficiency happy but on the other hand triggers my german anxiety to be faster than the cashier with packing the stuff 🤪
Yeah I really miss the Swedish check outs when I go to a German supermarket, in Sweden we have the same kind of mechanised band where you put your groceries at the front of check out, but when the cashier has scanned the barcode or weighed your vegetables, they put you wares down another band down into a big catch up area that is divided into either 2 or 3 sections so you can take your time to pack everything while the cashier has moved onto next customer, the cashier just uses the next section of the catch up area to put next customer's wares. Same speed as in German supermarkets from the cashier but you don't feel like you have to be a speeddemon to keep up.
ah yes the race against time, as the aldi cashier swoops item over item over the desk, faster than your hands can grab and bag them and then you pay and do your best to grab everything, even still unpacked items and waddle away, making space for the next customer, to an empty space to pack them right :,)
Gosh we do learn a lot of independency in Germany if you think about it, especially if you have parents who are like: "Oh, you are 18 now? GOod Luck surviving, we are no longer obligated to support you in any way :)" (Spoiler: Actually most of the time they still are)
@Rita Roork This comment seems like sarcasm...I really hope it's sarcasm. Please don't tell me my sarcasm detector has failed, I'm British so would no longer be able to function if that were the case.
@Rita Roork what a shit thing to say! they are not your servants, they are employees doing their job, or would you say you are your Boss's servant and not employee?
When I was 17 I worked at a certain popular fast fashion shop in the UK and had to stand for my whole shift too. :( I had to work a minimum of 5 hours to get a break, and even then it was only 15 minutes. Despite the fact I wasn't at school and my schedule was 100% flexible I kept being handed 4 hour shifts just so I wouldn't be able to get a break 🙄 Also you were NOT allowed a water bottle on the shop floor or behind the counter, so everytime I needed a drink of water I'd have to go in the lift to the staff room, and I felt like my co workers were mad at me whenever I had to go because they would have to cover my area of the shop for me while I was gone.
American here. American corporations take the viewpoint that if a cashier leans or sits at all during their 8+ hour shift, they are lazy. (Yes, sometimes, especially airports, cashiers work longer than 8 hour shifts on their feet... with only a 30 minute lunch break.) If you can't stand your whole shift, then the corporation will hassle and hound you about your lack of self-discipline, laziness, etc. You're expected to be an automaton for the company and cram their 5 minute schpeal into the 2 minute interaction with your customer. Offer every addon under the sun, ask for donations to charities to help the corporations bottom line, mention credit card offers, rewards programs, etc. etc. etc. If you forget one, you get written up for failure to comply to "corporate standards." I highly suggest avoiding retail jobs in the US if you ever look for employment in the US.
The contradiction of seeing the cashiers sitting as “lazy” but also being mad that there’s no one to greet you because they are all busy stocking or checking people out 😅
Where do you live? No one in America gets mad when there isn’t a greeter. Everyone knows they’re not necessary it’s just a way to give people with disabilities a job.
When I went to the US grocery stores felt really awkward, like some employees jobs were just to welcome people, or the fact that the cashier would bag your items for you, I think it makes the customer feel like a child.
Maybe it makes Europeans feel like children, but in the U.S. it is just good old fashioned American customer service Mike of Korea, We invented Supermarkets , so it is the rest of the world that is wierd not the U.S. By the way bagging groceries and collecting the carts gave me a job as a teenager 150 dollars a week.. I had my own money not bad and I'd take that over the rest of the worlds way of doing things in Supermarkets..
@@umutkarzai9190 One can make money at a supermarket as a teenager in Europe too. You just do other things (stock-up, cleaning, work at the cash register).
@@eknaap8800 Well, Those children have kept Europe from erupting into war by keeping the REAL CHILDREN from starting a new World War Europeans have a long history of causing wars and dragging the whole world into their wars!! Why do you think the the U.S. still has more than 399,999 troops in Germany and in other parts of Europe! Children don't produce unemployment rates as low as 3.4% such as it was just, before covid-19.. Maybe you should look at yourself, before calling other names, maybe your projecting your nature and actions onto others.. Europeans also have a tendency to do that as well..
M M … Sure or take a box and leave it in the shopping cart for someone else to get rid of after your stuff is in your car. Love those people! On the other hand that is getting harder to do because in many stores the merchandise is no longer on the shelves in the boxes as it used to be years ago.
As an American who understands VERY little german, but spends a lot of time in Germany, I love this about Germany! I can go grocery shopping and know exactly what to expect.
Andrea Clyndes’s Because most Americans have an inferiority complex, it comes from being derided as a new country with little history, no culture and an appalling education system. They therefore like to make their low paid workers suffer publicly, it makes the customers somehow feel a better- that they are superior, worthy of the "service" they are receiving.
Because to most Americans a job that involves customer service makes the person doing it a servant, and therefore the belief is that they should be treated as such.
@@spencerwilton5831 Ironically inColruyt you also have to stand and it's considered one of the best employers. (Pay might have something to do with it)
Of course Cahiers are servants. Cashiers, sales clerks, barbers, waiters and many more are all servants. I am sure that I would either never work as a cashier or if I had to I would stand most of the time through my own free will. Sitting constantly makes people lazy and sick. It is very bad for blood circulation and can lead to or at least induce major health problems. That is why doctors started recommending that people go jogging, to the gym, ride bikes and so forth as more and more people started sitting in front of computers all day long.
@@wout4yt the difference is that in Colruyt they walk around, switch your items to a different cart and then have to walk to register. American cashiers literally have to stand in one place. Imagine a delhaize cashier but standing all day. Also, colruyt employees rotate during one shift, 'regular' cashiers usually don't.
It's pretty easy: Aldi isn't just doing all those cost-cutting measures; they are actually forwarding those as cheaper prices for their customers. So, at the end of the day, you can have a cart pusher, a guy twiddling his thumbs all day for customer service, two more cashiers than you actually need, smalltalk at the checkout and a bagger, or you can have another shopping cart full of stuff you can actually eat. That one comment you showed in your video was "I will gladly drive down the road where I'm treated with respect". You can't eat respect, you can't eat smalltalk. Pragmatism is why Aldi will continue to thrive in the US.
I shop at several different types of grocery stores, depending on who has the best sales. First, there are NEVER more cashiers than you need. Usually, there are several checkout lanes that are closed. Most stores don't have baggers anymore; either the cashier bags the items, or the customer does. No one I know cares about small talk, but it's often mandatory for the employee to do it because corporate thinks it makes the store look friendlier. I shop at Aldi, and while they have many good deals, they also have a very, very small meat section, and they don't keep their vegetables and fruits cool, which means they probably toss out a lot more for spoilage than the stores that do keep their produce cool. And their prices overall are not THAT much less than the average supermarket.
@@hodgeelmwood8677 About the only small talk you get these days is "did you find everything?" and they don't care if you did or not, no one says thank you anymore. As for customer service desks, they're not twiddling their thumbs, they're working harder than anyone else in the store.
Hodge Elmwood, You are crazy, the prices at Aldi's are nearly half the prices at the regular super markets. Their meat and produce selections make not be as bountiful as the regular market, but everything one needs is there, and at a very high quality.
@@athleticguy15 I have been to Aldi on a few occasion, but I have NEVER found anything in there with prices any different than I have at Food Lion. Hell, it's the reason why I first decided to try going there.
Aldi is in Germany called a discounter and Aldi ist not a supermarket. On the one Hand Kaufland, Rewe Edeka and Penny are Supermarkets they sell a wide variety of brand Products as well as self brand products. The Stores are really big and clean but on the other hand there are discounters like Lidl, Netto or Aldi this Shops sell mostly self brand Products that they are self producing. This Shops are like Aldi wich you see in the Video above, but real german Supermarkets are like Wallmart, for instance Kaufland has a own service Center for Custumers in each store .
@@oldhelldog5460 that maybe true, but all of these supermarkets have adopted almost all of Aldis philosophy, the .99 prices, to only open boxes instead of unpacking them, you'll only find people already working on something and never waiting to simply welcome someone, also they are allowed to sit (as they should)
So... Americans: why are the cashiers sat down...how lazy is that?!? Also Americans: How dare they expect me to take my shopping cart back, and pack my own groceries?!? 🤔🙄
Learn some proper grammar, like the difference, between the past tense and the continuous tense.. I know smart asses have to come up with so called glib answers except your ans. aren't glib nor intelligent!!
As an introverted American, I really like Aldi. My shopping trips there a quick and efficient and don’t break the bank and I hate small talk in public.
I can imagine. As an introvert European I remember feeling rather uncomfortable when i lived in the U.S, and had to go to say Wallmart. Employees greeting me, asking me how my day was, beaming& smiling all the time.. I felt obligated to put on a phony smile,& respond ..Not offending anyone took more enrgy then the shopping itself... . ( I'm 'exegurrating offcourse, ..but stil..)
Let me ask you this though. As an introvert, did you resist using the self check-out because you didn't know how to use it and did not want to look like an idiot when you first tried? I am very tech-savy, but I still had to wait till I did my shopping when the place was dead before giving it a go. After using it once, I now prefer it.
"Beggars can't be choosers." Something that Americans themselves often don't understand. You pay less, you get less service. I've visited the USA a couple of times and always was annoyed with the overpriced food. Yes, the stores are big and have a very large selection, but in the end the customer is paying for that.
@@Kellydoesherthing well, that's not true. You can't just not talk when someone says something to you. So you have the choice: Do a fake smile and be annoyed or be an asshole. I don't want either.
@@Metalbirne I work in food service in America. That is how it works here sadly. Sometimes once I take someone's order, they don't even acknowledge me. I approach the window and go "hello, your total is x! How are you today?" I'd say at least twice per shift, someone doesn't turn their head in my direction, doesn't make eye contact, just stares straight ahead holding out their card or money. And when I hand them their stuff, they just hit the gas. At least twice a day. And that doesn't include the people who just give me a polite smile, maybe a nod and say nothing. That is 100% normal and something you could do in America. I recommend at least a small smile and a nod. Anyone who isn't new to customer service will immediately recognize this as you saying "I don't want to talk" without words.
It's two of the most important things in german shopping: 1. We don't want the cashier or staff to start talking to us. It's an invasion of our personal space. WE shop there, we don't want to get to know you or, worse, feel like you are inquiring into our personal lives. 2. Never attempt to bag our things. We will assume you do it wrong, that you put the squishable things, like fruits or eggs, down first and then they will break on the way home. Walmart back then tried to offer packaging services, and they were screamed and yelled at for it. Never do our packing, it will end in drama and people demanding refunds for breaking what they bought. In general: Germans don't want personal interaction from anything or anyone that is not family or close friends. Short, efficient contacts, down to the point with no one putting their nose into our business
Yikes. We're definitely from two different worlds. I guess we're friendlier here in the U.S. than you are in Germany. As a customer, the cashier is a human being who shouldn't be treated like a robot, which is how you treat them clearly. I sometimes, seldom, will talk to a cashier like they're a friend who I don't see often. We are very amicable. It's probably because older generations need someone to talk to when they leave the house, so it just passes down. If you stop me on the street though to try and sell me something, best believe I'm giving you the cold shoulder though. That's the only time I don't welcome interaction. I'm only interested in buying something if I'm at a place of business ready to buy something, not when I'm getting from point A to point B, unless someone asks for directions somewhere.
@@JGirDesu It's not unfriendly, as the cashier here also does not expect or want to be talked to in that way. They just want to do their job. It's just a different culture and different expectations. Germans, in general, are very friendly, but it does not take the same outward appearance. Most Germans will go out of their way to help you if you are in a dire situation, or if ask them to. But offensive friendliness, like a cashier talking to you like that, like someone offering to package your stuff, or trying to engage in unwanted smalltalk, it is perceived as intrusive and fake. Become close to a German, and they will be your best friend ever. But go out of your way to invade the personal bubble of us, and we will start with being very very suspicious of you.
@@Mishakur I have heard of Europeans being suspicious when someone is overly friendly to them, but I feel like Americans should be an exception to your rule. We don't get out of the house much, so we appreciate being in other countries and feel like we're representing our country, so we're extra friendly, and it's genuine in most cases. Unless the tourist asks for money, then watch out lol
@@JGirDesu Most Germans ARE behaving friendly to the cashier. In Germany you go to cashier, smile friendly-- say Hello then he/she answeres Hello.... and starts working. In the big discount chains like Aldi, Lidl and Netto - there often is a queue with other waiting customers behind you, so you try to NOT take to much of the cashiers time. If your the only customer and you are a regular, then there is often a lot more interaction and even some small talk about random interesting things. The same goes for our local supermarket chains in the neighbourhood. Because you often know the cashier there, because he/she lives in your neighbourhood, you have much more topics to talk about.
@@Thorsten_Wiegand That sounds VERY American too. You don't take any more time than needed unless you really know the person, but at that point, you stand out of the way while they help another customer.
In the Dilbert comics they joke excessively about that. "If you are happy you are stealing company time." all the way to "If you are healthy you are stealing company time."
That must be an American thing. I had the same thing once working in a British supermarket and an American couple were talking behind me saying I was a bit lazy for sitting on a stool whilst clearing a lower shelf ready for cleaning. I'm 6 foot 2!!!
EdgyNumber1 I’m in the UK too, an engineer. After recovering from a knee injury, I used a stool for sitting and knee cushions/pads for kneeling down. I’ve had many jibes for being lazy, even though I’m still getting the job done, if not actually better. I find a large amount of copious profanity and hand gestures works very well. But that’s ok with work colleagues you know, I wouldn’t try it with retail customers......🤣🤣🤣
You see, and here is the problem, Europe is highly organized and we have standards/norms for everything. And when I read or see how it looks in America sometimes, this is one big mess for me and I wonder if in the US employees have any rights or they're just slaves.
@@reynaswaffle That's actually not true. The US has about 331 million people, the EU about 447 millions. (and there's still european states that aren't members of the EU) I always used to think the US had more people because it's so big, and was surprised when I found out by chance it was the other way round. Europe's density is just a lot higher. ... unless of course you were talking about just Germany, which has a population of about 80 million.
Have you even been to the US before? How can you generalize a country of 330 million people occupying an enormous piece of land? As someone who lives here and has been to Germany before, I clearly see the issue: Americans value service. Germans value efficiency. We do what works for us. You do what works for you. We know how to board the subway/metro in an orderly fashion. In Germany, they just smash into each other like it's life-or-death. That works for you all but not us (Montreal even has lines on the floor showing you where to stand).
American corporations are practicing various forms of slavery more and more. Many large corporations actually practice slavery - that is the actual law they intentionally break - by forcing workers to work off of the clock - or get fired. Target and Hobby Lobby have been prosecuted, lost and received a slap on their hands as punishment for this illegal behavior. As a Dollar Tree employee for a short time, I was told I would work 10 hours a week for free or be fired. Other corporations are forcing employees to sign contracts giving up their rights to breaks and mealtimes that are mandated by law. The U.S. is becoming a third world country very quickly.
@@theowaigel8588 Same as the new type Aldi Nord stores. Ironically, Aldi in Germany is transitioning to a more premium style with more A-brands and less cartons.
@Daniel Robertson What are inexperienced shoppers?😅 You should lern that from your parents, and if you still have problems you can always ask the staff, they don‘t bite.😁
@@blacky_Ninja Aldi is new to US so can't learn from parents. There are almost no staff to ask. I like Aldi, but it's sometimes more "efficient" use of my time to go to a big brand store.
@@Ikbeneengeit there is staff to ask. They're just not standing around waiting to answer people's questions. You can ask the person stacking or the cashiers or the people driving the products through the store.
About that smalltalk thing: I'm from germany and I'm learning english in school. Last week our teacher was talking about the US and their culture. We had to practice the smalltalk in supermarkets. Everyone in my class called it stupid and needless XD...
I am american and I do not care for small talk. Hello and please and thank you are about all i care to engage in. I like the employee to focus on their job so i can focus on mine, paying, packing and getting the heck outta there as soon as possible. It appears to me that folk that want to chit chat are either lonely, or need validation of some sort. Or they are nosey. Not my thing...
Ich mache meine Schülerinnen und Schüler schon auf diesen small talk aufmerksam, aber ich würde mich hüten, so etwas Sinnloses einüben zu lassen. Die Kids sollen nur wissen, dass es so einen Schwachsinn in den USA und in UK gibt, sollten sich aber definitif diese oberflächen Phrasen nicht aneignen, sondern nur verstehen und weiterhin "ehrlich" bleiben. Stupid ist nur ein abgemilderter Ausdruck für das Phänomen.
@@kathyw4212 Still a strange thing that something like small talk even exists in the USA. I always thought it was a British thing. Meaningless small talk .. to some extent really funny ;).
I really had to laugh when you said that we Germans are emotionally invested in how our groceries are bagged. Of course my first response was to be a little offended because 'come on, we're not that stuck up' but then I thought about having to watch someone pack my stuff all wrong and... yeah, I would probably be at least as displeased as Americans used to having people bag their stuff having to do it on their own for the first time. I want to be responsible for the dents in my food/whatever. Otherwise I'd be pissed at the person who did it for me... "^^
I think I slowly mastered the art of tetris-packing my stuff. takes a bit of time, but I get to use all of the room I have. I got no car, so I have to pack it wisely if I don't want to die handling 5 bags when going home. und ich werd tatsächlich emotional wenn ich seh wie mein freund alles einfach nur reinschmeißt wenn er einkauft. damn ;)
Honestly, American grocery baggers are really good. From what I have read and when i speak with my german friends it just sounds like germany has really crappy customer service. Which makes sense since germany is more socialistic then america. The whole point of capitalism is selling the product to the customer. Apart of that is making the customer feel good. But when I put my groceries on the conveyor belt to be scanned I will often put it in the order I want it bagged and it is almost always bagged exactly how I would have bagged it. A lot of the times cashiers will even put your breakable items in a bag and set it on top of the bagging area. As the saying goes here in America, for better or worse, the customer is always right.
@@natf6747 hm I don't think you could call it crappy customer service, if bagging stuff isn't part of their job. we're used to bag our stuff since we're little, there may be a few grandmas that like help and a short conversation, but most of us just want to buy and pack our things as quick as possible. It's not like they're our waiter, who gets paid to be uber-friendly. this is still a crappy job, which I worked at myself too. as long as they're not negative, I'm all good with neutral and quick cashier at the store. better than some mega fake 'hiiiiiiiiii, how are youuuuu, how's your dayyyyy... I really don't caaaaare....but have to aaask.....byeeeee'
@@PapayaStyle Yeap. Not just talking about whether they pack your bags or not. From what my friends have said it is pretty much all in compassing. Especially when compared to the southern USA. Of course, I have never been to Germany so all I have is what they and many people on the internet have said and my experience watching them interact with clients at our job. But being kind and making someone feel like you are actually glad they are there doesn't have to be fake. Often it may be. But when you do it long enough you actually tend to begin to care about the person you are selling the product to. I have had many cashiers point me towards interesting new products that I didn't get the first time. Or who warned me about the product I was intending to buy for the first time. While I get it when it comes to groceries that most people now exactly what brand they want and don't like to try new things, the issues come into play when the whole point is to find something new. Here in America workers actively seek to assist you. If you are in Starbucks or some other cafe on a fairly calm day and are browsing around the store often a worker will come talk to you about what they found interesting and assist you in making a decision. What I have read about Germany is that is practically no existent. So while yes, there is a lot that is fake about American customer service I would rather have someone who is fake assisting me and making me at least feel like they appreciate me being there then someone who is being real and is completely ignoring that I am even in the store. But this is where are cultures differ. You are taught to mind your business, get in and get out. I am was taught to be polite and say hi.
@@natf6747 well, of course we also say hi, and I never mind sharing a smile with them, but at least for me (introvert) everything more is most times akward. but I think I can agree, that's just our cultural difference, and that's fine, I can see where you're coming from :)
I’m an “American” viewer, and don’t find ALDI “weird” nor do I dislike anything about ALDI. I prefer it to most grocery stores in the U.S. Also, all cashier should be allowed to sit, as opposed to standing in place for hours.
I lived in the US for 4 years and had an Aldi locally. I never heard any Americans saying they didn’t understand how they operated or were confused. They did like the quality of the products and the prices. This is incredibly patronising and pure projection.
I remember as a kid driving half an hour to the next town over once a month with my mom for our Aldi trip. She managed to feed a family of four on $100 a month (plus trips to the store in town for perishables like bread and milk that won't last a month) in the early 00s. I always ran ahead to put the quarter in the cart, or hand a quarter to a customer who was about to return their cart. The store has never seemed messy or disorganized to me--quite the opposite. It's laid out in a sensical way that makes it very easy to go through your list, grab your groceries, and not have to back-track. In fact, I thought for over a decade that the aisles were one-way because everybody took the exact same route every time. The "lack" of choices also makes it super efficient to shop. You're not paralyzed by choice, blocking the condiment section because you don't know what kind of ketchup to buy. You just grab a bottle and keep going. The way the product is put out in boxes makes it easier to bulk buy as well! Need half a dozen cans of carrots and half a dozen cans of green beans? Grab that half empty box of carrots and put six cans of beans in with it. Now you have a case that's easier to carry to the car! I don't go to Aldi much anymore because there's not one in town and I work odd hours, but I miss how streamlined the store makes shopping. I dread grocery shopping now because American-style stores constantly move things around and actively try to upsell customers. I didn't realize as a kid how different Aldi was. I just assumed all stores were like that. I miss Aldi.
Many stores employ a tactic of placing different "normal items" in different sections of the store, so to make you walk by their "great offers" and what-not to make you do impulse shopping. If Aldi works like Lidl in Finland, then it most likely has the same basic layout in every store (or as close to it as possible), so it doesn't matter to which Aldi you go to, you still know where the stuff you're looking are.
Aye most germans abstain from Smalltalk however if you like me live in a quiet small village were the Stores are also quite Small you overtime know every single employee that works there and for me personally, I like Smalltalk with people I know e.g the employees of the store I now goto for nearly 4 years but something like Walmart you might not have the same employees there every day or there might just me too much to really kinda get to know them.
Yes, they will see smalltalk as an annoyance that serves no meaningful purpose. They are not unfriendly though, nor do they hate other people - they just don't understand the point of smalltalk.
Smalltalk is done between people who know each other or work together or have some sort of relation. That can be the weather or politics. But not with some anonymous stranger. There's just no sense in meaningless talking about my life with someone I will never see again.
paying for a trolley is because people were taking them throwing them in rivers etc. less likely to steal if you have to find a quid to put in it first .
+Rev two.hands But you are NOT "paying" for it! You are paying a deposit, which is returned to you when you return the trolley to the trolley park. It encourages people to return the trolleys to where you got it, rather than leaving them scattered all over the car park...
Ha ha ha ! ….Excuse me for laughing, But steeling was not the major reason. Years ago (at least in Germany) there were smaller stores with shopping carts, Rewe, Edelstolz, Edeka as example, but they were within the store. As the larger Supermarkets started the idea came up with coins as a deposit because (just as it happens in the US or elsewhere ) people would not bring them back into the store. Since many people tend to be thrifty to stingy (most cases) it was obvious that asking for money would do the trick and only when one pushes the key from his cart into another one. Proof of this is the fact that when only one cart has to be left somewhere in the middle of a parking lot invariably others will push theirs into it instead of returning it to the parking cabin where it belongs. Many people are lazy by every chance they get. Guess that is just the human nature of the so called Intelligent species.
@@robertthomas6127 when I was a wee one I tied a trolly to a car and went for a spin. I've seen a few homeless people take them too, our local river has 3 trollies in it. I'm sure these sort of things played a big part in the decision to go with a deposit system
2:00 it wasn't just German culture that WalMart failed to adapt to, but also German law - in Germany, employees have the right to unionize and form a "Betriebsrat" (roughly a shop council) and a company trying to stamp this out will, of course, be faced with resistance. Add to that Walmarts "conduct code" which also had provisions that are illegal in Germany. An employer in Germany can't tell its employees who to hang out with in their free time, and it can certainly not outlaw relationships between coworkers. I believe this latter aspect really was a far more important reason why WalMart failed in Germany.
@@stephanweinberger You're free to not work for or shop at Walmart if you don't like the way they do things. You're also free to open your own store and do things your own way-not as free as Americans used to be, but better than most.
.. there was an other thing: they didn't get building permits for their stores. They bought two superstore divisions for other companies, that was it. But that wasn't enough to implement their business model - the economy of scale part.
I really don't get where the "sitting is lazy" idea came from? What, does that make office workers lazy? Because that's pretty much all they do all day is sit in front of a desk.
@@ardalire651 Honestly I know a lot of people who refer to sitting cashiers as lazy or rude. They tend to be people who do more laborious work themselves or think "Back in the old days cashiers stood up," and/or "It's rude to sit when speaking to someone who is standing!" The people who feel this way are also more likely to leave reviews in my experience, though, so I would say it's likely to be the loud minority.
I think that it is also related to the kind of management structure we have. bosses expect people to be working hard all the time. Even if customers dont care. Someone who wants to sit seems "not dedicated/hard working enough". We have a fetish for the appearance of "hard work". I have an office job in software and my employer wants us all to be in the office early in the morning and at our desks 8 hours/day, only talking about work things, with only work things on our screens, to ensure surveillance and invoke the feeling of like "if i have to suffer I might as well be productive" even though our metrics that we are judged by are measured digitally and not based on hours worked
@@UNR3S7 You're so right. Americans care more about the appearance of doing hard work than we do about actually working hard. I've had jobs where talking about non-work things with a coworker was forbidden when not on lunch break (and good luck getting the paid breaks you're entitled to), including one job that deliberately separated two employees if they were talking even when both were being productive just near each other. Arriving early and staying late as well as skipping lunch (all without additional pay) are seen as working hard even though the reality is that certain work traits are not sustainable.
My boyfriends mother works as a supermarket cashier, not at aldi (I'm German in Germany) - and they have to aim for scanning 64 items/minute, if I remember it right
Nope. Thats the average speed. And if you are not as fast as that yourself to get all your shit in the cart, than you will get very bad glares from the cashier and maybe from people standing in line beind you wich makes you look like if you did bad for being the slow one
... and there's usually a poster outside wiith the same announcement. And those "special weekly offers" are always at the same place in a shop, so once you are used to it, it doesn't feel chaotic at all.
Maybe if the journal was packed for them or the poster was read to them they'd know. You can't expect them to do that stuff for themselves, they're Americans!
@@steffenfrank7038 ah alles klar. Sounds like something only germans would invent. Candles are supposed to operate with fire. I suppose they are trying to be more eco-friendly by reducing greenhouse gases too. Too bad in DE most of the electricity generated (to operate such an over engineered device) is from coal now.
And as a woman one might even feel hit on by the male cashier, because it is that uncommon. It is nobodies business how I feel, espacially not the business of the cashier, because I don't know him.
Me, as as customer would think "Do I look sick" or needy for support ? "How are you" is as indiscrete as asking "how is your bank account and when had you make love the last time".
Relating to the 'generic' brands, maybe they're still setting this up in the US but in europe the generic brands Aldi sells are pretty much exlusive house brands and Aldi is very strict about quality. The stores may seem disorganised but the way they're managed is EXTREMELY efficient at logistics and making the best use out of the 'limited' size of the store (which in europe is easier to see how making a smaller store work saves a lot on costs bc real estate prices) For the OG Aldi shoppers: Olé= Léo
Yes regarding the generic house brands, which in many cases actually are produced by very well-known brands, just under a different name. It's a win-win situation: ALDI offers its customers a better price; the original producer will have lower product margins but essentially is guaranteed a very wide customer base. Here's a website that lists (left column) the discounters' products (e.g. discounters such as Aldi, Penny, etc), and the well-established companies behind these companies (right column). Please note that the first set of products are milk products; for other categories of products, one needs to click on the plus (+) sign. --> www.wer-zu-wem.de/handelsmarken/no-name-suche/ Some of ALDI's products, including wines by top-notch winemakers, have ranked very high in customer tests (e.g. comparison of price, taste, etc).
Generic brands are actually overtaking Europe. Some supermarkets are getting rid of any competition to their own brands. It a very profitable model because they use vertical integration. They not only sell products, they sell mostly their own products.
Yes, but 'their own products' are usually produced for them by well-known firms, but under a different name (and often with slightly different weight, etc). For these original brands, it is also lucrative to sell through ALDI. That the too ALDI brothers (who did not get along that well with each other, hence the division of Germany into ADLI Nord and ALDI Sued - same principle would be applied to Europe) are very clever is beyond doubt - they and their families were constantly among the richest people in Germany. The following website (among many others) shows the 'in-house' products and the subcontracted 'brand names' producing for ALDI under a different imprint --> www.stern.de/wirtschaft/news/aldi-eigenmarken--diese-hersteller-stecken-hinter-den-discounter-produkten-7241640.html#:~:text=Hergestellt%20werden%20viele%20dieser%20Lebensmittel%20aber%20bei%20namhaften%20Unternehmen.&text=Hinter%20den%20Erdnussflips%2C%20die%20es,zu%20dem%20Konzern%20Intersnack%20geh%C3%B6rt.&text=Deutschlands%20Discounter%20sind%20durch%20Eigenmarken,%2C%20Lidl%2C%20Penny%20und%20Co.
When I heard that people had to pay for shopping carts in Aldi, I thought this was odd and strange. But putting a quarter in as a deposit? We've been doing that in Canada for years! Even at Canadian Wal-Mart stores! I had not realized this was upsetting and frightening to Americans.
.....overblown reaction.....many, if not most Americans would not object.....they'd just give their cart to someone else in the parking lot who was going into the store.....
From experience at very different Aldi stores a little chit-chat with the cashier happens and so is welcomed. Though there exceptions depending on the cashier.
correct the European way, we see grocceries as a wharehouse not as a positive shopping experience. get in, grab al the neccesary daily crap fast and cheap, check out and do more importent things in life . Only for special things we take time in special shops. Thats why we are always anoyed when they change the layout in our local groccery shop so we have to learn again where al the stuff is
@Lawrance Ovarabia Me... they're generally very nice and friendly people & hospitable and courtious too... as well as smart, resourceful & innovative... not to mention their lager beer is the best in the world!
In most European countries cashiers sit, no one packs your groceries and you have to insert a coin in the cart, although many people have plastic or metal jetons that you can get for free. Paying less for my groceries is more important than anything, especially having small talk with the personnel as if they were mom-and-pop stores. The people writing those harsh critiques sound spoiled and entitled.
Exactly, we are going for the least expensive food and items, NOT anything else. Besides, anytime we really had a question at our Aldi we were able to be helped just as much as the American store. At the American stores we try to do the bagging anyway, as well as return the cart. We think it's awesome, the humane thing to do and very considerate to the employees if they can sit as much as possible while they work, why not! I like to sit whenever possible too.
True. for me it would be the other way around as I am accustomed since childhood that casiers sit behind the register, and hardly engage in smalltalk. Still the lack of known and diversity of products and the disorganised look of Aldi (and Lidl) was kinda off putting for me at fist, when they pulled up in my country. The price difference and quality of most of the products made it my goto stores though. Coffeepad quality for my Senseo is kinda lacking though.
European here: i even go as far as pre-sorting my stuff on the belt so they can be packed efficiently. For example, i always place the soda bottles, canned food and potatoes on the belt first, and the chips and bread last. This way the solid stuff ends on the bottom of the bag and the soft stuff on the top. The cashier will simply pull the products over the scanner in the order i placed them on the belt and i can quickly dump m in my bag in that same order. I usually check out within 1 minute, not enough for any small talk. I want to get out of other people's way as quickly as possible so they don't have to stand in line. It's all about efficiency.
What you describe is also my shopping strategy, in Germany. I get generic products and produce at Aldi for a really good price, and then go to a non-discount supermarket like Edeka or Rewe for brand or specialized items. You can't find everything at Aldi, but you do find a lot, and can save a lot of money by taking advantage of that.
Europeans aren’t emotionally attached to their groceries, it just makes practical sense to pack similar items together cold with cold, hard packaging with hard etc
Honestly, from what I've heard I feel like Americans have their priorities mixed up, they insist on wasting time and having a conversation when buying groceries but in restaurants, cafes or when just cooking and eating at home (which many apparently also rarely do) they rush through that instead of taking the time to relax and talk a bit.
This is a thing that was created by the corporate offices o the grocery chain's owners. THEY are the ones that insist their cashiers chat with customers. In 63 years I have never known anyone who complained that their cashier didn't talk to them. I have had cashiers get too chatty with me. I wish people would stop assuming that every video they see on TH-cam contains the gospel truth about everything.
From an American perspective, it's not really about chatting with the employee. Most stores have self check-out lanes so you can avoid that interaction altogether. If you review the video, outside of the "employee is rude" comments, most of the people who complain about the service were upset about not receiving assistance. If Aldi is a good representation of euro grocery stores, then you can tell American stores are much larger as she said. Maybe I want flour tortillas so I go to the Mexican food aisle but only find corn tortillas. I might look for an employee who can direct me to the bread aisle where the flour tortillas are. Or maybe I want a specific brand of granola cereal, but I dont see it in the cereal aisle, you might ask for help to discover it is actually next to the trail mix and jerky sections. I could see how you are used to a wider selection that Aldi doesn't have, and upon first visit you might want employee's help to figure out what they do have. And then become frustrated when you have to walk all over the store to find one.
Well......the Aldi way of doing things differs somewhat in the US from Germany and Austria (Hofer). I love shopping in Aldi in Germany and Austria (Hofer), but not really in the USA. I am from, and live in the UZA, by the way.
I never saw anyone in Germany packing his bag emotionally, I believe its rational. I was told as a kid to place the heavy and stable things at the beginning of that belt and place the items in that order in the bags, and it still makes sense to me since sensible items otherwise would get ruined.
Okay, I've never shopped at Aldi, but I'm sold. Cashier small talk annoys me. So do people walking up to me asking if I need help or welcoming me into the store. This sounds like a breath of fresh air to me.
I think the staff also like it as Aldi more than what customers do... If they have a lot to do or if they have things to think about... A, they can just focus on the job, B not have to worry about the customers feelings by faking interest.
Aldi are great, They also save money on AC apparently, As it's the only supermarket in my hometown, You can enter with sandals on and not get sick instantly.
Rita Roork This remark keeps cracking me up. The color of your skin does not matter one bit in this discussion. You are also not giving any real reasons, which make you seem a self-centered, entitled, immature “woman”, who is not self-sufficient enough to even handle the simplest tasks. I have a picture of a bigoted girl with rich parents, not having worked to earn your own money. Am I close? ;)
Rita Roork Oh, and by the way, the Aldi DOES NOT pay their employees to bag groceries, so that argument is invalid. If you want to buy groceries, but don’t spend as much as in other stores, you get what you paid for, and saving on these extra service costs is an easy way to lower prices. This should be understood if not welcomed by any price-conscious shopper but especially those with limited funds. Of course if you want the extra service and are ok with paying a little more, you’re free to shop elsewhere.
Brandon Martinez Could be, but it could also be her true opinion. I saw her mentioning this and similar racist things multiple times and defending her opinion. Also, she seems to be deleted from the comments now. People like that do exist, just like people who think it is acceptable to, as a minority, go protest fully armed and showing aggressiveness, insinuating violence to try and get their way or their point across, even though the majority of citizens does not agree, let alone that getting your way is even endangering your fellow citizens even more, because you want to lift the Corona mitigation restrictions. The “protest” could be seen as terrorism and the political view as inhumane and anti social. Yet, these people exist, look at the “protest” in Michigan recently. If that is true, Rita could also be serious in my opinion...
Swede here. Watching this I had the constant nodding of my head going on: “Yes, yes of course it would be like that. Aldi seems just like all Swedish grocery stores.” And then I saw the checkout and how everything was practically thrown back into the cart by the cashier: “What are they doing!?” In Sweden the moving lane where you place your groceries continue past the person registering the item and into a rather large and closed of section where you can bag your items in peace. This section as two lanes of its own (they split) so when one lane is occupied with someone’s groceries the cashier uses the other - alternating between the two lanes. If both lanes are occupied the cashier waits a little or if there isn’t much left to bag in one, begins placing the groceries at the top of the lane without pushing them down so that the items don’t mix with another persons items. Watching the cashier throwing the items back into the cart stressed me out lmao 😂
We also have got the same thing with split lanes in Germany for the "higher" priced supermarkets. And by "higher" I mean like normal ones that are not a discount store like Aldi. Discount stores prefer to use less space for the checkout section to have more space for the shelve area. EDIT: I now saw the part with the cashier at 12:55. I've never seen a checkout lane with that small amount of space at the end, even at Aldi. And I never had a cashier put stuff in my shopping cart either. Theres always at least SOME space at the end of the lane so you can put the things in your cart by yourself.
Yeah, the only thing I don't really see much of here in Sweden is the whole " leaving the stuff in its boxes" thing. That only seem to happen with certain goods
Luckily, most cashiers at Aldi either don't do that or are careful to grab only the stuff that doesn't bruise. But yes, that on-going moving lane is a lot better, it means you don't have to chose between hurrying and being in the way of the next customer.
It actually became like that with the shorter lane some years ago. In the past we always had long lanes, but it's more efficient now, so people have to pay faster. I feel sorry for the older people, it's hectic for them.
The first time I went to Aldi many years ago, I was helping my elderly aunt. The store we went to was not well organized (it had opened just a couple weeks before) and there was a big line of people who also had never been to Aldi. The experience was...not good. BUT, once I went by myself during a less crazy day, I came to really appreciate Aldi, and now I love shopping there. I especially love bagging my own groceries. I hate the way most baggers, often teenage boys who know nothing, crush fragile items, etc. I'm able to bag my items perfectly for my needs and to protect my food best. I also LOVE the "finds" aisle.
Regarding the shopping carts: If those complaining would actually bring back their carts, they would have known that they get back the coin. Hence I can only assume that they simply leave the cart wherever they want after shopping.
@Wynter Well, then just keep a single quarter for use in ALDI shopping carts that you never spend. As a European it sounds crazy to me not to carry any cash at all. Crazy.
That's one of the main reasons you have to put in a coin: to make you bring back the cart to where it belongs, so that no employee has to be bothered bringing stranded carts back because some ignorant customer left it right where he or she no longer needed it. It is a pity though that the coin of highest value in the U.S. is only a mere 25 Cents which, as it seems, is not enough to make some bring the cart back.
The silly thing with most generic brand food products is, that a lot of them are made by the same factory with the same ingredients or come from the same farmers, like the no-name products (or sometimes even same as other brands). The only thing that's different is the price for the companies image.
That is true, I work in a food factory in the UK, we make Aldi products, but we also make Marks and Spencer products (a very expensive store). We use the same ingredients from the same suppliers for both, recipes may slightly differ but they are ultimately the same thing.
Can verify, I worked at a Mr Kiplings for some months, but we also did products for ASDA and Sainsbury's on the little apple tart cakes alone. They do have to specify their own formulas though.
Yes maybe, but the problem is the the U.S is very money oriented. So off-brand product are not as good as the name brands one. If you buy an off-brand paper towel it will rip as soon as it's wet, but the name brand on will not. The cereals will definitely not taste the same. Dish soap will require more soap to clean, more water in the orange juice etc. So seeing off-brand product automatically makes you think of those things.
As a Dane (similar in many ways to Germans), the idea of in store greeters and compulsory small-talk at checkout abhors me - I seems so utterly insincere and commercialized. I don't want to bother those working and they don't need to bother me. But again, if we had the insane amount of items in the store, I might need all the help I could get to navigate!
I have been shopping at the same Publix for many, many years and you get to know the cashiers over time. The small talk in those instances doesn't feel insincere, it may be surface conversation but that's the definition of small talk. One example a months ago a I told a cashier "hey, store is almost closed and you get to go home." She dropped that she was leaving for Arizona in the morning for vacation. The next time I saw her I asked how her vacation was. That sort of thing. It's one of the reasons I avoid Aldi. I find it extremely cold and impersonal. The price difference isn't enough for me to shop where I feel like a cog in a wheel.
@@cgirl111 I'm a American and don't understand our American obsession with small talk. I don't WANT to get to know everybody. I want everybody happy, even happier than myself, but I couldn't care less about knowing them.
@@miriamcohen7657 "Insincere: I'm not sure why, but it is the typical experience for Germans in the US, that people are phoney and insincere, but I guess that matches that to Americans we Germans come across as cold.
@DuineFion Greetings from Germany (lower saxony) and I have to agree in regards to the similar thing, but with one small exception. As a lower saxon I feel like I have more in common with a Dane or a Dutch than someone from Bavaria. The culture and people are much more similar and sure we speak a different language and can't understand each other but at least it sounds familiar. I can't understand someone from Bavaria either, but to make things worse, it sounds foreign. (A little tongue and cheek but there is some truth to it.)
you walk into an aldi, as your walking around you see an item that has run out, you take the cardboard box and use that as a basket to hold your items, that's what I do here, saves them a job and you can recycle the box yourself instead of using plastic, its efficient not messy at all
I did the same thing with the cardboard boxes. The other customers would look at me funny when i was throwing out all the items to empty the box. But i got used to that look. Gotta say it was messy though ... :-P jk
"They don't wanna feel like they are another faceless customer" it's quite ironic that people living in the most profit-focused country on Earth don't understand that all the shop wants is their credit card. PS : if the cashiers rush that much, it's because they don't want to be fired for being "lazy", they have a terrible job and difficult quotas, so they won't act like they are living their dream life. I don't understand how most Americans can't understand that shop employees are human beings and not slaves that go take their cart and do all the shit job while the customer just sits there and waits
i guess it is because of the way people interact in this country. there are so many americans around that act fake compared to european standarts. so they just play the game as being told from a young age on. allways smile, allways be happy even if its fake.
@@svellice for us it's hard to say lazy or not like this aldi in Germany www.google.com/maps?ll=50.57309,6.26263&z=18&t=h here is one of our aldi www.google.com/maps/@41.18876,-87.85147,281m/data=!3m1!1e3 for easiest to compare take that map and zoom out a little walmart, bunch of stores on the right or even this walmart www.google.com/maps/@40.74503,-99.74157,565m/data=!3m1!1e3 they pay people to push carts less so because if it was same as aldi i don't think for safety at lest you want people coming back and forth to the store.. it would be easier just to pay someone to come out at certain times of the day to retrieve the carts otherwise like i said you will have lets say 10 people coming one way and 10 people going the other way (3 times) . while cars are pulling in or out as well
The random shopping aisle is my favorite part of Aldi lol. It's like Christmas..You never know what you might get... You can find great treasures and a lot of things you don't actually want.
Craft stuff, seasonal food and kitchen gadgets. I love having a rummage in the middle aisle! I find myself being tempted to buy a churro maker or a snorkelling set when I only went in for milk and bananas 😂.
Yes Our stores maybe over staffed by European standards which I disagree with but, if you need help you will get that help ASAP!! Also, our stores have a much larger variety of brands and goods convience and we don't mind paying more for the service and the larger selection!!!
What help could you possibly need while shopping in a grocery store? xD Tbh I can understand the brand part... I heard that the general quality control in the US is so bad that a brand can mean good quality as well.
@@sandornemeth5388 Wait until you get old and you will find out what help you might need in a grocery store. Oh, and here's one: This advertised item is not on the shelf where it should be - is it sold out, or did you place it somewhere else? 9 times out of 10, the answer is that they put in a different place and I couldn't find it.
I like to think of different cultures as interesting rather than strange. Germans have a stereotype of being cold and efficient, Alid's is German, is it a stereotype?
@Rita Roork The idea of having some random person bag my stuff up for make makes me feel uncomfortable. The only time we ever see people bagging up groceries is when there are people fundraising (children often pack bags to raise money for charity)
@@MonkeyButtMovies1 Same in Finland... I've probably seen teenagers doing the packing in my store twice in the past 15 years. And both times I gave them the tip (for whatever they were collecting the money for) and packed the stuff myself. I take my packing order seriously :D
"I am just a cog in the capitalist machine and the companies don't care for my or the employee's well-being, but darn, I want to talk about my life with those people, standing for hours for minimum wage and feel like they love me."
It's the last and most egregious of humiliations foisted upon the worker by capitalism. Not only do you need to work your arse off, on your feet all day, being demeaned by oversized toddlers, earning less than a living wage, without healthcare or labour rights to speak of - you have to *SMILE* and *MAKE SMALL TALK*, because Prickmart incorporated is a *HAPPY FAMILY*.
As an American, self-checkout is a godsend for me as I prefer minimal interaction with other people when purchasing things. I don't like plastic bags either. So I only buy enough to the point to where I can barely carry it with my hands lol That way I don't buy more than I need each trip to the store. I get tired of the: "Hi, how are you?" "Good, you?" "Good." "That's good." Depending on the person/cashier, if they're friendly, I will open up and discuss things but not usually. It's moreso, "I'm hungry now, so I want to get home as quick as possible to make the food I'm purchasing" lol
15:33 „cashier sitting while work .. are they lazy?“ ... the hight of the chair and belt combination is measured, so the cashier can work as optimal as possible - it‘s hard enough job anyway. To add an UNFAIR comment: if one American is not willing to see, that the cashier is a human being, that deserves the best as possible job-condition(like all humans do), so he can do the job for the customer in health, then the thought of slavery seems to continue on a different level TO ME. How can you expect to be treated well, if you do not tread others well? Sounds like something JC might have said.
Well if we are talking about Jesus Christ. He said treat others as you want to be treated. It had nothing to do with personal gain. Simply a statement of they deserve to be treated well simply because they are children of God. Not because you gain something from treating them well. Then secondly, standing isn't a bad thing. Do you have tall chairs for your cashiers at fast food stores? For cooks? Nope. I worked in fast food. Almost never had a chair or really even a break until the end of my shift. Never really even noticed until thinking through your comment. Honestly, I won't complain if a cashier has a seat because honestly, I don't care. If they do great, if they don't great. But employment is a contract. If you as the employee doesn't like the deal... Don't take it. However, comparing it to slavery is disrespecting the atrocity of slavery. To compare a job you get paid to do and can leave at anytime to a job you are forced to do and can only leave at the discretion of your owner.. Slavery is a total forced loss on humanity. Working is a contractually agreed exchange of goods.
@@natf6747 Most fast food chains in europe are american enterprises so they tend to treat the staff the american way, they have an turnover so quick you expect staff to change by the hour...
@@natf6747 No, but I think this ignores the issue that the food jobs require moving (granted in the kitchen less, but still moving around), while a cashier would need to stand nearly still the whole time. While moving is very exhausting it is way less damaging to the body than standing still for a prolonged time. Also for the food jobs standing is unavoidable, but sitting while scanning products doesn't impact your work; and if you give your employees the option to sit you make it a more inclusive job offer so people who are physically impaired and can't stand for a prolonged time have bit more opportunities for employment.
@@playse94 Well we can argue the health benefits of sitting, standing, or moving. But at the end of the day I think something we have talked about was hit on. You stated that cashiers don't need to stand because scanning is all they do. However, here in the USA that isn't all they do. Now could you do there job and sit. Probably, but I am not sure. But I guess to have a chair or not to have a chair really reflects on the cultural differences. In america the job of the cashier is to assist the customer. In some stores that even means carrying groceries. Thus they need to be able to move. Being efficient is important but here keeping the customer coming back is more important. This is hindered by a chair. Where as I guess in Germany, from what I have read, you can practically treat the customer as practically nothing. Only doing enough to do your job. So them, and their products are treated simply as a job. I grab, I scan, I put in cart. They pay they go away. I guess the difference is the mentality of customer service. However, apparently you are unwilling to extend this to the restaraunt world. Why is it more important that a grocery store cashier sit down then a fast food cashier? I mean. Couldn't they make it where you grab all your food and bring it to the cashier to scan and ring up? Why are there more expectations on a fast food cashier then a grocery cashier? To me it sounds like unequal work loads. In one area you expect to be waited on and in another you expect to be practically insignificant.
When I lived in Ireland for 9 years, as a German, I had my difficulties when buying groceries. Especially at older established chains like Tesco or Dunnes. Since we Germans tend to take things literally, i.e. the "How are you today?" from the cashier for us is not a greeting, it's a question. It took me a while to realise that they don't actually want to know how I am. It's just a greeting formula. :D There's so many tiny details that make a huge difference. Let me bore you with another example: I worked there in German customer support for an American company. At some point, the company decided to unify the process of handling the customer contacts, be it in live chat or on the phone - not a bad idea, really. But this even affected the way in which the customers were to be greeted. It had to be the same as in English. The German staff voiced concerns that this might not work as well as imagined because of the cultural differences. The superiors heard that but asked us to give it a try anyways. On the first day when the customers were greeted with "How are you today?" in German, we had reponses like "Not too well, I just had my chemo session." or "I just came back from my grandmother's burial.". So there's two options: 1) they replied truthfully, because they are German an were asked a question 2) they intentionally wanted to make the situation awful to show that they don't want to be asked personal questions. Anyway, we didn't have to stick to that greeting formula anymore after a few days..... surprise! ^^ Germans have a reputation of (in general) being blunt. If with "blunt" you mean "not polite", then I agreee and give that notion my seal of approval. We prefer being friendly over adhering to conventions of politeness. Of course, there are always exceptions to the rule.
I live in Spain and here not only cashiers ask how you are as a way of greeting you. People do it all the time and even after over 2 years of living here I still often times don't understand when people want to know how I am and when they are just saying hi xD
I grew up in Wisconsin and we've had Aldi here since I was a kid. My mom shopped there a lot when I was growing up, so it's completely normal to me. Aldi was my saving grace when I was a broke college student. It was the only way I could get a couple weeks worth of groceries for less than $50. I still shop there now because they have some pretty excellent products.
My brand loyalty amounts to: If I find something I like I get that something, I don't care who makes it. I've been buying the same instant coffee for years, I only noticed who made it two months ago. 🙄
I can't think of the last time I bought a branded product. We shop in Aldi and Lidl (in the UK) and I love the smaller size shops as it's much less overwhelming.
Well, there are some brands which genuinely taste better...ie I tend to buy the expensive ice cream because it tends to genuinely be the better one....and sometimes the no-name offer is actually the better one.
Maybe some additional/historical remarks: German shops haven't all been that way, it was Aldi inventing it and others followed. Aldi was always set to minimise all non essential cost - which allowed them to undercut other stores by far. Over time others simply adopted some of their cost cutting measures to stay competitive. So expect others to adopt car deposit over time. Deposit: Isn't using a deposit the most 'capitalist' way to handle the cart issue? After all, the deposit is nothing else than a reward one is required to set out for whoever returns the car. If done by the customer it just gets returned (and usually Germans are as thrifty to do so). But you may leave it as well at the parking lot - having someone else collecting the reward. It perfectly takes away the need for all customers to pay for cart return service and puts the cost at the ones who want to have that service. It seams as that's why some assume that they pay for the cart - which in fact is exactly what they do if they just let the cart at the parking lot - they pay for the service of someone returning the car. Shelves: Until the mid 80's Aldi had (almost) _no_ shelves at all. 90% palettes. Having shelves is a rather new development, dated from the time Brand name loyalty: Most of their products are made by brand manufacturers, just not labelled as such (well into the 90s customers could guess by the company address - until manufacturers used cover addresses to hide their involvement, protecting the brand). Brand loyalty exists in Germany as well, despite German willingness to use generic products if quality is right. Something Aldi had to learn the hard time. The key example are Haribo Gummi Bears, which were the only big brand product during the 1980s at Aldi - simply because people didn't buy them as much when packaged as store brand. They tried over more than a year having either or both. Service Personal: I always found it easy to get information about products from Aldi employees, no matter if it was in the US, Germany, England or any other country. Therre are always some refilling the shelves, so just ask - of course, one has to _actively_ ask, as due the way they operate, there are no idle employees ready to ask customers if they can help. Checkout: The US-Aldi checkout is in fact a combination of old time Aldi checkout with today's way like you described it. Aldi didn't add conveyor belts until the 90s. people just rolled their cart up to the cashier were already another cart was waiting turned around (set up in the morning or from the previous customer) and the cashier was simply moving the items from your cart into the waiting one while adding up - right hand moving the items, left hand keying in the numbers (they had to know the price of every item from memory). After paying one just took the 'other cart' and left, while the cashier turned your 'old' card around and served the next customer. So when conveyor belts were introduced Germans got the freedom to package their cars as they like :) At the same time they 'learned' to keep up with the speed of the employee. A crucial 'training' Americans are missing. So the US cashier section got designed to be like a mixed breed of both: Conveyor belt and scanners but the cart will be filled by the cashier. Speed: While Aldi cashier handling my seam incredible fast, up to being rude, to a German visiting a US Aldi, it always seam rather slow at times. This goes hand in hand with the perceived 'friendliness'. As a customer, it for sure feels nice to be recognised, but but then, checking out and packaging is about the least desirable part of shopping at all. One wants to got it's done. While selecting products may be fun, waiting in line and waiting to get charged is simply wasted time. So lets get that done as fast as possible - which also excludes self check out, as I will always be slower than an Aldi cashier - in fact, it's team work the cashier and me working together to get over this phase as fast as possible, keeping shopping a great experience. Bagging: It's again a cost issue, not as much about environment as some think. The bring your own bag or pay policy was already in place with the very first Aldi stores. After all, it cuts of a few cents per customer. It also did fit habits back in the 60s when it was still common to have your own bag anyway. In this sense, it's more like a surviving habit from times before throw away bags. Also, it's not so much about being emotional, but get them effective into as least bags as possible. Leaving a US store were a cashier fills the bags, or a dedicated bagger does so, usually means I end up with several times the number of bags I really need. Often a separate bag for each 2 liter bottle, some times even double bagged, completely contradicting the idea of using light wight bags.
Yeah, if I need to ask about where something is in the store, the usual question, I've never found it difficult to find an employee to ask. There is always at least a cashier, but I prefer to ask an employee who is stocking. Thanks for the detailed post. Another cost-saving measure: all products are bar-coded, produce is sold in bar-coded packages, not loose, and there are no prices on products, it's all done with shelf markers. Once in a while those are missing and there is a bar code scanner to get the price. A bit inconvenient, but this is what allows checkout to be so rapid. beepbeepbeep, as fast as the cashier can move those items across the scanner. No bagging at the checkout, all the goods going into a cart right next to the cashier, again, brilliant.
That's a good point about Aldi employees being familiar with what they sell. At some American stores when you try to stop someone to ask where something is, half the time they don't know because they don't even work for a store but some contracting company that just stocks the shelves! Actual employees sometimes can't answer questions because the store is so big nobody has any idea what they actually sell or don't sell and where it is (esp. Walmart supercenters, good grief they need their own zip codes! I once had to ask for directions out of the store because it was so big I could not find the exit).
I LOVE the "random stuff" aisle. I found a high-velocity fan once there that I was looking for cheaper (as always) than anywhere else in town. And Aldi employees seem to be a lot happier than employees at Walmart, maybe BECAUSE they aren't having a lot of small talk. It certainly doesn't bother me. I don't expect to be chatted up when I'm getting milk. I also like how small the Aldi stores are. Walk right in from your car, get your stuff, walk right out to your car. That NEVER happens anywhere else.
My mother told me that Aldis today have changed very much from what they started out as. At that time, they really had mostly "from-scratch" stuff - flour, milk, eggs, produce ... Of course they went with the times and now they have the basics of candy, chocolate, convenience food. And yes, they are the very bare bones compared to what's "normal" in the US. Naturally, us Europeans are just as confused and shocked by those small-village-sized grocery stores with 60 variations on the theme "ketchup".
But why is customer service even a thing. Go in and buy your freaking stuff. I don't like to get bothered by employees. I even hate it when they are stocking up the shelves during opening hours. This always plugs the ways...
Yeh and unlike most other UK supermarkets aldi don't even have a run off area on the checkout if you don't shift it fast enough back into the trolly or bag at 80 items per minute then it ends up on the floor Big advantage is that they are so fast that it dosn't matter if there are 3 or 4 people ahead of you, the wait is tiny. Although not as fast as before they had barcodes and the cashiers would key the items by hand, often faster than the conveyer could keep up!
In the Czech Republic the cashiers are giving the items to you and sometimes is really difficult to "invent a construction in a cart that won´t fall and the items won´t break" (especially with the glass packagings, heavy ones and items packed like yoghurts, creams etc. - we´ve already broke a few creams´ and yoghurts´ packagings at our local grocery store). I´d be so happy for some packers! I´ve seen word "packer" in a English picture dictionary and I couldn´t believe that something like this job really exist, I was so confused! XD
It was in, at least in the GDR(east-germany,) back in the 80's. Of course we didn't had an goods conveyor belt, so the cashiers put the items from yours into another standing right next to it.
Dutch grocery store experience: *walks up to cashier* Me: Hello Cashier: Hello -beep beep beep beep beep beep- M: That will be .... euro C: Card please M: Ok C: See you M: See you .. Cashier: Hello
And honestly, it can mostly be like that in the US. You just add “hello how are you” and then “hello I’m good” and that’s it. Y’all imagine this scenario where every American imprisons you and forces you to have small talk versus the reality which is being socially aware to recognize if someone wants to talk or not.
@@Kellydoesherthing The problem I had when being in the US is that when I didn't want this small talk I had the feeling that the cashier thinks I am an unsocial weirdo.
@@Kellydoesherthing I feel like "the problem" is not about what these interactions are really like in the US. It is that a lot of Europeans can't imagine why someone would want to talk to the cashier or want the option to do so. However.. in small towns where people just generally know each other, they would probably talk to cashiers and other employees, because they just know them. I also feel like regulars, who come in every day to buy lunch or whatever, would also have a chat.
@@Kellydoesherthing So in the end europeans and americans aren't much different, because the american "hello, how are you" is just longer formular without the meaning behind. XD @pialina "It is that a lot of Europeans can't imagine why someone would want to talk to the cashier or want the option to do so. " That's not it, but a lot of people just make a cut between privacy and job, because if you mix it, you can't be efficient and risk to lose your job.
Maybe it depends on city vs. village? I think in a city, its usually more or less hello-goodbye, but in a village there may be some smalltalk involved?
I agree. If asked, I would feel obligated to answer truthfully. I they ask how I am, I would have to reveal my inner thoughts to that stranger OR make myself liar and say "I am fine" (if I was not). I hate lying. Also, if cashier asked, did I find everything, what are you supposed to answer? If I say no, will the cashier stop working and go get my missing stuff and held back the full line of other customers who were already ready to be checked out? :D I would be really embarrased to hold the line like that.
I'm American and I don't like talking to cashiers. I don't like shopping in general. I want to get my shit and get out. Hell, most of the other people I know are the same way.
I'm an American that grew up with Aldi shopping. Before coin operated carts all the carts were not allowed to leave the store. Had to carry stuff to vehicle. Coin operated carts are great. Also Aldi is one of the highest paying grocery store. At least for me the people that work at the Aldi I shop at are very helpful and have great customer service.
Different in the UK, aldi work you to the bone and looking happy is a requirement for the job no matter how you feel. One slip up in front of a customer can lead to getting a strike/warning or even suspension without pay. It's high paying for a reason always remember that. The novelty will wear off for USA people soon enough.
I don't know about Aldi, but when I heard what Lidl pays their employees, I was actually surprised. I thought they paid minimum wage, but it was almost 50% more than that. Still not a lot, to be fair, but it's decent pay for the job.
The first few points, I was like, "They don't do that...? I thought everybody did that...." Efficiency, man. How different Canada is from her Big Brother...
When did standing - still - somehow make for a more efficient worker than someone sitting down, doing the same job, same pace, same "quality"..? Being a "hard worker" is not a good thing. It only nets you a broken body. Work smarter, not harder. You don't usually see people standing for hours on end in offices, do you? Employers want results, and ideally content workers - not sick leave because your knees are bust and you finally blew a disc. How on earth does you ruining your feet, knees, lower back, not even from lifting but frickin' standing there when it serves no extra purpose - serve your employer or customer? If you're manning a store and move around constantly, only by the register to ring up a customer and then off again - I get it. But if you're manning a register for more than 10 minutes at a time, you need some sort of chair. Just keep in mind posture.
It ‘shows work ethic’. (Don’t ask me what work ethic is. It basically boils down to a willingness to sacrifice your health and potentially even your life for your maste... er, the corporation that employs you.)
@@adiuntesserande6893 As if people in germany didn't show work ethic.. I think the do it even more. If your employer treats you well and cares for your health, you are more motivated and willing to give everything you got at work. This should be very important in the US because health care is expensive and the system is very fucked up.
The "small" variety at ALDI isn't just good for ALDI, but also for the customer - it helps to prevent decision fatigue. I usually find it relaxing to buy there.
Funny fun fact: At least at Aldi in Germany, there are more and more branded products. But behind many of Aldi's own brands are the companies of expensive brands. The cheap cappuccino from Aldi (brand "Combo") is actually made by Nescafé. The cheap dairy products ("Milsani") come from the companies "Müller Milch", "Arla" or "Milram" and these are actually the most expensive brands in Germany for dairy products. The recipe is slightly changed and is produced especially for the discounters.
Most times the recipe is exactly the same, because starting another recipe production line (or changing a running one) is way to expensive. Most of the time it is even the same package, just with another label. Most times you can tell by the package which company is producing the stuff. Just jugg in the "cheapo label" and let the line run on.
9:00 fun fact: Even tho the products have no brand name, they often are of the same quality, because they were produced in the same factory as the brand named products (the manufacturer is the same, the product just uses a different name).
Or, they were produced in a different facility and are not of the same quality. You won't know unless you try it. Or you can buy the brand name product and know what to expect.
@@richardlamm4826 Actually, you can look it up - there are pages on the internet which tell you what product at Aldi is what brand name product. And before you ask: nope, Aldi doesn't change their manufacturers very often (and if they do, the product normally looks different and most often has a slightly different name, too). Aldi as a company is big enough that all brand manufacturers are actually HAPPY to work with them (think of Kenwood or other "brands" form Sears or other big chains a decade ago, which in reality were from GE and other companies, too) - the German term for this business behaviour is btw "die verfügbare Kaufkraft abschöpfen" (I guess a translation would be something like "harvest the available purchase power"), which means that they want people to buy THEIR products, and if they cannot afford the brand name, then they at least should buy the no-name version of their product from THEM, and not something from another manufacturer (they still make money of those no-name products, just not as much as from the brand ones which are exactly the same in different packaging). Isn't business interesting? ;-)
Exactly Stefan. Lidl and Aldi makes deals with brand companies if they produce they stuff without the name on it, then they would sell it in their stores. If the company doesn't wanna do that, they won't sell their products at Aldi or Lidl. That's why Aldi and Lidl are so successful. With lil money you can buy good quality by big companies without paying their overpriced names on it.
My mom and I have been shopping at Aldi for years. We love it! I can actually get almost twice as much at Aldi as at WalMat for the same price. What many people do eith the carts is "pay it forward." Someone will give us the cart for free, and when we're done using the cart we'll give it to the next person for free. We don't mind Aldi brand food at all. My mother and I will greet the cashier, and we're usually conversing with each other while we're having our groceries rung through.(we do this pretty much wherever we happen to be shopping.) Our Aldi will deliver our groceries to our home now, which is incredibly helpful to me, ad I'm physically handicapped, and can't drive anymore. The Aldi setup doesn't bother me one bit! I'm totally okay with it!
As an American, my first time at an Aldi was very negative. I thoughts were: wow, where are all their employees at?? They must be in financial problems or something where they can’t hire enough employees. Why do I have to pay for a shopping cart, this cheap ass store. Why isn’t anyone bagging my groceries?? People must be on break. NOW, I know it’s not an American company, I can totally understand. I want to visit an Aldi again just to experience it again with a new perspective
@10:32 no germans are not suprised what they find in the "random" stuff isle ;) the supermarkets have leafleats about what will be in store the next week (usually the day of change is thursday) and on really well sought after items, there were already queues at the store on openening time. (most famous example was the first personal computer Aldi was selling, but it also happened for smartphones, tvs, bikes and similar)
I love how u make it sound like the Americans are being more open-minded by accepting the supermarket designs All of Europe and more other places use. But the Germans are bad for not accepting the weird systems that are ONLY accepted in the US. Did it ever occur to you that Aldi is doing well not because merica is more 'tolloret' of those funny 'German' ideas but because those ideas are simply more practical?
Exactly that! Aldi is successfull in a lot of contries and it keeps growing. Not because other contries are tolerating them, but it actually works. Aldi stores all over the world have a similar layout and you will never get lost. With a random isle for seasonal items that might be usefull in the upcomming days/weeks.
Aldi is simply cheap and offers good quality, that is why in the end people where ready to accept the concept even if it seemed strange? Brands in food are basically pointless, so the supermarket can cut prices quite a lot by eliminiating the middle man.
Lets be honest, its just the price. When Walmart was in Germany it wasn't exactly known for being cheap, so it had nothing special to offer that the competition doesn't. Whereas Aldi is cheap in the US as well and therefore liked there esp. from poor ppl.
@@carnifexx true,, it is about being cheap BUT also about good quality at low price... in Europe VERY VERY often Aldi (as well as Lidl) is located just next door to upper scale groceries. They complement each other. First you go to Aldi to get the standard stuff at a low price ... then you just walk 15m further to the next store and collect the specialities ...
As I was a kid I llways heard of America as "the country of freedom" ... nowadays I just think America is "the country of overweight man who cheer up an talking orange who is suposed to be their president"
I'm shocked by the Northern European way of rudeness, being cold as ice and generally I wo uld rather stay home where people act like human beings and not cold as ice cyborgs!! I woudn't mind visiting Latin America,where people act human not like a souless cyborg!!
I live in Canada. Here we have (The Great Canadian) Superstore. Shopping carts are a $1 deposit, and you have to bag your own groceries. I think Aldi would probably do quite well here.
Inthe uk, some shops will sell key rings with the 'coin' attached so you don't need real coinage in you pocket, you just attach your keys to the cart that are freed up when you return the cart.
I don't mind the smalltalk as long as they keep working while they do it. It's not exactly rocket science to scan and bag groceries, so they can chat while they're doing it. I know this because I was a cashier for a very busy supermarket for ten years. I hate it when they just stand there gabbing, whether they're waiting on me or anyone else. Luckily that doesn't happen often, most stores won't allow it. I know which ones do and I cringe when I shop at one and it happens, telling myself - again - that I won't shop there again. Unfortunately, the one with the chatty, snail-speed cashiers is the only one on my way home from work.
As an EU citizen, I love to shop at Aldi and Lidl. Although Lidl seems to have a little more diversity. I also love the "weekly deals", which Americans seem to think are "random items". I am very receptive to change, if it is for the better. I don't understand why people resist change so much. I like this quote from Charles Darwin: "It is not the strongest of the species that survives, but the one most responsive to change."
The random seasonal row is the best. It’s like a special bonus catalogue. They send out in the post each week and you get excited sort of like kinder eggs to see the new things. As an English/German person :)
@@debbiebankscell You do though in my experiences travelling to the US those aisles seem to always feature what feels like a rather excessive amount of themed decor and branding to make sure that even most legally blind people would be able to tell it was the seasonal aisle at a glance (Most can make out blurry shapes and colours to a limited degree). Least it felt somewhat overkill to me in most US stores and this coming from a British person so I'm used to a culture which features heavy American influences including having adopted that trend of overtly decorating seasonal aisles but it still felt like overkill in many US stores to me, regular seasons feeling more like Christmas type extreme. Christmas usually being more in your face here but that seems to be more to make it stand out as the whole store will be decorated for Christmas anyway so making a Christmas theme stand out in a store decorated with a Christmas theme is harder lol.
But by definition - they do offer things you never intended to buy. It's pure impulse shopping. That is not rational. In the shop you say "I could need it" at home you say "why did I buy this" ?
I moved from the US to the UK over twenty years ago and had forgotten just how incredibly spoiled most American shoppers are. The sheer vitriol in some of the screencapped comments absolutely floored me. Let's recap, shall we? No, it's not ridiculous for a store to reduce staffing costs (and encourage personal customer responsibility) by using a coin/keyfob system for cart retention. No, it's not "disorganised" or "dirty" to display individually-packaged food items in the same cardboard boxes they arrive at the store in. No, cashiers are not "lazy" for sitting down at the registers. (Why would you want to increase the misery of staff by forcing them to stand for an 8- or 10-hour shift, you selfish jerks?) No, they're not being "rude" by opting to ring up your groceries as quickly as possible rather than dilly-dallying with chit-chat. (News flash for Americans lucky enough never to have had to work in retail: staff at big chains like Walmart are punished for not putting on that fake "cheerful greetings" schtick. Perhaps you could engage in some basic human empathy and realise that overworked, underpaid staff are unlikely to be in a bright and bouncy mood and that you insisting that they put on such an act for your pleasure is cruel and entitled of you.) It's staggering hypocrisy for shoppers to demand products as cheaply as possible, but to then feign shock and dismay that this entails some minor compromises in how they shop. It also highlights a crass consumerist culture in the USA that couldn't give a damn about workplace conditions or the mental and physical health of the workers.
Also, cashiers engaging in small talk while there's a line behind you sucks for everyone in that line, too. I'd take a faster-moving line over an overly friendly cashier any time.
A comment about the "randomness" of Aldis selection of non-food products: This is basically part of their idea: They provide you with everything you need through the course of a year - but on their own schedule. For example you'll be able to buy kid's winter boots sometime during fall (just when you kids will be about to need new ones most likely!) and they'll be of awesome quality for a low price. Then, in winter, they'll carry snow shovels one week, warm jackets and thick socks the next and so on. Finally, when spring arrives, they'll provide you with most of your gardening needs and sell you new furniture for your patio a week after that. Good thing is that their stuff is mostly high quality and since they buy in bulk (or have manufacturers work for them directly) they are able to offer great prices and a very wide range of stuff. Several years back, Aldi started selling computers two to three times a year and caused a riot with people waiting in line hours before stores opened in order to get one of the computers because the price was just that good...
@@TheJH1015 Medion ONLY sell through supermarkets.Having said that my printer died and lo Aldi came to the rescue they were selling Canon printers. Again.
I got my keyboard (piano thing) at aldi about ten years ago. It‘s by far not the best you can get but it brought me a lot of joy. It also shows the notes on the little display so I was able to teach myself songs without taking lessons. I mean I have taken lessons in college years later because they were free. Only then I realized that a real piano‘s keys need a lot more pressure to give a sound. Took me a while to get used to but I have no regrets haha
17:05 you said, that germans are emotional about bagging teir groceries. I am german and don‘t think that‘s the case, but when we can sort groceries it makes a lot more sense. For example, we put milk and frozen stuff in a spezial cooled bag. In the other bags we put the heavy stuff in the bottom of the bag, so that nothing gets squezed. I don‘t think walmart cashiers sort it that well.
F B Walmart and grocery store cashiers are trained to keep frozen foods together, refrigerated foods together, meat, poultry, seafood and cooked foods separate from each other and everything else and bag bulk items together. They’re not savages.
@@afcgeo882 I lived in the US from 1984 til 1987 and the baggers I experienced were very efficient in packing groceries into brown paper bags. But I remember that they also expected to be paid for their services.
I wouldn't call it emotional, but I definitely have a strategy how I place products in the cart and later on the belt. Heavy and hard (or not delicate) stuff first so they got to the bottom of the baskets. Bottles in six packs stay in the cart and divide the heavy from the light. Cool or frozen stuff goes to a special container for camping or special bags when I come to the car. Mostly I do not use bags for the unrefrigerated stuff, but three big open plastic baskets that I have been using for >10 years and which are quickly filled. On the way to Aldi I bring along the empty bottles and cans for redeemer and the cardboard from Aldi products and return them both before the shopping starts. It is my personal logistics concept, if you will.
@@angelafriedemannnecef6984 Maybe at mom-and-pop stores, where there were baggers in addition to cashiers? At all the big chains, you don't pay the cashiers for bagging.
corporate does not train their employees anything because they think it cost more money to do so that is why many do not know the basic stuff in life, that is why customer service in the US lacks tremendously nowadays
The "random" limited non-food offers get me every time. Because they are gone the next week and are so cheap, I always feel like I need to buy them. Which I guess is the idea behind the whole thing.
They always see, where they get a good bulk offer for their thousands of stores and then sell them there as a limited sale. Just to always be the cheapest and get the people to look in their advertisement for new offers
Pizza goes splat Honestly, this is one of the things I like about them. If you are on a tight budget you can still get a lot of stuff that is relatively cheap and has an overall decent quality.
Well, since I can guess from your name that you're probably German, you should be familiar with the scenarios occurring every now and then at Aldi's entrance when they got extremely cheap offers. We don't need Black Friday in Germany, when Aldi can offer TVs for 300€ on Monday.
Very thorough view on American vs. German shopping habits. I think the reason why Aldi is successful in the US and Walmart had to fold in Germany is that the annoyances of Aldi are paid for by cheaper goods whereas Walmart asked Germans to pay extra for the annoyance. That's of course oversimpified especially since Walmart used price dumping in Germany. As a German I don't like shopping at Aldis. Americans are without a doubt right, the customer service is non-existant. But like you pointed out - that's the point! It saves cost and makes the products cheaper. So you have a choice. Surely Walmart offered something that hasn't been in Germany. But there was no demand for it either. I'm mostly put off by people who are constantly smiling. It appears fake to me. There are service oriented grocery shops in Germany like REWE. You will always find help there, all the brand name items, but it is more expensive. However they are still efficient. I cannot however concur on the emotionality of grocery packing. When I pack my bag it's heavy, solid items on the bottom, lighter and more delicate items on top so they don't get smashed. In my experience when a store clerk packs my bag, they bag it the way the items are checked out. Some products get damaged. So there is nothing emotional about that as far as I am concerned. Stay safe and healthy!
just what type of customer service do you require when picking up milk, cheese, mineral water, lettuce and some onions for example? In the US, I hated having to permanently fend off shop assistants hovering around me like outhouse flies instead of leaving me alone and letting me just do my shopping!
At most major grocery store chains in the U.S., the cashiers/baggers are specifically taught how to pack bags. They are supposed to put the heavier items on the bottom, as you said. They are not to put soaps or anything fragrant in the same bag as food. Things like that. In my own experience, I find that the vast majority of them do these things. Only when there is someone new or on a rare occasion does someone do it wrong. Or if I provide my own bag, which I'm trying to do, then they're kind of forced to put everything into the same bag.
Lets not forget the one thing, that Walmart had to face in Germany as well: worker rights. A company in Germany cannot forbid its employees to fraternize. Its against the law in Germany to try something like that and Walmart got sued over it by unions and lost.
I am Dutch and we have a lot of Aldi's in the Netherlands. The way the Dutch stores operate are like the German ones, with minor differences. Most of the differences between US grocery stores apply to the Dutch too. In my opinion most of the differences are not that bad. One however is: the attitude of the costumers towards the employees. These employees have a right to a safe and healthy environment and the right to a secure and well payed job. In this time they are the heroes that stay on the job and make the living in social quarantine for the other people possible thus preventing the breakdown of the health system.
That's why I'm currently thanking those people each time I go shopping and tell them that I wish them health and strength (especially to deal with the annoying irrational customers and the workload)
They do? A right to a secure and well paid job....??? Wow....thanks interesting, I have never heard of a place where that was a right. We have a right to quit our job if we don’t like it , demand more pay, or go to work somewhere else. It is basically all based on supply and demand I guess. The more skills one has, the more pay that he/she can demand, as long as those skills are in demand they will have a job. It’s interesting how other countries do things. The only question I would have is, how does one define what is well paid??
@@ike7933 Would you wish someone a non-secure job that is badly paid, Ike? And on what grounds? Do you think someone working at a low paid job therefore must have a lack of skills? Do you think skilled people who have skills that are not in demand should starve?
This is so good. I knew I hated Aldi but didn’t know why! I’m Australian so Aldi hasn’t been around that long. The latest toilet paper shortage changed my mind. We had tried out biggest two supermarkets (Coles and Woolies) and no toilet paper. I sat and waited for my daughter to go into Aldi to get some wine and she came out with 4 rolls of toilet paper! The cashier asked every customer if they wanted to buy some Toilet paper. She had some hidden behind her. I nearly cried because I was down to two rolls between 4 adults!
smalltalk with a cashier? i would never ask one how he or she is doing, when i know he or she can not answer honestly. hallo. (hello.) guten tag. (good morning) beep! beep! beep! ... ...das auch von Ihnen? (this is also yours?) ja. (yes.) beep! ... ... macht 22,40 bitte. (it's 22,40) ... 25, danke. (25, thank you) 2,60 für sie. (2,60 back) danke. ( thank you) schönes wochenende. (have a nice weekend.) danke, Ihnen auch. (thank you, you also.) that's all you need. no false blabla and grant them the freedom to be faceless
Yeah, those empty phrases have always given me a bad feeling. I used to work for the US Army at the end of the eighties. My boss, a captain, always asked me how I was when he came to my office. At one time I just felt like saying that I'm not well (although I was quite okay) just to see his reaction. He didn't react at all by asking me why I wasn't well. He didn't care and ignored my answer , just another empty phrase, small talk, no real interest in my well being. That is exactly the difference between Anglosaxons, US as well as UK, and continental European mentality. So glad to be living in Europe :).
I work as a cashier in an American Aldis and I can say that it's really difficult trying to make small talk when I'm trying to move customers through the line. The company really does encourage efficiency (so do I), but when I'm trying to ring up a line of 3-4 people quickly while also trying to accommodate America's small talk culture, it can be a little frustrating...especially when I don't mean half the things I ask or reply to.
Frankly, as an American, I'm fine without small talk from the cashier. I've been queuing for 10 minutes, the last thing I need is a chatty cashier. Get it rung up and get me out!
I am American and have worked in two different grocery stores. Once when I was a teenage and once about five years back. Neither time were we over staffed, in fact both time and in both stores we were understaffed. Because we were understaffed all employees worked various parts of the store not just one area. Now this might not be true of every store in the US but many stores are under staffed and employees work more than one area.
Depositing 25 cents for a cart really isn't a bad thing and it makes sense why stores do it. I think the main reason it would be annoying is that most people do not carry cash/coins at all. Also almost everything we use now is going toward cards, even vending machines.
I completely agree with cashiers being able to sit. There is absolutely no reason they need to stand for their whole shift. This is definitely something that does need to change.
Maybe this is because I am American but I like it when the cashiers make small talk. This to me is more of a culture thing as we do tend to talk to strangers more often and enjoy conversation. I do understand why Aldi has it's cashiers not make small talk and I wouldn't rate it lower because of it.
Bagging your own groceries is kinda hit or miss for me. I've had cashiers put my bread at the bottom of a bag with cans on top, soooo yeah sometimes I really want to bag my own groceries. However, my first job was bagging groceries (and other duties) and I was grateful to have that job. It was also my job to get the carts from outside. I actually really loved that part because I got to go outside. So even though those things may make Americans seem spoiled and/or lazy to others, for me it gave me a job and a paycheck. I did not mind doing either and it was a great first job. Also got to help little old ladies take their groceries to their cars, had great conversations, and meet really cool people.
I do not understand why being able to ask employees a question makes us stupid and/or lazy. Granted some people are entitled and lazy, I have met them while I working in grocery stores. Then again I have met just as many people who have really tried to find an item and just can not find it. She even says in her video that we have much much more product. Being able to get assistance while in any store should be a bonus not a negative.
I think the thing that makes me feel sad about all of this is that the comment section is just filled with a whole lot of hate and negativity. So what if our cultures and stores are different? Why should our differences make others feel superior or right? This goes both ways.
You make a lot of great points. Thank you for sharing your perspective, especially as someone who has worked these jobs
German person here, "I do not understand why being able to ask employees a question makes us stupid and/or lazy", I don't think it does, either :D It's often enough I run around the store trying to catch some employee to ask something!
But of course it comes at a price, Aldi probably couldn't be as cheap as they are if they employed enough people to reliably have someone available to answer customer questions.
The reason for the coins is that Germans love their cash money. Everyone carries it around. So it's almost never an issue in Germany. They fail to realize that the world is changing around them though. Cash is becoming more and more of a legacy product. So yeah, I can fully understand the complaints in those reviews.
@@g3n3r3x Absolutely. Plus - I think lumping all the german grocery chains together is not correct. REWE & EDEKA for example are much more like the typical american grocery store. Well - minus the small talk ;)
I worked at a regular grocery store and was a Bagger and got carts and it is true alot of times we were short staffed also liked getting carts but I prefer so much working at aldi even though I do feel like I break my back there the extra services grocery stores give to customers in América made me feel like it goes way over there head they become spoiled want the World from you and make request alot of times in a rude way like your their servant and I don't miss bagging but eventhough my old store was under staff it does not compare to the pressure of aldi and I like your point of view but being in both set ups I prefer the European set up much more
American cashiers have to stand the whole time? That's barbaric.
I agree. Anyone like me who has ever had back problems knows it is torture to stand still for hours! If I walk around I'm not so bad but if I stand up long in one spot I'm dead meat.
Barbaric and completely unnecessary when people bag their own stuff.
Yea they do and I think most Americans other then old people would agree with you but the corporate makes them.
My sister worked at a grocery store in the US for a summer. They were forced to stand during their whole shift, they weren't even allowed to lean on anything. She was complaining every evening that her back hurt, despite being a young adult with no prior back problems. US unemployment rates are low compared to Europe, but the price is laborers' rights...
My friend works in an Australian grocery store and does the self serve area. They have to spend the entire stift walking around in a figure 8 pattern seeing if people need help. Gets the steps in at least. I do love aldi though
As an European I’m totally confused about why you would talk to your cashier
Laura you have a bit of that in the UK and it’s quite nice actually. That’s the one things that I would bring from the US. I don’t like vendors to talk to me while I am browsing but when it comes to ask or to pay it’s very nice and you feel connected to people around you.
Because they're a human being and not a robot? American here.
But why fill the air with sensless talk, that has no deeper meaning attached to it anyway? Never made sense to me, im not making friends there, i'm buying food. Nice, quick greeting and a smile should be enough for both sides.
@@JGirDesu Absolutely. Nothing frustrates more than to go an entire day working around people who never speak to you at all. It makes you feel like a lower-class person unworthy to be spoken to. I also hate when people give you their money or take their change as if they're afraid to touch your hands at all.
I live in London and while the big shops always have different employees working there and whatnot, the smaller tesco express or co-op down the road is staffed by a handful of people that you see often and you might talk a bit and know them by name.
I lived in Korea for 21 years, and none of this was unusual to me. America is the odd country when it comes to supermarkets.
Yeah xD I saw so many videos of people living in other countries and saw videos of people who came to Germany and ooof .... Also some things that didn't got mentioned in this video is the difference to other types of German grocery stores compared to Aldi. I'm from Germany and live here my whole life. We have a lot stores from other chains here like LIDL, Netto,... who are very similiar to Aldi wich means small stores, just a small hand of brand items but many non-brand stuff, random shelfs in the middle of the store who have offers like one week its DVDs, the next week its "As seen on TV" the next week they sell stationary,... you know what I mean and we here in Germany call them "Discounter" and you really see why. It's not only cause the non-brand stuff is cheaper as brand-items but also the brand-items they sell are often (not allways) a bit cheaper. So for example a supermarket has a brand of chocolate for lets say 1€ it could be that the same chocolate in the discounter is 0,98€ and so on.
Similiar to Aldi all stores also have a section for baked goods so there will be a small maybe 1,5m tall oven where they head up the whole breads and all 1 or 2 times a day per type of pasty or bread they sell so you get fresh breads in the morning and sometimes even around noon. Other than that you just find shelfs of the different food items and even a small selection on stuff like diapers, periodpads, deospray, shampoo,... some discounter even sell makeup like each piece 1-2€ etc. and a small selection of food for animals and so on.
Mostly all stores also have a shelf with cigaretes (depending on it you eighter ask the cashier to open the front so you can grab a pack or you have to press a button on a mashine and than the pack of cigaretes comes out) or single wraped candy like 1 single kinderriegel or bubble gum etc. sometimes even stuff like toothbrushes, condoms, pregnancytests, cheap glasses, cheap colectable toys,... next to the cashregister. Many stores also use the shelfs next to the cashregister to display giftcards or cards for when you have a mobile phone so you can buy the card and than have enough money on your phone to call someone again etc.
If we go now away from that there are the normal type supermarkets. First of all : Do not trust the Americans who visited Germany and pretend that ALL supermarkets would be tiny. Sure our stores are not ass HUGE as those in America, but there are still a lot stores that are quit big. You will often find the very large grocerystores in Germany eighter in big cities cause of cause the more people, the more food has to be sold or what I noticed since coming around Germany a bit that the super large stores are also often in the industrial area cause the halls are large that the store can rent or if the city happens to have a big mall outside the city than they place a bigger supermarket next to it cause large malls atrackt many people to visit and mostly such people think at the end of the day "how about I pick up some bread and don't have to go to the supermarket tomorrow when I'm allready here..."
The larger supermarkets have often also a big shelf for stuff you can eat on the go (yes people in Germany eat on the streets while walking around and even eat in the train or when waiting for the bus etc. ( you can eat in pruplic transportation only in the train, because its considered rude to eat in the bus. The rule in Germany IDK why is that you might take a long trip in the train and just a short one in the bus so they say its ok to eat in the train cause nobody knows how long you have been traveling allready). Some popular items to take with you from these kind of shelfs are milk coffe drinks, milk shakes, smoothies, small salads, sushi, even single packed boiled eggs sometimes.
Also you find in the supermarkets larger areas for baked goods, often even a meat or cheese counter, sections for medicine or stationary, sometimes depending on the store size they might even have sections to sell a small selection of decorations or clothes or even games and toys. Popular for "very large" grocerystores where you find almost everything from food to toys to makeup and even sometimes bycicles would be for example REAL (REAL-Einmal hin, alles drin). The store is so big that you might forget where you got the items last time from or if its your first time going there you think "huh... all this cheese but where do I find some yoghurt?" cause its more as in most stores. Even tho REAL is very big other stores can be big too even tho its not as big as REAL. The biggest store in the town I curently life is a KAUFLAND and its from what I was used to from where I grew up a big change cause the store is larger as the stores in the town I lifed before.
BTW if you think German stores had only small selections of items, than you are wrong. Especially when it comes to gummy candy, chocolate, cookies, meat and yoghurt you will find in most stores sooooooo much different types and brands and stuff.
Oh and mostly if a supermarket sells stuff like sandwichbread but has no isle for baked goods than there will be often a bakery inside the supermarket too so you can get other types of bread.
Also a thing is that some malls here in Germany also have grocerystores inside. In the town I live there is a mall in the city center with like 20 stores in it and one is a grocery store wich is the main reason for people to even go there (other than that the town is pretty dead IDK why but all shops are empty. Some people say its 1) the fault of the people who build the mall cause since it exist all shops closed down and some stores moved inside the mall 2) because a lot cities with 110-500K citizen are very close so people preffer to go shoping somewhere else)
Amen for this. They are odd not rest of world.
@@ACEsParkJunheeWreckedMeHard Du bist mir ein wenig (that's mean a lot of)(thats i'm editing) zu deutsch! Warum sind wir deutschen so? Ich verstehe es nicht! Du musst nicht immer recht haben! So ein Kommentar ist einfach peinlich! Ich konnte das nicht mal komplett antun! I hate this German Mentality!
i agree with you completly and I am from Southamerica! (Argentina)
@@ACEsParkJunheeWreckedMeHard Though REAL is the biggest kind of store in germany they aren't even as big as a regular walmart in the US. In my town the real is aactually in the buidling that was a walmart back in the day, but there's also a saturn and some other stores in there. Globus is also pretty big.
The plain ignoring of German working rights was the reason we threw out Walmart.
Walmart ignored working rights and had no idea what customers expected. Germans don't want to be "welcomed" when entering, they are able to pack their groceries themselves and don't need any help. Furthermore, people in Germany don't really like that superficial kind of friendlyness. We are usually friendly to the cashiers by saying hello smiling, thanks.etc. We don't want be be asked personal things like how we were doing as no cashier is really interested at all and it's just an empty phrase although I grew up in an anglosaxon commonwealth country. I have never understood the sense of small talk, especially not when in the Supermarket. I buy what I need and then I'm always very keen to pay and get out as quickly as possible. I go to a supermarket to buy food, no more and no less.
They also violated anti-Monopoly laws with their predatory pricing practices. And in general were absolute clowns who had no idea about the market they tried to enter. Walmart's german venture was essentially a giant pile of hubris, arrogance and ignorance.
Walmart is garbage
Your country is guilty of sending your products to China to have them made. The once great Germany is now leading the woke community and climate change hoax.
Americans: the cashiers sit down they must be lazy
Also Americans: complain when theres nobody to bag their shopping for them
So, muricans can't bag their own shopping?!?
@@sablatnic8030 apparently not seeing as half the reviews bitch about having to do it for themselves
@@sablatnic8030 the supermarkets in America the cashier or bag people bag the groceries. It is part of the service supermarkets provide.
@@eduardocruz4341 There is only the costumer to pay for that service, except most of the employees aren't paid a living wage anyway!
In the rest of the world people would rather pack their purchases themselves to avoid heavy stuff on top of fragile stuff, frozen stuff with things ruined by frost etc!
@@sablatnic8030 I am just stating what is done in American supermarkets. The bagging of groceries is done by the store employees. And for the most part, they are pretty good in separating groceries appropriately when bagging them at least in my experience.
Replace "German" with "European" and you get the point. Greets from the Netherlands
Juist ja, De Albert heijn is gvd geen buurthuis. Niet lullen maar poetsen :p
Same in Lithuania
@Lumiel not really. my mom is Portuguese but my father is Dutch. And Aldi, looks the same in both countries. i avoid it like the plague cause usually its located very far from the city or around. For example, jumbo and Albert heijn look like the typical american supermarket.
@@DForce26 Best part of the Netherlands is albert heijn
Same in here/Poland:)
I do find it ironic that the most capitalism-centric country in the world feels insulted when faced with naked capitalism
Some people prefer their capitalism sufficiently disguised I suppose.
a brilliant remark. you made my day :-) thank you!
trueee xD
This is beautiful. A much appreciated comment.
You're kidding yourself if you think capitalism exists today. By definition you need to have a free market in place to have capitalism.
'Crapitalism' as we know it today, is in fact just politely disguised socialism.
Watching this cashier be so fast on the one hand makes my german efficiency happy but on the other hand triggers my german anxiety to be faster than the cashier with packing the stuff 🤪
thats just an opportunity to do a friendly race against a professional. a bit of competition is always fun
I have become faster over time, but they still beat me. I usually hang at only one or two items, and in that moment I loose the race XD
Me, a German, totally understands this. 😅
Yeah I really miss the Swedish check outs when I go to a German supermarket, in Sweden we have the same kind of mechanised band where you put your groceries at the front of check out, but when the cashier has scanned the barcode or weighed your vegetables, they put you wares down another band down into a big catch up area that is divided into either 2 or 3 sections so you can take your time to pack everything while the cashier has moved onto next customer, the cashier just uses the next section of the catch up area to put next customer's wares. Same speed as in German supermarkets from the cashier but you don't feel like you have to be a speeddemon to keep up.
ah yes the race against time, as the aldi cashier swoops item over item over the desk, faster than your hands can grab and bag them
and then you pay and do your best to grab everything, even still unpacked items and waddle away, making space for the next customer, to an empty space to pack them right :,)
German grocery stores: Treat customers like independent adults and do their jobs without ruining their backs and knees
US customers: HOW DARE YOU!
Normal day in germany
Thats what i thougt. Are all Americans like 3 year old Kids? Please take my Hand and Show me what to Do... Im soooooo lost. Greetings from germany. 😂😀
Gosh we do learn a lot of independency in Germany if you think about it, especially if you have parents who are like:
"Oh, you are 18 now? GOod Luck surviving, we are no longer obligated to support you in any way :)"
(Spoiler: Actually most of the time they still are)
You mean employees not customers
@Rita Roork One would think the America saves the world meme would get a bit stale after 75 years. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I'm actually stunned to find out that cashiers have to stand their whole shift in the US! That's awful.
Yes I imagine it is :(
@Rita Roork This comment seems like sarcasm...I really hope it's sarcasm. Please don't tell me my sarcasm detector has failed, I'm British so would no longer be able to function if that were the case.
@Rita Roork what a shit thing to say! they are not your servants, they are employees doing their job, or would you say you are your Boss's servant and not employee?
When I was 17 I worked at a certain popular fast fashion shop in the UK and had to stand for my whole shift too. :( I had to work a minimum of 5 hours to get a break, and even then it was only 15 minutes. Despite the fact I wasn't at school and my schedule was 100% flexible I kept being handed 4 hour shifts just so I wouldn't be able to get a break 🙄
Also you were NOT allowed a water bottle on the shop floor or behind the counter, so everytime I needed a drink of water I'd have to go in the lift to the staff room, and I felt like my co workers were mad at me whenever I had to go because they would have to cover my area of the shop for me while I was gone.
American here. American corporations take the viewpoint that if a cashier leans or sits at all during their 8+ hour shift, they are lazy. (Yes, sometimes, especially airports, cashiers work longer than 8 hour shifts on their feet... with only a 30 minute lunch break.)
If you can't stand your whole shift, then the corporation will hassle and hound you about your lack of self-discipline, laziness, etc. You're expected to be an automaton for the company and cram their 5 minute schpeal into the 2 minute interaction with your customer. Offer every addon under the sun, ask for donations to charities to help the corporations bottom line, mention credit card offers, rewards programs, etc. etc. etc. If you forget one, you get written up for failure to comply to "corporate standards."
I highly suggest avoiding retail jobs in the US if you ever look for employment in the US.
The contradiction of seeing the cashiers sitting as “lazy” but also being mad that there’s no one to greet you because they are all busy stocking or checking people out 😅
Polina Ogboh there’s people who are greeters dumbass
I'd find it strange if someone greeted me at the supermarket. I'm there to do my shopping not check into a hotel. Lol
@@rtsharlotte also.. workers do greet you when you pass them
Where do you live? No one in America gets mad when there isn’t a greeter. Everyone knows they’re not necessary it’s just a way to give people with disabilities a job.
When I went to the US grocery stores felt really awkward, like some employees jobs were just to welcome people, or the fact that the cashier would bag your items for you, I think it makes the customer feel like a child.
I don't like the sound of that, I think I might try to find an Aldi when I go.
Maybe it makes Europeans feel like children, but in the U.S. it is just good old fashioned American customer service Mike of Korea, We invented Supermarkets , so it is the rest of the world that is wierd not the U.S. By the way bagging groceries and collecting the carts gave me a job as a teenager 150 dollars a week.. I had my own money not bad and I'd take that over the rest of the worlds way of doing things in Supermarkets..
That's because Americans ARE children...
@@umutkarzai9190 One can make money at a supermarket as a teenager in Europe too. You just do other things (stock-up, cleaning, work at the cash register).
@@eknaap8800 Well, Those children have kept Europe from erupting into war by keeping the REAL CHILDREN from starting a new World War Europeans have a long history of causing wars and dragging the whole world into their wars!! Why do you think the the U.S. still has more than 399,999 troops in Germany and in other parts of Europe! Children don't produce unemployment rates as low as 3.4% such as it was just, before covid-19.. Maybe you should look at yourself, before calling other names, maybe your projecting your nature and actions onto others.. Europeans also have a tendency to do that as well..
The most German thing ever .. go to the grocery store without bags and use a box from the store to transport your goods home.
This happens in the UK too!! 😂😂
Its a good re-use for something that went in the trash can! Greets from Austria, we do this aswell
Greece as well lidl tho
M M … Sure or take a box and leave it in the shopping cart for someone else to get rid of after your stuff is in your car. Love those people! On the other hand that is getting harder to do because in many stores the merchandise is no longer on the shelves in the boxes as it used to be years ago.
I did/do that here in Queensland.
As a German, my interaction with cashiers consists of "Hallo", "Danke" and "Tschüss". That feels like enough of a personal connection 😅
That’s all it has to be in the US too :) nobody forces you to talk
Sometimes "mit Karte"
you forgot "mit Karte bitte?"
I was raised polite! I add "schönes Wochende" and "schönen Tag noch", at least sometimes.^^
As an American who understands VERY little german, but spends a lot of time in Germany, I love this about Germany! I can go grocery shopping and know exactly what to expect.
Cashiers aren’t servants. Why should they stand?
Andrea Clyndes’s Because most Americans have an inferiority complex, it comes from being derided as a new country with little history, no culture and an appalling education system. They therefore like to make their low paid workers suffer publicly, it makes the customers somehow feel a better- that they are superior, worthy of the "service" they are receiving.
Because to most Americans a job that involves customer service makes the person doing it a servant, and therefore the belief is that they should be treated as such.
@@spencerwilton5831 Ironically inColruyt you also have to stand and it's considered one of the best employers. (Pay might have something to do with it)
Of course Cahiers are servants. Cashiers, sales clerks, barbers, waiters and many more are all servants. I am sure that I would either never work as a cashier or if I had to I would stand most of the time through my own free will. Sitting constantly makes people lazy and sick. It is very bad for blood circulation and can lead to or at least induce major health problems. That is why doctors started recommending that people go jogging, to the gym, ride bikes and so forth as more and more people started sitting in front of computers all day long.
@@wout4yt the difference is that in Colruyt they walk around, switch your items to a different cart and then have to walk to register. American cashiers literally have to stand in one place. Imagine a delhaize cashier but standing all day. Also, colruyt employees rotate during one shift, 'regular' cashiers usually don't.
It's pretty easy: Aldi isn't just doing all those cost-cutting measures; they are actually forwarding those as cheaper prices for their customers. So, at the end of the day, you can have a cart pusher, a guy twiddling his thumbs all day for customer service, two more cashiers than you actually need, smalltalk at the checkout and a bagger, or you can have another shopping cart full of stuff you can actually eat.
That one comment you showed in your video was "I will gladly drive down the road where I'm treated with respect". You can't eat respect, you can't eat smalltalk. Pragmatism is why Aldi will continue to thrive in the US.
I shop at several different types of grocery stores, depending on who has the best sales. First, there are NEVER more cashiers than you need. Usually, there are several checkout lanes that are closed. Most stores don't have baggers anymore; either the cashier bags the items, or the customer does. No one I know cares about small talk, but it's often mandatory for the employee to do it because corporate thinks it makes the store look friendlier. I shop at Aldi, and while they have many good deals, they also have a very, very small meat section, and they don't keep their vegetables and fruits cool, which means they probably toss out a lot more for spoilage than the stores that do keep their produce cool. And their prices overall are not THAT much less than the average supermarket.
@@hodgeelmwood8677 About the only small talk you get these days is "did you find everything?" and they don't care if you did or not, no one says thank you anymore. As for customer service desks, they're not twiddling their thumbs, they're working harder than anyone else in the store.
Hodge Elmwood, You are crazy, the prices at Aldi's are nearly half the prices at the regular super markets. Their meat and produce selections make not be as bountiful as the regular market, but everything one needs is there, and at a very high quality.
You don't need to refrigerate most produce, especially not in an air conditioned store. That's another weird American thing.
@@athleticguy15 I have been to Aldi on a few occasion, but I have NEVER found anything in there with prices any different than I have at Food Lion. Hell, it's the reason why I first decided to try going there.
You talking about how Aldi is different, I'm just thinking it's exactly like every supermarket in Europe lol
Aldi is in Germany called a discounter and Aldi ist not a supermarket. On the one Hand Kaufland, Rewe Edeka and Penny are Supermarkets they sell a wide variety of brand Products as well as self brand products. The Stores are really big and clean but on the other hand there are discounters like Lidl, Netto or Aldi this Shops sell mostly self brand Products that they are self producing. This Shops are like Aldi wich you see in the Video above, but real german Supermarkets are like Wallmart, for instance Kaufland has a own service Center for Custumers in each store .
@@oldhelldog5460 that maybe true, but all of these supermarkets have adopted almost all of Aldis philosophy, the .99 prices, to only open boxes instead of unpacking them, you'll only find people already working on something and never waiting to simply welcome someone, also they are allowed to sit (as they should)
Except this one doesn't have emthat section in the end where u can bag your food
@@rainmeh4255 u use the benches at the windows. they are there to pack ur stuff ( by ur self of course)
@@oldhelldog5460 In the Netherlands we call the Aldi a supermarket. Our Aldi sells their own brand, but also A-listed brands.
So...
Americans: why are the cashiers sat down...how lazy is that?!?
Also Americans: How dare they expect me to take my shopping cart back, and pack my own groceries?!? 🤔🙄
Exactly! Jeez so many of these people sounded so entitled and hypocritical.
@Rita Roork With them low wages one could question if you really paid for much service at all.
@Rita Roork Sounds like a lot of White American Women are over-entitled twats
Learn some proper grammar, like the difference, between the past tense and the continuous tense.. I know smart asses have to come up with so called glib answers except your ans. aren't glib nor intelligent!!
Hey, blame the unions who demand these weird "separate bagging person, separate cart person, stockers can't work the cash registers" BS.
As an introverted American, I really like Aldi. My shopping trips there a quick and efficient and don’t break the bank and I hate small talk in public.
I can imagine. As an introvert European I remember feeling rather uncomfortable when i lived in the U.S, and had to go to say Wallmart. Employees greeting me, asking me how my day was, beaming& smiling all the time.. I felt obligated to put on a phony smile,& respond ..Not offending anyone took more enrgy then the shopping itself... . ( I'm 'exegurrating offcourse, ..but stil..)
Let me ask you this though. As an introvert, did you resist using the self check-out because you didn't know how to use it and did not want to look like an idiot when you first tried? I am very tech-savy, but I still had to wait till I did my shopping when the place was dead before giving it a go. After using it once, I now prefer it.
.......try self-serve checkouts.......unless you particularly prefer the whole 3rd world atmosphere of aldi..........
@@chrisgermo1956 How is a well-stocked grocery store "3rd world"? Have you ever been in a "3rd world" country?
@@chrisgermo1956 European here, and Aldi isn't a 3rd world geocerie store. It's a good "little" shop, and it's like this for a lot if grocerie store.
"Beggars can't be choosers." Something that Americans themselves often don't understand. You pay less, you get less service.
I've visited the USA a couple of times and always was annoyed with the overpriced food. Yes, the stores are big and have a very large selection, but in the end the customer is paying for that.
I'm a german and if the cashier would try to have small talk with me everytime i want to pay for stuff I would search for another store.
No one forced you to talk...all you have to do is not talk haha
+1 😂
@@Kellydoesherthing well, that's not true. You can't just not talk when someone says something to you. So you have the choice: Do a fake smile and be annoyed or be an asshole. I don't want either.
@Rita Roork congratulations for being "WHITE"
@@Metalbirne I work in food service in America. That is how it works here sadly. Sometimes once I take someone's order, they don't even acknowledge me. I approach the window and go "hello, your total is x! How are you today?" I'd say at least twice per shift, someone doesn't turn their head in my direction, doesn't make eye contact, just stares straight ahead holding out their card or money. And when I hand them their stuff, they just hit the gas.
At least twice a day. And that doesn't include the people who just give me a polite smile, maybe a nod and say nothing.
That is 100% normal and something you could do in America. I recommend at least a small smile and a nod. Anyone who isn't new to customer service will immediately recognize this as you saying "I don't want to talk" without words.
It's two of the most important things in german shopping:
1. We don't want the cashier or staff to start talking to us. It's an invasion of our personal space. WE shop there, we don't want to get to know you or, worse, feel like you are inquiring into our personal lives.
2. Never attempt to bag our things. We will assume you do it wrong, that you put the squishable things, like fruits or eggs, down first and then they will break on the way home. Walmart back then tried to offer packaging services, and they were screamed and yelled at for it. Never do our packing, it will end in drama and people demanding refunds for breaking what they bought.
In general: Germans don't want personal interaction from anything or anyone that is not family or close friends. Short, efficient contacts, down to the point with no one putting their nose into our business
Yikes. We're definitely from two different worlds. I guess we're friendlier here in the U.S. than you are in Germany. As a customer, the cashier is a human being who shouldn't be treated like a robot, which is how you treat them clearly.
I sometimes, seldom, will talk to a cashier like they're a friend who I don't see often. We are very amicable. It's probably because older generations need someone to talk to when they leave the house, so it just passes down.
If you stop me on the street though to try and sell me something, best believe I'm giving you the cold shoulder though. That's the only time I don't welcome interaction. I'm only interested in buying something if I'm at a place of business ready to buy something, not when I'm getting from point A to point B, unless someone asks for directions somewhere.
@@JGirDesu It's not unfriendly, as the cashier here also does not expect or want to be talked to in that way. They just want to do their job. It's just a different culture and different expectations. Germans, in general, are very friendly, but it does not take the same outward appearance.
Most Germans will go out of their way to help you if you are in a dire situation, or if ask them to.
But offensive friendliness, like a cashier talking to you like that, like someone offering to package your stuff, or trying to engage in unwanted smalltalk, it is perceived as intrusive and fake.
Become close to a German, and they will be your best friend ever. But go out of your way to invade the personal bubble of us, and we will start with being very very suspicious of you.
@@Mishakur I have heard of Europeans being suspicious when someone is overly friendly to them, but I feel like Americans should be an exception to your rule. We don't get out of the house much, so we appreciate being in other countries and feel like we're representing our country, so we're extra friendly, and it's genuine in most cases. Unless the tourist asks for money, then watch out lol
@@JGirDesu Most Germans ARE behaving friendly to the cashier. In Germany you go to cashier, smile friendly-- say Hello then he/she answeres Hello.... and starts working. In the big discount chains like Aldi, Lidl and Netto - there often is a queue with other waiting customers behind you, so you try to NOT take to much of the cashiers time. If your the only customer and you are a regular, then there is often a lot more interaction and even some small talk about random interesting things. The same goes for our local supermarket chains in the neighbourhood. Because you often know the cashier there, because he/she lives in your neighbourhood, you have much more topics to talk about.
@@Thorsten_Wiegand That sounds VERY American too. You don't take any more time than needed unless you really know the person, but at that point, you stand out of the way while they help another customer.
Some people have an obsession with the odd notion of “if you aren’t suffering then you aren’t working.”
In the Dilbert comics they joke excessively about that.
"If you are happy you are stealing company time." all the way to "If you are healthy you are stealing company time."
That must be an American thing. I had the same thing once working in a British supermarket and an American couple were talking behind me saying I was a bit lazy for sitting on a stool whilst clearing a lower shelf ready for cleaning. I'm 6 foot 2!!!
@@EdgyNumber1 As long as you get the job done, you're not lazy.
Who is suffering?
EdgyNumber1 I’m in the UK too, an engineer.
After recovering from a knee injury, I used a stool for sitting and knee cushions/pads for kneeling down.
I’ve had many jibes for being lazy, even though I’m still getting the job done, if not actually better.
I find a large amount of copious profanity and hand gestures works very well.
But that’s ok with work colleagues you know, I wouldn’t try it with retail customers......🤣🤣🤣
You see, and here is the problem, Europe is highly organized and we have standards/norms for everything. And when I read or see how it looks in America sometimes, this is one big mess for me and I wonder if in the US employees have any rights or they're just slaves.
i guess it's because the US has more citizens which makes needs for more job places
@@reynaswaffle That's actually not true. The US has about 331 million people, the EU about 447 millions. (and there's still european states that aren't members of the EU) I always used to think the US had more people because it's so big, and was surprised when I found out by chance it was the other way round. Europe's density is just a lot higher.
... unless of course you were talking about just Germany, which has a population of about 80 million.
Have you even been to the US before? How can you generalize a country of 330 million people occupying an enormous piece of land? As someone who lives here and has been to Germany before, I clearly see the issue: Americans value service. Germans value efficiency. We do what works for us. You do what works for you. We know how to board the subway/metro in an orderly fashion. In Germany, they just smash into each other like it's life-or-death. That works for you all but not us (Montreal even has lines on the floor showing you where to stand).
Employee rights in the US are very limited. You aren’t off the mark with your question.
American corporations are practicing various forms of slavery more and more. Many large corporations actually practice slavery - that is the actual law they intentionally break - by forcing workers to work off of the clock - or get fired. Target and Hobby Lobby have been prosecuted, lost and received a slap on their hands as punishment for this illegal behavior. As a Dollar Tree employee for a short time, I was told I would work 10 hours a week for free or be fired. Other corporations are forcing employees to sign contracts giving up their rights to breaks and mealtimes that are mandated by law. The U.S. is becoming a third world country very quickly.
Meanwhile in The Netherlands
Cashier: "Hello"
Customer: "hey"
Cashier: "K, bye"
Customer: "bye"
"heeft u een bonuskaart?" "Wilt u koopzegels, voetbalplaatjes of de bon?"
@@jokeikmezelfenmij1426 Yup... en dat is het wel zo'n beetje :p
Lekker simpel
Same in Sweden, great to not have a culture chock when I went on exchange in The Netherlands :).
Hetzelfde in duitsland :D
German here. I actually never realized until now that everything in Aldi is still sitting in card boxes lol
Lol!
Well not everything the "new type" Aldi Süd stores have more unpacked goods sitting on shelves than the old ones.
@@theowaigel8588 Same as the new type Aldi Nord stores. Ironically, Aldi in Germany is transitioning to a more premium style with more A-brands and less cartons.
same 😅😅😅
because it doesn't matter for shopping...
Germans just do everything as efficient as possible, Aldi is peak efficiency 😂
Aldi is efficient for the store, but can be inefficient for inexperienced shoppers. Lines are also typically long at Aldi.
@Daniel Robertson
What are inexperienced shoppers?😅
You should lern that from your parents, and if you still have problems you can always ask the staff, they don‘t bite.😁
@@blacky_Ninja Aldi is new to US so can't learn from parents. There are almost no staff to ask. I like Aldi, but it's sometimes more "efficient" use of my time to go to a big brand store.
Yeah, but the quality is a little too efficient too, though. Well, after we've gotten Lidl they're no longer the worst
@@Ikbeneengeit there is staff to ask. They're just not standing around waiting to answer people's questions. You can ask the person stacking or the cashiers or the people driving the products through the store.
About that smalltalk thing: I'm from germany and I'm learning english in school. Last week our teacher was talking about the US and their culture. We had to practice the smalltalk in supermarkets. Everyone in my class called it stupid and needless XD...
I am american and I do not care for small talk. Hello and please and thank you are about all i care to engage in. I like the employee to focus on their job so i can focus on mine, paying, packing and getting the heck outta there as soon as possible. It appears to me that folk that want to chit chat are either lonely, or need validation of some sort. Or they are nosey. Not my thing...
Ich mache meine Schülerinnen und Schüler schon auf diesen small talk aufmerksam, aber ich würde mich hüten, so etwas Sinnloses einüben zu lassen. Die Kids sollen nur wissen, dass es so einen Schwachsinn in den USA und in UK gibt, sollten sich aber definitif diese oberflächen Phrasen nicht aneignen, sondern nur verstehen und weiterhin "ehrlich" bleiben. Stupid ist nur ein abgemilderter Ausdruck für das Phänomen.
@@kathyw4212 Still a strange thing that something like small talk even exists in the USA. I always thought it was a British thing. Meaningless small talk .. to some extent really funny ;).
Thing is that genuine chat is not minded, its when you know its entirely fake because it's part of a job requirement that you hate it.
I really had to laugh when you said that we Germans are emotionally invested in how our groceries are bagged. Of course my first response was to be a little offended because 'come on, we're not that stuck up' but then I thought about having to watch someone pack my stuff all wrong and... yeah, I would probably be at least as displeased as Americans used to having people bag their stuff having to do it on their own for the first time. I want to be responsible for the dents in my food/whatever. Otherwise I'd be pissed at the person who did it for me... "^^
I think I slowly mastered the art of tetris-packing my stuff. takes a bit of time, but I get to use all of the room I have. I got no car, so I have to pack it wisely if I don't want to die handling 5 bags when going home. und ich werd tatsächlich emotional wenn ich seh wie mein freund alles einfach nur reinschmeißt wenn er einkauft. damn ;)
Honestly, American grocery baggers are really good. From what I have read and when i speak with my german friends it just sounds like germany has really crappy customer service. Which makes sense since germany is more socialistic then america. The whole point of capitalism is selling the product to the customer. Apart of that is making the customer feel good. But when I put my groceries on the conveyor belt to be scanned I will often put it in the order I want it bagged and it is almost always bagged exactly how I would have bagged it. A lot of the times cashiers will even put your breakable items in a bag and set it on top of the bagging area. As the saying goes here in America, for better or worse, the customer is always right.
@@natf6747 hm I don't think you could call it crappy customer service, if bagging stuff isn't part of their job. we're used to bag our stuff since we're little, there may be a few grandmas that like help and a short conversation, but most of us just want to buy and pack our things as quick as possible.
It's not like they're our waiter, who gets paid to be uber-friendly. this is still a crappy job, which I worked at myself too.
as long as they're not negative, I'm all good with neutral and quick cashier at the store. better than some mega fake 'hiiiiiiiiii, how are youuuuu, how's your dayyyyy... I really don't caaaaare....but have to aaask.....byeeeee'
@@PapayaStyle Yeap. Not just talking about whether they pack your bags or not. From what my friends have said it is pretty much all in compassing. Especially when compared to the southern USA. Of course, I have never been to Germany so all I have is what they and many people on the internet have said and my experience watching them interact with clients at our job. But being kind and making someone feel like you are actually glad they are there doesn't have to be fake. Often it may be. But when you do it long enough you actually tend to begin to care about the person you are selling the product to. I have had many cashiers point me towards interesting new products that I didn't get the first time. Or who warned me about the product I was intending to buy for the first time. While I get it when it comes to groceries that most people now exactly what brand they want and don't like to try new things, the issues come into play when the whole point is to find something new. Here in America workers actively seek to assist you. If you are in Starbucks or some other cafe on a fairly calm day and are browsing around the store often a worker will come talk to you about what they found interesting and assist you in making a decision. What I have read about Germany is that is practically no existent. So while yes, there is a lot that is fake about American customer service I would rather have someone who is fake assisting me and making me at least feel like they appreciate me being there then someone who is being real and is completely ignoring that I am even in the store. But this is where are cultures differ. You are taught to mind your business, get in and get out. I am was taught to be polite and say hi.
@@natf6747 well, of course we also say hi, and I never mind sharing a smile with them, but at least for me (introvert) everything more is most times akward. but I think I can agree, that's just our cultural difference, and that's fine, I can see where you're coming from :)
I’m an “American” viewer, and don’t find ALDI “weird” nor do I dislike anything about ALDI. I prefer it to most grocery stores in the U.S. Also, all cashier should be allowed to sit, as opposed to standing in place for hours.
wait, cashiers in the Us have to stand all day?
MaX St - didn’t you watch the video??
I think Aldi Nord figured it out pretty quickly. Trader Joe's was always my favorite grocery store. Maybe it's just because I'm half German though.
I lived in the US for 4 years and had an Aldi locally. I never heard any Americans saying they didn’t understand how they operated or were confused. They did like the quality of the products and the prices. This is incredibly patronising and pure projection.
You get it!
I remember as a kid driving half an hour to the next town over once a month with my mom for our Aldi trip. She managed to feed a family of four on $100 a month (plus trips to the store in town for perishables like bread and milk that won't last a month) in the early 00s.
I always ran ahead to put the quarter in the cart, or hand a quarter to a customer who was about to return their cart. The store has never seemed messy or disorganized to me--quite the opposite. It's laid out in a sensical way that makes it very easy to go through your list, grab your groceries, and not have to back-track. In fact, I thought for over a decade that the aisles were one-way because everybody took the exact same route every time. The "lack" of choices also makes it super efficient to shop. You're not paralyzed by choice, blocking the condiment section because you don't know what kind of ketchup to buy. You just grab a bottle and keep going.
The way the product is put out in boxes makes it easier to bulk buy as well! Need half a dozen cans of carrots and half a dozen cans of green beans? Grab that half empty box of carrots and put six cans of beans in with it. Now you have a case that's easier to carry to the car!
I don't go to Aldi much anymore because there's not one in town and I work odd hours, but I miss how streamlined the store makes shopping. I dread grocery shopping now because American-style stores constantly move things around and actively try to upsell customers. I didn't realize as a kid how different Aldi was. I just assumed all stores were like that.
I miss Aldi.
Many stores employ a tactic of placing different "normal items" in different sections of the store, so to make you walk by their "great offers" and what-not to make you do impulse shopping.
If Aldi works like Lidl in Finland, then it most likely has the same basic layout in every store (or as close to it as possible), so it doesn't matter to which Aldi you go to, you still know where the stuff you're looking are.
So you're telling me Germany as a whole tends to abstain from smalltalk?
Time to pack my bags and get back on that Duolingo train!
Aye most germans abstain from Smalltalk however if you like me live in a quiet small village were the Stores are also quite Small you overtime know every single employee that works there and for me personally, I like Smalltalk with people I know e.g the employees of the store I now goto for nearly 4 years but something like Walmart you might not have the same employees there every day or there might just me too much to really kinda get to know them.
Yes, they will see smalltalk as an annoyance that serves no meaningful purpose. They are not unfriendly though, nor do they hate other people - they just don't understand the point of smalltalk.
Smalltalk is done between people who know each other or work together or have some sort of relation. That can be the weather or politics. But not with some anonymous stranger. There's just no sense in meaningless talking about my life with someone I will never see again.
paying for a trolley is because people were taking them throwing them in rivers etc. less likely to steal if you have to find a quid to put in it first .
Revy two.hands oh in germany the People steal the Trolleys too. 50ct are not so much Money.
+Rev two.hands
But you are NOT "paying" for it! You are paying a deposit, which is returned to you when you return the trolley to the trolley park. It encourages people to return the trolleys to where you got it, rather than leaving them scattered all over the car park...
@@lorddaver5729 true paying was wrong word deposit is what i mean
Ha ha ha ! ….Excuse me for laughing, But steeling was not the major reason. Years ago (at least in Germany) there were smaller stores with shopping carts, Rewe, Edelstolz, Edeka as example, but they were within the store. As the larger Supermarkets started the idea came up with coins as a deposit because (just as it happens in the US or elsewhere ) people would not bring them back into the store. Since many people tend to be thrifty to stingy (most cases) it was obvious that asking for money would do the trick and only when one pushes the key from his cart into another one. Proof of this is the fact that when only one cart has to be left somewhere in the middle of a parking lot invariably others will push theirs into it instead of returning it to the parking cabin where it belongs. Many people are lazy by every chance they get. Guess that is just the human nature of the so called Intelligent species.
@@robertthomas6127 when I was a wee one I tied a trolly to a car and went for a spin. I've seen a few homeless people take them too, our local river has 3 trollies in it. I'm sure these sort of things played a big part in the decision to go with a deposit system
2:00 it wasn't just German culture that WalMart failed to adapt to, but also German law - in Germany, employees have the right to unionize and form a "Betriebsrat" (roughly a shop council) and a company trying to stamp this out will, of course, be faced with resistance. Add to that Walmarts "conduct code" which also had provisions that are illegal in Germany. An employer in Germany can't tell its employees who to hang out with in their free time, and it can certainly not outlaw relationships between coworkers.
I believe this latter aspect really was a far more important reason why WalMart failed in Germany.
exactly... people who NEVER lived and had to survive in Germany don't get it...it isn't all that.. just a low budget grocery store...
And it's always amazing, how those things are legal in the "land of the free"...
@@stephanweinberger Yup, land of free on a wish list.
@@stephanweinberger You're free to not work for or shop at Walmart if you don't like the way they do things. You're also free to open your own store and do things your own way-not as free as Americans used to be, but better than most.
.. there was an other thing: they didn't get building permits for their stores. They bought two superstore divisions for other companies, that was it. But that wasn't enough to implement their business model - the economy of scale part.
I really don't get where the "sitting is lazy" idea came from? What, does that make office workers lazy? Because that's pretty much all they do all day is sit in front of a desk.
@@ardalire651 Honestly I know a lot of people who refer to sitting cashiers as lazy or rude. They tend to be people who do more laborious work themselves or think "Back in the old days cashiers stood up," and/or "It's rude to sit when speaking to someone who is standing!" The people who feel this way are also more likely to leave reviews in my experience, though, so I would say it's likely to be the loud minority.
I think that it is also related to the kind of management structure we have. bosses expect people to be working hard all the time. Even if customers dont care. Someone who wants to sit seems "not dedicated/hard working enough". We have a fetish for the appearance of "hard work". I have an office job in software and my employer wants us all to be in the office early in the morning and at our desks 8 hours/day, only talking about work things, with only work things on our screens, to ensure surveillance and invoke the feeling of like "if i have to suffer I might as well be productive" even though our metrics that we are judged by are measured digitally and not based on hours worked
@@UNR3S7 You're so right. Americans care more about the appearance of doing hard work than we do about actually working hard. I've had jobs where talking about non-work things with a coworker was forbidden when not on lunch break (and good luck getting the paid breaks you're entitled to), including one job that deliberately separated two employees if they were talking even when both were being productive just near each other. Arriving early and staying late as well as skipping lunch (all without additional pay) are seen as working hard even though the reality is that certain work traits are not sustainable.
Things in the US, are arranged more to suit the corporations rather than the workers, there is no legal right to any annual paid leave for example.
"Many Americans think this is less organised."
*laughs in German efficiency*
German efficiency is the best av all countries as long as germany not is in charge.
@@edelweiss2971 so true😂
Goth girl cashier was a speed demon! Bonus points for her!
Yeah, while several costumer have commented I'm fast, that chick was a good amount faster than me.
i was surprised the register could scan every item at that speed.
normaly you have to run an item multiple times over the scanner cause of some bs.
@@uteriel282 Aldi specifically prints multiple bar codes on different sides of the products, just so they are faster to scan
My boyfriends mother works as a supermarket cashier, not at aldi (I'm German in Germany) - and they have to aim for scanning 64 items/minute, if I remember it right
Nope. Thats the average speed. And if you are not as fast as that yourself to get all your shit in the cart, than you will get very bad glares from the cashier and maybe from people standing in line beind you wich makes you look like if you did bad for being the slow one
Aldi doesn't have random items. These are special weekly offers they announce a week before in a small journal you can just grab at the exit.
... and there's usually a poster outside wiith the same announcement. And those "special weekly offers" are always at the same place in a shop, so once you are used to it, it doesn't feel chaotic at all.
Maybe if the journal was packed for them or the poster was read to them they'd know. You can't expect them to do that stuff for themselves, they're Americans!
WTF is a candle warmer???
@@hansbrix2495 it smelts aroma wax in a bowl with electricalheat like arromacandels but without fire that can burn your place down
@@steffenfrank7038 ah alles klar. Sounds like something only germans would invent. Candles are supposed to operate with fire. I suppose they are trying to be more eco-friendly by reducing greenhouse gases too. Too bad in DE most of the electricity generated (to operate such an over engineered device) is from coal now.
"The cashiers know each of there Customers"
I Worked as a cashier in german store and asked a customer how he was doing. I got yelled at :D
I 100% believe that haha
🤣🤣
And as a woman one might even feel hit on by the male cashier, because it is that uncommon. It is nobodies business how I feel, espacially not the business of the cashier, because I don't know him.
Semicaper then all you have to do is not answer :)
Me, as as customer would think "Do I look sick" or needy for support ? "How are you" is as indiscrete as asking "how is your bank account and when had you make love the last time".
Relating to the 'generic' brands, maybe they're still setting this up in the US but in europe the generic brands Aldi sells are pretty much exlusive house brands and Aldi is very strict about quality.
The stores may seem disorganised but the way they're managed is EXTREMELY efficient at logistics and making the best use out of the 'limited' size of the store (which in europe is easier to see how making a smaller store work saves a lot on costs bc real estate prices)
For the OG Aldi shoppers: Olé= Léo
Yes regarding the generic house brands, which in many cases actually are produced by very well-known brands, just under a different name. It's a win-win situation: ALDI offers its customers a better price; the original producer will have lower product margins but essentially is guaranteed a very wide customer base.
Here's a website that lists (left column) the discounters' products (e.g. discounters such as Aldi, Penny, etc), and the well-established companies behind these companies (right column).
Please note that the first set of products are milk products; for other categories of products, one needs to click on the plus (+) sign.
--> www.wer-zu-wem.de/handelsmarken/no-name-suche/
Some of ALDI's products, including wines by top-notch winemakers, have ranked very high in customer tests (e.g. comparison of price, taste, etc).
Generic brands are actually overtaking Europe. Some supermarkets are getting rid of any competition to their own brands. It a very profitable model because they use vertical integration. They not only sell products, they sell mostly their own products.
Yes, but 'their own products' are usually produced for them by well-known firms, but under a different name (and often with slightly different weight, etc). For these original brands, it is also lucrative to sell through ALDI. That the too ALDI brothers (who did not get along that well with each other, hence the division of Germany into ADLI Nord and ALDI Sued - same principle would be applied to Europe) are very clever is beyond doubt - they and their families were constantly among the richest people in Germany. The following website (among many others) shows the 'in-house' products and the subcontracted 'brand names' producing for ALDI under a different imprint --> www.stern.de/wirtschaft/news/aldi-eigenmarken--diese-hersteller-stecken-hinter-den-discounter-produkten-7241640.html#:~:text=Hergestellt%20werden%20viele%20dieser%20Lebensmittel%20aber%20bei%20namhaften%20Unternehmen.&text=Hinter%20den%20Erdnussflips%2C%20die%20es,zu%20dem%20Konzern%20Intersnack%20geh%C3%B6rt.&text=Deutschlands%20Discounter%20sind%20durch%20Eigenmarken,%2C%20Lidl%2C%20Penny%20und%20Co.
When I heard that people had to pay for shopping carts in Aldi, I thought this was odd and strange. But putting a quarter in as a deposit? We've been doing that in Canada for years! Even at Canadian Wal-Mart stores! I had not realized this was upsetting and frightening to Americans.
Upsetting and frightening 😂
Fun fakt That coustom off deposit are going douwn in germany some Shops dont have it any more
I don't carry coins. It's 2020
.....overblown reaction.....many, if not most Americans would not object.....they'd just give their cart to someone else in the parking lot who was going into the store.....
Will have to let Stephen king know about this - I can imagine the title - Token
I’m from Germany and she’s absolutely right 😂 why would I want a conversation with the cashier? I want to get food quick and easy. 🤷♂️
From experience at very different Aldi stores a little chit-chat with the cashier happens and so is welcomed. Though there exceptions depending on the cashier.
correct the European way, we see grocceries as a wharehouse not as a positive shopping experience.
get in, grab al the neccesary daily crap fast and cheap, check out and do more importent things in life . Only for special things we take time in special shops.
Thats why we are always anoyed when they change the layout in our local groccery shop so we have to learn again where al the stuff is
@Lawrance Ovarabia Me... they're generally very nice and friendly people & hospitable and courtious too... as well as smart, resourceful & innovative... not to mention their lager beer is the best in the world!
@Lawrance Ovarabia Me. Every German I have met has been wonderful.
I have never had a conversation with a cashier in a large grocery store. Not sure where she's getting this from.
In most European countries cashiers sit, no one packs your groceries and you have to insert a coin in the cart, although many people have plastic or metal jetons that you can get for free. Paying less for my groceries is more important than anything, especially having small talk with the personnel as if they were mom-and-pop stores. The people writing those harsh critiques sound spoiled and entitled.
@Randy Welsh It makes the groceries more expensive.
Exactly, we are going for the least expensive food and items, NOT anything else. Besides, anytime we really had a question at our Aldi we were able to be helped just as much as the American store. At the American stores we try to do the bagging anyway, as well as return the cart. We think it's awesome, the humane thing to do and very considerate to the employees if they can sit as much as possible while they work, why not! I like to sit whenever possible too.
True. for me it would be the other way around as I am accustomed since childhood that casiers sit behind the register, and hardly engage in smalltalk. Still the lack of known and diversity of products and the disorganised look of Aldi (and Lidl) was kinda off putting for me at fist, when they pulled up in my country. The price difference and quality of most of the products made it my goto stores though. Coffeepad quality for my Senseo is kinda lacking though.
@Randy Welsh it makes the groceries more expensive AND the packer does not get a living wage ... slavery light
European here: i even go as far as pre-sorting my stuff on the belt so they can be packed efficiently. For example, i always place the soda bottles, canned food and potatoes on the belt first, and the chips and bread last. This way the solid stuff ends on the bottom of the bag and the soft stuff on the top.
The cashier will simply pull the products over the scanner in the order i placed them on the belt and i can quickly dump m in my bag in that same order.
I usually check out within 1 minute, not enough for any small talk. I want to get out of other people's way as quickly as possible so they don't have to stand in line.
It's all about efficiency.
What you describe is also my shopping strategy, in Germany. I get generic products and produce at Aldi for a really good price, and then go to a non-discount supermarket like Edeka or Rewe for brand or specialized items. You can't find everything at Aldi, but you do find a lot, and can save a lot of money by taking advantage of that.
Europeans aren’t emotionally attached to their groceries, it just makes practical sense to pack similar items together cold with cold, hard packaging with hard etc
Yeah but trying to introduce common sense to some americans is a Herculean task.
Thanks Kelly for trying.
yes...and our cashiers get trained on that....not that they're all perfect, but it is part of their job.
Bread at the top so it doesn't get squished by heavier things
@Darth Wheezius we can find plenty of wise ass tho.
also when I buy only few things I put them into my handbag. I wouldn't want an employee to touch that.
Honestly, from what I've heard I feel like Americans have their priorities mixed up, they insist on wasting time and having a conversation when buying groceries but in restaurants, cafes or when just cooking and eating at home (which many apparently also rarely do) they rush through that instead of taking the time to relax and talk a bit.
This is a thing that was created by the corporate offices o the grocery chain's owners. THEY are the ones that insist their cashiers chat with customers. In 63 years I have never known anyone who complained that their cashier didn't talk to them. I have had cashiers get too chatty with me. I wish people would stop assuming that every video they see on TH-cam contains the gospel truth about everything.
From an American perspective, it's not really about chatting with the employee. Most stores have self check-out lanes so you can avoid that interaction altogether.
If you review the video, outside of the "employee is rude" comments, most of the people who complain about the service were upset about not receiving assistance. If Aldi is a good representation of euro grocery stores, then you can tell American stores are much larger as she said. Maybe I want flour tortillas so I go to the Mexican food aisle but only find corn tortillas. I might look for an employee who can direct me to the bread aisle where the flour tortillas are. Or maybe I want a specific brand of granola cereal, but I dont see it in the cereal aisle, you might ask for help to discover it is actually next to the trail mix and jerky sections.
I could see how you are used to a wider selection that Aldi doesn't have, and upon first visit you might want employee's help to figure out what they do have. And then become frustrated when you have to walk all over the store to find one.
LoL you are right!
Well......the Aldi way of doing things differs somewhat in the US from Germany and Austria (Hofer). I love shopping in Aldi in Germany and Austria (Hofer), but not really in the USA. I am from, and live in the UZA, by the way.
Walmart in Germany
Walmart employee: "Good day sir, how may I help you today?"
"Schnauze halten wär schonmal n guter Anfang."
xD
sale on sour pickles made in wuhan china
Hahahahaha
Hahahahahahaha lmao
Der war gut 😄
😆 som i Sverige då.
I never saw anyone in Germany packing his bag emotionally, I believe its rational. I was told as a kid to place the heavy and stable things at the beginning of that belt and place the items in that order in the bags, and it still makes sense to me since sensible items otherwise would get ruined.
Okay, I've never shopped at Aldi, but I'm sold. Cashier small talk annoys me. So do people walking up to me asking if I need help or welcoming me into the store.
This sounds like a breath of fresh air to me.
Don't know about the American Aldi, but in Germany the goods are just as good as at other places
I think the staff also like it as Aldi more than what customers do... If they have a lot to do or if they have things to think about... A, they can just focus on the job, B not have to worry about the customers feelings by faking interest.
Im totally going to check them out the next time I venture outside for groceries
Aldi are great,
They also save money on AC apparently,
As it's the only supermarket in my hometown,
You can enter with sandals on and not get sick instantly.
Yep, that´s what I like: Big words about being "independent" and "self sufficient" - but feeling lost, when having to pack their own grocery...
Rita Roork This remark keeps cracking me up. The color of your skin does not matter one bit in this discussion. You are also not giving any real reasons, which make you seem a self-centered, entitled, immature “woman”, who is not self-sufficient enough to even handle the simplest tasks. I have a picture of a bigoted girl with rich parents, not having worked to earn your own money. Am I close? ;)
Rita Roork Oh, and by the way, the Aldi DOES NOT pay their employees to bag groceries, so that argument is invalid. If you want to buy groceries, but don’t spend as much as in other stores, you get what you paid for, and saving on these extra service costs is an easy way to lower prices. This should be understood if not welcomed by any price-conscious shopper but especially those with limited funds.
Of course if you want the extra service and are ok with paying a little more, you’re free to shop elsewhere.
@@janvogelaar7078 Bro you're literally just taking bait. That's a troll account. You're bad and you should feel bad.
Jan Vogelaar pretty sure it’s a sarcastic comment
Brandon Martinez Could be, but it could also be her true opinion. I saw her mentioning this and similar racist things multiple times and defending her opinion. Also, she seems to be deleted from the comments now.
People like that do exist, just like people who think it is acceptable to, as a minority, go protest fully armed and showing aggressiveness, insinuating violence to try and get their way or their point across, even though the majority of citizens does not agree, let alone that getting your way is even endangering your fellow citizens even more, because you want to lift the Corona mitigation restrictions.
The “protest” could be seen as terrorism and the political view as inhumane and anti social. Yet, these people exist, look at the “protest” in Michigan recently. If that is true, Rita could also be serious in my opinion...
Swede here. Watching this I had the constant nodding of my head going on: “Yes, yes of course it would be like that. Aldi seems just like all Swedish grocery stores.”
And then I saw the checkout and how everything was practically thrown back into the cart by the cashier: “What are they doing!?”
In Sweden the moving lane where you place your groceries continue past the person registering the item and into a rather large and closed of section where you can bag your items in peace. This section as two lanes of its own (they split) so when one lane is occupied with someone’s groceries the cashier uses the other - alternating between the two lanes. If both lanes are occupied the cashier waits a little or if there isn’t much left to bag in one, begins placing the groceries at the top of the lane without pushing them down so that the items don’t mix with another persons items.
Watching the cashier throwing the items back into the cart stressed me out lmao 😂
We also have got the same thing with split lanes in Germany for the "higher" priced supermarkets. And by "higher" I mean like normal ones that are not a discount store like Aldi. Discount stores prefer to use less space for the checkout section to have more space for the shelve area.
EDIT: I now saw the part with the cashier at 12:55. I've never seen a checkout lane with that small amount of space at the end, even at Aldi. And I never had a cashier put stuff in my shopping cart either. Theres always at least SOME space at the end of the lane so you can put the things in your cart by yourself.
Yeah, the only thing I don't really see much of here in Sweden is the whole " leaving the stuff in its boxes" thing. That only seem to happen with certain goods
But she said that in the Video as well. In Germany it is the same as in Sweden.
Luckily, most cashiers at Aldi either don't do that or are careful to grab only the stuff that doesn't bruise. But yes, that on-going moving lane is a lot better, it means you don't have to chose between hurrying and being in the way of the next customer.
It actually became like that with the shorter lane some years ago. In the past we always had long lanes, but it's more efficient now, so people have to pay faster. I feel sorry for the older people, it's hectic for them.
The first time I went to Aldi many years ago, I was helping my elderly aunt. The store we went to was not well organized (it had opened just a couple weeks before) and there was a big line of people who also had never been to Aldi. The experience was...not good. BUT, once I went by myself during a less crazy day, I came to really appreciate Aldi, and now I love shopping there. I especially love bagging my own groceries. I hate the way most baggers, often teenage boys who know nothing, crush fragile items, etc. I'm able to bag my items perfectly for my needs and to protect my food best. I also LOVE the "finds" aisle.
Regarding the shopping carts: If those complaining would actually bring back their carts, they would have known that they get back the coin. Hence I can only assume that they simply leave the cart wherever they want after shopping.
Namorat Preach! 🙌🏻🙏🏻
@Wynter Well, then just keep a single quarter for use in ALDI shopping carts that you never spend.
As a European it sounds crazy to me not to carry any cash at all. Crazy.
That's one of the main reasons you have to put in a coin: to make you bring back the cart to where it belongs, so that no employee has to be bothered bringing stranded carts back because some ignorant customer left it right where he or she no longer needed it.
It is a pity though that the coin of highest value in the U.S. is only a mere 25 Cents which, as it seems, is not enough to make some bring the cart back.
@Wynter
You can get trolley tokens which you can clip onto your key ring. I've even got some plastic ones obtained from a French hypermarket.
@@cigmorfil4101 I have one from our local newspaper. Now, what's more outdated?
The silly thing with most generic brand food products is, that a lot of them are made by the same factory with the same ingredients or come from the same farmers, like the no-name products (or sometimes even same as other brands). The only thing that's different is the price for the companies image.
That is true, I work in a food factory in the UK, we make Aldi products, but we also make Marks and Spencer products (a very expensive store). We use the same ingredients from the same suppliers for both, recipes may slightly differ but they are ultimately the same thing.
Can verify, I worked at a Mr Kiplings for some months, but we also did products for ASDA and Sainsbury's on the little apple tart cakes alone. They do have to specify their own formulas though.
Yes maybe, but the problem is the the U.S is very money oriented. So off-brand product are not as good as the name brands one. If you buy an off-brand paper towel it will rip as soon as it's wet, but the name brand on will not. The cereals will definitely not taste the same. Dish soap will require more soap to clean, more water in the orange juice etc. So seeing off-brand product automatically makes you think of those things.
The off-brand products at Aldi's are as good or better than the name-brand items, and usually at about half the price. Shopping there is a no-brainer.
As a Dane (similar in many ways to Germans), the idea of in store greeters and compulsory small-talk at checkout abhors me - I seems so utterly insincere and commercialized. I don't want to bother those working and they don't need to bother me. But again, if we had the insane amount of items in the store, I might need all the help I could get to navigate!
I have been shopping at the same Publix for many, many years and you get to know the cashiers over time. The small talk in those instances doesn't feel insincere, it may be surface conversation but that's the definition of small talk. One example a months ago a I told a cashier "hey, store is almost closed and you get to go home." She dropped that she was leaving for Arizona in the morning for vacation. The next time I saw her I asked how her vacation was. That sort of thing. It's one of the reasons I avoid Aldi. I find it extremely cold and impersonal. The price difference isn't enough for me to shop where I feel like a cog in a wheel.
@@cgirl111 I'm a American and don't understand our American obsession with small talk. I don't WANT to get to know everybody. I want everybody happy, even happier than myself, but I couldn't care less about knowing them.
It's not insincere, and not compulsory.
@@miriamcohen7657
"Insincere:
I'm not sure why, but it is the typical experience for Germans in the US, that people are phoney and insincere, but I guess that matches that to Americans we Germans come across as cold.
@DuineFion
Greetings from Germany (lower saxony) and I have to agree in regards to the similar thing, but with one small exception.
As a lower saxon I feel like I have more in common with a Dane or a Dutch than someone from Bavaria.
The culture and people are much more similar and sure we speak a different language and can't understand each other but at least it sounds familiar.
I can't understand someone from Bavaria either, but to make things worse, it sounds foreign.
(A little tongue and cheek but there is some truth to it.)
you walk into an aldi, as your walking around you see an item that has run out, you take the cardboard box and use that as a basket to hold your items, that's what I do here, saves them a job and you can recycle the box yourself instead of using plastic, its efficient not messy at all
I did the same thing with the cardboard boxes. The other customers would look at me funny when i was throwing out all the items to empty the box. But i got used to that look. Gotta say it was messy though ... :-P jk
absolutely hilarious - in Germany a shopping trip is a shopping trip, in the US a shopping trip is a social outing :-)
Don't say "in Germany", it's in anonymous discounters. If you want chitchat with or about your neighbors go to the bakery.
"They don't wanna feel like they are another faceless customer" it's quite ironic that people living in the most profit-focused country on Earth don't understand that all the shop wants is their credit card.
PS : if the cashiers rush that much, it's because they don't want to be fired for being "lazy", they have a terrible job and difficult quotas, so they won't act like they are living their dream life. I don't understand how most Americans can't understand that shop employees are human beings and not slaves that go take their cart and do all the shit job while the customer just sits there and waits
i guess it is because of the way people interact in this country. there are so many americans around that act fake compared to european standarts. so they just play the game as being told from a young age on. allways smile, allways be happy even if its fake.
And honestly, being a cashier isn't even pleasant here in german
*Gernany
@@svellice you mean Germany?
@@svellice for us it's hard to say lazy or not like this aldi in Germany www.google.com/maps?ll=50.57309,6.26263&z=18&t=h
here is one of our aldi
www.google.com/maps/@41.18876,-87.85147,281m/data=!3m1!1e3
for easiest to compare take that map and zoom out a little
walmart, bunch of stores on the right
or even this walmart
www.google.com/maps/@40.74503,-99.74157,565m/data=!3m1!1e3
they pay people to push carts less so because if it was same as aldi i don't think for safety at lest you want people coming back and forth to the store..
it would be easier just to pay someone to come out at certain times of the day to retrieve the carts otherwise like i said you will have lets say 10 people coming one way and 10 people going the other way (3 times) . while cars are pulling in or out as well
The random shopping aisle is my favorite part of Aldi lol. It's like Christmas..You never know what you might get... You can find great treasures and a lot of things you don't actually want.
Very true!
Craft stuff, seasonal food and kitchen gadgets. I love having a rummage in the middle aisle! I find myself being tempted to buy a churro maker or a snorkelling set when I only went in for milk and bananas 😂.
Actually you DO know what you might get, at least in Germany. You just have to take the "Aldi Aktuell" paper to have an overview for the next weeks.
@@Pelzi. is there any person who reads them? We have those promotional info flyers too, but who the heck reads them anyways?
@@aCidNow I read them sometimes, wouldn't want to miss out on good items. There can be some great stuff
American Stores sound very strange and overstaffed
Yes Our stores maybe over staffed by European standards which I disagree with but, if you need help you will get that help ASAP!! Also, our stores have a much larger variety of brands and goods convience and we don't mind paying more for the service and the larger selection!!!
What help could you possibly need while shopping in a grocery store? xD Tbh I can understand the brand part... I heard that the general quality control in the US is so bad that a brand can mean good quality as well.
@@sandornemeth5388 Wait until you get old and you will find out what help you might need in a grocery store. Oh, and here's one: This advertised item is not on the shelf where it should be - is it sold out, or did you place it somewhere else? 9 times out of 10, the answer is that they put in a different place and I couldn't find it.
I like to think of different cultures as interesting rather than strange. Germans have a stereotype of being cold and efficient, Alid's is German, is it a stereotype?
I wonder how much food is actually wasted and ends in the trash in US supermarkets, must be much more than in European supermarkets.
If my cashier started talking with me I would probably have an internal panic attack
@Rita Roork What is wrong with you? Why are your comments so pressingly angry?
@Rita Roork The idea of having some random person bag my stuff up for make makes me feel uncomfortable. The only time we ever see people bagging up groceries is when there are people fundraising (children often pack bags to raise money for charity)
@@MonkeyButtMovies1 or for school trips
@@MonkeyButtMovies1 Same in Finland... I've probably seen teenagers doing the packing in my store twice in the past 15 years. And both times I gave them the tip (for whatever they were collecting the money for) and packed the stuff myself. I take my packing order seriously :D
"I am just a cog in the capitalist machine and the companies don't care for my or the employee's well-being, but darn, I want to talk about my life with those people, standing for hours for minimum wage and feel like they love me."
It's the last and most egregious of humiliations foisted upon the worker by capitalism. Not only do you need to work your arse off, on your feet all day, being demeaned by oversized toddlers, earning less than a living wage, without healthcare or labour rights to speak of - you have to *SMILE* and *MAKE SMALL TALK*, because Prickmart incorporated is a *HAPPY FAMILY*.
Aldi. The place for happy Introverts.
Verena Straub 🙌🙌🙌🤣
Exactly! 😂
Yes, very true. I come home from Aldi much less stressed in comparison to Walmart or even Publix.
Who wants small talk when they just want to get their shopping done?And poor cashiers that have to stand all day:o
As an American, self-checkout is a godsend for me as I prefer minimal interaction with other people when purchasing things. I don't like plastic bags either. So I only buy enough to the point to where I can barely carry it with my hands lol That way I don't buy more than I need each trip to the store.
I get tired of the:
"Hi, how are you?"
"Good, you?"
"Good."
"That's good."
Depending on the person/cashier, if they're friendly, I will open up and discuss things but not usually. It's moreso, "I'm hungry now, so I want to get home as quick as possible to make the food I'm purchasing" lol
15:33 „cashier sitting while work .. are they lazy?“ ... the hight of the chair and belt combination is measured, so the cashier can work as optimal as possible - it‘s hard enough job anyway.
To add an UNFAIR comment: if one American is not willing to see, that the cashier is a human being, that deserves the best as possible job-condition(like all humans do), so he can do the job for the customer in health, then the thought of slavery seems to continue on a different level TO ME. How can you expect to be treated well, if you do not tread others well? Sounds like something JC might have said.
Well if we are talking about Jesus Christ. He said treat others as you want to be treated. It had nothing to do with personal gain. Simply a statement of they deserve to be treated well simply because they are children of God. Not because you gain something from treating them well.
Then secondly, standing isn't a bad thing. Do you have tall chairs for your cashiers at fast food stores? For cooks? Nope. I worked in fast food. Almost never had a chair or really even a break until the end of my shift. Never really even noticed until thinking through your comment. Honestly, I won't complain if a cashier has a seat because honestly, I don't care. If they do great, if they don't great. But employment is a contract. If you as the employee doesn't like the deal... Don't take it. However, comparing it to slavery is disrespecting the atrocity of slavery. To compare a job you get paid to do and can leave at anytime to a job you are forced to do and can only leave at the discretion of your owner.. Slavery is a total forced loss on humanity. Working is a contractually agreed exchange of goods.
@@natf6747 Most fast food chains in europe are american enterprises so they tend to treat the staff the american way, they have an turnover so quick you expect staff to change by the hour...
Pounce Pounce okay. How about the ones that aren’t American? Do they get chairs? Do cooks and waitresses in restaraunts get chairs?
@@natf6747 No, but I think this ignores the issue that the food jobs require moving (granted in the kitchen less, but still moving around), while a cashier would need to stand nearly still the whole time. While moving is very exhausting it is way less damaging to the body than standing still for a prolonged time.
Also for the food jobs standing is unavoidable, but sitting while scanning products doesn't impact your work; and if you give your employees the option to sit you make it a more inclusive job offer so people who are physically impaired and can't stand for a prolonged time have bit more opportunities for employment.
@@playse94 Well we can argue the health benefits of sitting, standing, or moving. But at the end of the day I think something we have talked about was hit on. You stated that cashiers don't need to stand because scanning is all they do. However, here in the USA that isn't all they do. Now could you do there job and sit. Probably, but I am not sure. But I guess to have a chair or not to have a chair really reflects on the cultural differences. In america the job of the cashier is to assist the customer. In some stores that even means carrying groceries. Thus they need to be able to move. Being efficient is important but here keeping the customer coming back is more important. This is hindered by a chair. Where as I guess in Germany, from what I have read, you can practically treat the customer as practically nothing. Only doing enough to do your job. So them, and their products are treated simply as a job. I grab, I scan, I put in cart. They pay they go away. I guess the difference is the mentality of customer service. However, apparently you are unwilling to extend this to the restaraunt world. Why is it more important that a grocery store cashier sit down then a fast food cashier? I mean. Couldn't they make it where you grab all your food and bring it to the cashier to scan and ring up? Why are there more expectations on a fast food cashier then a grocery cashier? To me it sounds like unequal work loads. In one area you expect to be waited on and in another you expect to be practically insignificant.
When I lived in Ireland for 9 years, as a German, I had my difficulties when buying groceries. Especially at older established chains like Tesco or Dunnes. Since we Germans tend to take things literally, i.e. the "How are you today?" from the cashier for us is not a greeting, it's a question. It took me a while to realise that they don't actually want to know how I am. It's just a greeting formula. :D
There's so many tiny details that make a huge difference. Let me bore you with another example:
I worked there in German customer support for an American company. At some point, the company decided to unify the process of handling the customer contacts, be it in live chat or on the phone - not a bad idea, really. But this even affected the way in which the customers were to be greeted. It had to be the same as in English. The German staff voiced concerns that this might not work as well as imagined because of the cultural differences. The superiors heard that but asked us to give it a try anyways.
On the first day when the customers were greeted with "How are you today?" in German, we had reponses like "Not too well, I just had my chemo session." or "I just came back from my grandmother's burial.". So there's two options: 1) they replied truthfully, because they are German an were asked a question 2) they intentionally wanted to make the situation awful to show that they don't want to be asked personal questions. Anyway, we didn't have to stick to that greeting formula anymore after a few days..... surprise! ^^
Germans have a reputation of (in general) being blunt. If with "blunt" you mean "not polite", then I agreee and give that notion my seal of approval. We prefer being friendly over adhering to conventions of politeness. Of course, there are always exceptions to the rule.
I live in Spain and here not only cashiers ask how you are as a way of greeting you. People do it all the time and even after over 2 years of living here I still often times don't understand when people want to know how I am and when they are just saying hi xD
I grew up in Wisconsin and we've had Aldi here since I was a kid. My mom shopped there a lot when I was growing up, so it's completely normal to me. Aldi was my saving grace when I was a broke college student. It was the only way I could get a couple weeks worth of groceries for less than $50. I still shop there now because they have some pretty excellent products.
"Brand Loyal" translates to German as "sucker for marketing manipulation".
My brand loyalty amounts to: If I find something I like I get that something, I don't care who makes it. I've been buying the same instant coffee for years, I only noticed who made it two months ago. 🙄
Yep, pretty much.
I can't think of the last time I bought a branded product. We shop in Aldi and Lidl (in the UK) and I love the smaller size shops as it's much less overwhelming.
The cashier is busy She will assume the customer is busy too
Well, there are some brands which genuinely taste better...ie I tend to buy the expensive ice cream because it tends to genuinely be the better one....and sometimes the no-name offer is actually the better one.
Maybe some additional/historical remarks:
German shops haven't all been that way, it was Aldi inventing it and others followed. Aldi was always set to minimise all non essential cost - which allowed them to undercut other stores by far. Over time others simply adopted some of their cost cutting measures to stay competitive. So expect others to adopt car deposit over time.
Deposit: Isn't using a deposit the most 'capitalist' way to handle the cart issue? After all, the deposit is nothing else than a reward one is required to set out for whoever returns the car. If done by the customer it just gets returned (and usually Germans are as thrifty to do so). But you may leave it as well at the parking lot - having someone else collecting the reward. It perfectly takes away the need for all customers to pay for cart return service and puts the cost at the ones who want to have that service.
It seams as that's why some assume that they pay for the cart - which in fact is exactly what they do if they just let the cart at the parking lot - they pay for the service of someone returning the car.
Shelves: Until the mid 80's Aldi had (almost) _no_ shelves at all. 90% palettes. Having shelves is a rather new development, dated from the time
Brand name loyalty: Most of their products are made by brand manufacturers, just not labelled as such (well into the 90s customers could guess by the company address - until manufacturers used cover addresses to hide their involvement, protecting the brand). Brand loyalty exists in Germany as well, despite German willingness to use generic products if quality is right. Something Aldi had to learn the hard time. The key example are Haribo Gummi Bears, which were the only big brand product during the 1980s at Aldi - simply because people didn't buy them as much when packaged as store brand. They tried over more than a year having either or both.
Service Personal: I always found it easy to get information about products from Aldi employees, no matter if it was in the US, Germany, England or any other country. Therre are always some refilling the shelves, so just ask - of course, one has to _actively_ ask, as due the way they operate, there are no idle employees ready to ask customers if they can help.
Checkout: The US-Aldi checkout is in fact a combination of old time Aldi checkout with today's way like you described it. Aldi didn't add conveyor belts until the 90s. people just rolled their cart up to the cashier were already another cart was waiting turned around (set up in the morning or from the previous customer) and the cashier was simply moving the items from your cart into the waiting one while adding up - right hand moving the items, left hand keying in the numbers (they had to know the price of every item from memory). After paying one just took the 'other cart' and left, while the cashier turned your 'old' card around and served the next customer. So when conveyor belts were introduced Germans got the freedom to package their cars as they like :) At the same time they 'learned' to keep up with the speed of the employee. A crucial 'training' Americans are missing. So the US cashier section got designed to be like a mixed breed of both: Conveyor belt and scanners but the cart will be filled by the cashier.
Speed: While Aldi cashier handling my seam incredible fast, up to being rude, to a German visiting a US Aldi, it always seam rather slow at times. This goes hand in hand with the perceived 'friendliness'. As a customer, it for sure feels nice to be recognised, but but then, checking out and packaging is about the least desirable part of shopping at all. One wants to got it's done. While selecting products may be fun, waiting in line and waiting to get charged is simply wasted time. So lets get that done as fast as possible - which also excludes self check out, as I will always be slower than an Aldi cashier - in fact, it's team work the cashier and me working together to get over this phase as fast as possible, keeping shopping a great experience.
Bagging: It's again a cost issue, not as much about environment as some think. The bring your own bag or pay policy was already in place with the very first Aldi stores. After all, it cuts of a few cents per customer. It also did fit habits back in the 60s when it was still common to have your own bag anyway. In this sense, it's more like a surviving habit from times before throw away bags.
Also, it's not so much about being emotional, but get them effective into as least bags as possible. Leaving a US store were a cashier fills the bags, or a dedicated bagger does so, usually means I end up with several times the number of bags I really need. Often a separate bag for each 2 liter bottle, some times even double bagged, completely contradicting the idea of using light wight bags.
Yeah, if I need to ask about where something is in the store, the usual question, I've never found it difficult to find an employee to ask. There is always at least a cashier, but I prefer to ask an employee who is stocking. Thanks for the detailed post. Another cost-saving measure: all products are bar-coded, produce is sold in bar-coded packages, not loose, and there are no prices on products, it's all done with shelf markers. Once in a while those are missing and there is a bar code scanner to get the price. A bit inconvenient, but this is what allows checkout to be so rapid. beepbeepbeep, as fast as the cashier can move those items across the scanner. No bagging at the checkout, all the goods going into a cart right next to the cashier, again, brilliant.
That's a good point about Aldi employees being familiar with what they sell. At some American stores when you try to stop someone to ask where something is, half the time they don't know because they don't even work for a store but some contracting company that just stocks the shelves! Actual employees sometimes can't answer questions because the store is so big nobody has any idea what they actually sell or don't sell and where it is (esp. Walmart supercenters, good grief they need their own zip codes! I once had to ask for directions out of the store because it was so big I could not find the exit).
So they view cashiers as lazy for sitting, but is to lazy to bag their own groceries?.... I'm confused...
Heaven forbid you have a tiny bit of comfort during a 10 hour shift!
@@homerj.simpson7562 A 10-hour shift would be illegal anyway within the country of origin of ALDI. 8 hous max. according to ArbZG § 3.
@@stbufraba Still, 8 hours without being able to sit at all except for breaks. I'd need a lot of breaks then. Or compensation for new socks...
*are too lazy
Adrian Jarvis you know you can give them your bags and they’ll bag your groceries in it for you.
I LOVE the "random stuff" aisle. I found a high-velocity fan once there that I was looking for cheaper (as always) than anywhere else in town. And Aldi employees seem to be a lot happier than employees at Walmart, maybe BECAUSE they aren't having a lot of small talk. It certainly doesn't bother me. I don't expect to be chatted up when I'm getting milk. I also like how small the Aldi stores are. Walk right in from your car, get your stuff, walk right out to your car. That NEVER happens anywhere else.
My mother told me that Aldis today have changed very much from what they started out as. At that time, they really had mostly "from-scratch" stuff - flour, milk, eggs, produce ... Of course they went with the times and now they have the basics of candy, chocolate, convenience food. And yes, they are the very bare bones compared to what's "normal" in the US.
Naturally, us Europeans are just as confused and shocked by those small-village-sized grocery stores with 60 variations on the theme "ketchup".
Generally, European supermarkets are all about efficiency, whereas American supermarkets prioritize customer service and outward appearances.
Pol Wijnen Have you been in Walmart?!
But why is customer service even a thing. Go in and buy your freaking stuff. I don't like to get bothered by employees. I even hate it when they are stocking up the shelves during opening hours. This always plugs the ways...
i.e. marketing shoved up our noses.
Stephen Newton what is it with walmart? I‘m curious
It's all about getting you to part with more money.
16:40 wow they place your groceries back into the cart for you? And people were still complaining? This does not even happen in Europe😂😂
Mellory Lopes Right? I was suprised to see that!
Yeh and unlike most other UK supermarkets aldi don't even have a run off area on the checkout if you don't shift it fast enough back into the trolly or bag at 80 items per minute then it ends up on the floor
Big advantage is that they are so fast that it dosn't matter if there are 3 or 4 people ahead of you, the wait is tiny.
Although not as fast as before they had barcodes and the cashiers would key the items by hand, often faster than the conveyer could keep up!
In the Czech Republic the cashiers are giving the items to you and sometimes is really difficult to "invent a construction in a cart that won´t fall and the items won´t break" (especially with the glass packagings, heavy ones and items packed like yoghurts, creams etc. - we´ve already broke a few creams´ and yoghurts´ packagings at our local grocery store). I´d be so happy for some packers! I´ve seen word "packer" in a English picture dictionary and I couldn´t believe that something like this job really exist, I was so confused! XD
It was in, at least in the GDR(east-germany,) back in the 80's. Of course we didn't had an goods conveyor belt, so the cashiers put the items from yours into another standing right next to it.
Dutch grocery store experience:
*walks up to cashier*
Me: Hello
Cashier: Hello
-beep beep beep beep beep beep-
M: That will be .... euro
C: Card please
M: Ok
C: See you
M: See you
..
Cashier: Hello
And honestly, it can mostly be like that in the US. You just add “hello how are you” and then “hello I’m good” and that’s it. Y’all imagine this scenario where every American imprisons you and forces you to have small talk versus the reality which is being socially aware to recognize if someone wants to talk or not.
@@Kellydoesherthing The problem I had when being in the US is that when I didn't want this small talk I had the feeling that the cashier thinks I am an unsocial weirdo.
@@Kellydoesherthing I feel like "the problem" is not about what these interactions are really like in the US. It is that a lot of Europeans can't imagine why someone would want to talk to the cashier or want the option to do so.
However.. in small towns where people just generally know each other, they would probably talk to cashiers and other employees, because they just know them. I also feel like regulars, who come in every day to buy lunch or whatever, would also have a chat.
@@Kellydoesherthing So in the end europeans and americans aren't much different, because the american "hello, how are you" is just longer formular without the meaning behind. XD
@pialina "It is that a lot of Europeans can't imagine why someone would want to talk to the cashier or want the option to do so. "
That's not it, but a lot of people just make a cut between privacy and job, because if you mix it, you can't be efficient and risk to lose your job.
Maybe it depends on city vs. village? I think in a city, its usually more or less hello-goodbye, but in a village there may be some smalltalk involved?
Yikes, I would get anxiety if a cashier starts talking to me.
What do you wanna know from me? I don't wanna talk, lady!
I agree. If asked, I would feel obligated to answer truthfully. I they ask how I am, I would have to reveal my inner thoughts to that stranger OR make myself liar and say "I am fine" (if I was not). I hate lying.
Also, if cashier asked, did I find everything, what are you supposed to answer? If I say no, will the cashier stop working and go get my missing stuff and held back the full line of other customers who were already ready to be checked out? :D I would be really embarrased to hold the line like that.
I'm American and I don't like talking to cashiers. I don't like shopping in general. I want to get my shit and get out. Hell, most of the other people I know are the same way.
I'm an American that grew up with Aldi shopping. Before coin operated carts all the carts were not allowed to leave the store. Had to carry stuff to vehicle. Coin operated carts are great. Also Aldi is one of the highest paying grocery store. At least for me the people that work at the Aldi I shop at are very helpful and have great customer service.
My sense is that the employees are happy. They certainly seem so.
Different in the UK, aldi work you to the bone and looking happy is a requirement for the job no matter how you feel.
One slip up in front of a customer can lead to getting a strike/warning or even suspension without pay.
It's high paying for a reason always remember that.
The novelty will wear off for USA people soon enough.
I don't know about Aldi, but when I heard what Lidl pays their employees, I was actually surprised. I thought they paid minimum wage, but it was almost 50% more than that.
Still not a lot, to be fair, but it's decent pay for the job.
The first few points, I was like, "They don't do that...? I thought everybody did that...." Efficiency, man. How different Canada is from her Big Brother...
Very!
When did standing - still - somehow make for a more efficient worker than someone sitting down, doing the same job, same pace, same "quality"..? Being a "hard worker" is not a good thing. It only nets you a broken body. Work smarter, not harder. You don't usually see people standing for hours on end in offices, do you? Employers want results, and ideally content workers - not sick leave because your knees are bust and you finally blew a disc. How on earth does you ruining your feet, knees, lower back, not even from lifting but frickin' standing there when it serves no extra purpose - serve your employer or customer? If you're manning a store and move around constantly, only by the register to ring up a customer and then off again - I get it. But if you're manning a register for more than 10 minutes at a time, you need some sort of chair. Just keep in mind posture.
It ‘shows work ethic’. (Don’t ask me what work ethic is. It basically boils down to a willingness to sacrifice your health and potentially even your life for your maste... er, the corporation that employs you.)
@@adiuntesserande6893 As if people in germany didn't show work ethic.. I think the do it even more.
If your employer treats you well and cares for your health, you are more motivated and willing to give everything you got at work. This should be very important in the US because health care is expensive and the system is very fucked up.
The "small" variety at ALDI isn't just good for ALDI, but also for the customer - it helps to prevent decision fatigue. I usually find it relaxing to buy there.
The only downside is if you really prefer a specific brand of something and can’t find it.
Funny fun fact: At least at Aldi in Germany, there are more and more branded products. But behind many of Aldi's own brands are the companies of expensive brands. The cheap cappuccino from Aldi (brand "Combo") is actually made by Nescafé. The cheap dairy products ("Milsani") come from the companies "Müller Milch", "Arla" or "Milram" and these are actually the most expensive brands in Germany for dairy products. The recipe is slightly changed and is produced especially for the discounters.
pegatan
Yes. And I actually prefer aldi’s chips. Clancy is the brand name in the USA. They’re really good!
In the US we have 2 main glass bakeware producers: Pyrex and anchor. Anchor produces the Aldi glass bakeware (at least here in the US)
Most times the recipe is exactly the same, because starting another recipe production line (or changing a running one) is way to expensive. Most of the time it is even the same package, just with another label. Most times you can tell by the package which company is producing the stuff.
Just jugg in the "cheapo label" and let the line run on.
and they have Maggi Products aswell!
same with the Aldi where I live in the Netherlands, mix of brand and non-brand here as well
9:00 fun fact: Even tho the products have no brand name, they often are of the same quality, because they were produced in the same factory as the brand named products (the manufacturer is the same, the product just uses a different name).
Or, they were produced in a different facility and are not of the same quality. You won't know unless you try it. Or you can buy the brand name product and know what to expect.
@@richardlamm4826 Actually, you can look it up - there are pages on the internet which tell you what product at Aldi is what brand name product.
And before you ask: nope, Aldi doesn't change their manufacturers very often (and if they do, the product normally looks different and most often has a slightly different name, too).
Aldi as a company is big enough that all brand manufacturers are actually HAPPY to work with them (think of Kenwood or other "brands" form Sears or other big chains a decade ago, which in reality were from GE and other companies, too) - the German term for this business behaviour is btw "die verfügbare Kaufkraft abschöpfen" (I guess a translation would be something like "harvest the available purchase power"), which means that they want people to buy THEIR products, and if they cannot afford the brand name, then they at least should buy the no-name version of their product from THEM, and not something from another manufacturer (they still make money of those no-name products, just not as much as from the brand ones which are exactly the same in different packaging).
Isn't business interesting? ;-)
Exactly Stefan. Lidl and Aldi makes deals with brand companies if they produce they stuff without the name on it, then they would sell it in their stores. If the company doesn't wanna do that, they won't sell their products at Aldi or Lidl. That's why Aldi and Lidl are so successful. With lil money you can buy good quality by big companies without paying their overpriced names on it.
The Aldi products that I’ve tried lack the flavor of brand name. No way around it, but for the great prices, it’s something I can live with.
My mom and I have been shopping at Aldi for years. We love it! I can actually get almost twice as much at Aldi as at WalMat for the same price. What many people do eith the carts is "pay it forward." Someone will give us the cart for free, and when we're done using the cart we'll give it to the next person for free. We don't mind Aldi brand food at all. My mother and I will greet the cashier, and we're usually conversing with each other while we're having our groceries rung through.(we do this pretty much wherever we happen to be shopping.) Our Aldi will deliver our groceries to our home now, which is incredibly helpful to me, ad I'm physically handicapped, and can't drive anymore. The Aldi setup doesn't bother me one bit! I'm totally okay with it!
As an American, my first time at an Aldi was very negative. I thoughts were: wow, where are all their employees at?? They must be in financial problems or something where they can’t hire enough employees. Why do I have to pay for a shopping cart, this cheap ass store. Why isn’t anyone bagging my groceries?? People must be on break. NOW, I know it’s not an American company, I can totally understand. I want to visit an Aldi again just to experience it again with a new perspective
Sounds cool. Now you'll know where these prices come from. Efficiency doesn't have to do with poor service mentality.
ở mỹ đâu phải văn minh đâu? cũng còn nhà quê ruộng lúa và mù chữ nữa 😂
@10:32 no germans are not suprised what they find in the "random" stuff isle ;)
the supermarkets have leafleats about what will be in store the next week (usually the day of change is thursday) and on really well sought after items, there were already queues at the store on openening time. (most famous example was the first personal computer Aldi was selling, but it also happened for smartphones, tvs, bikes and similar)
I love how u make it sound like the Americans are being more open-minded by accepting the supermarket designs All of Europe and more other places use. But the Germans are bad for not accepting the weird systems that are ONLY accepted in the US.
Did it ever occur to you that Aldi is doing well not because merica is more 'tolloret' of those funny 'German' ideas but because those ideas are simply more practical?
Exactly that! Aldi is successfull in a lot of contries and it keeps growing. Not because other contries are tolerating them, but it actually works. Aldi stores all over the world have a similar layout and you will never get lost. With a random isle for seasonal items that might be usefull in the upcomming days/weeks.
Aldi is simply cheap and offers good quality, that is why in the end people where ready to accept the concept even if it seemed strange?
Brands in food are basically pointless, so the supermarket can cut prices quite a lot by eliminiating the middle man.
Lets be honest, its just the price. When Walmart was in Germany it wasn't exactly known for being cheap, so it had nothing special to offer that the competition doesn't.
Whereas Aldi is cheap in the US as well and therefore liked there esp. from poor ppl.
@@carnifexx true,, it is about being cheap BUT also about good quality at low price... in Europe VERY VERY often Aldi (as well as Lidl) is located just next door to upper scale groceries. They complement each other. First you go to Aldi to get the standard stuff at a low price ... then you just walk 15m further to the next store and collect the specialities ...
I have to say I'm shocked about the "American way"! almost every aspect of it
As I was a kid I llways heard of America as "the country of freedom" ... nowadays I just think America is "the country of overweight man who cheer up an talking orange who is suposed to be their president"
I'm shocked by the Northern European way of rudeness, being cold as ice and generally I wo uld rather stay home where people act like human beings and not cold as ice cyborgs!! I woudn't mind visiting Latin America,where people act human not like a souless cyborg!!
@@umutkarzai9190 what do you mean ? we arent rude ? i mean most arent
@@l.h.9747 that umut guy is just ridiculous only talking bullshit like in every 2nd comment
I live in Canada. Here we have (The Great Canadian) Superstore. Shopping carts are a $1 deposit, and you have to bag your own groceries. I think Aldi would probably do quite well here.
It seems to me that Canadians are far more like Europeans and therefore not as ignorant as a lot of Americans.
Inthe uk, some shops will sell key rings with the 'coin' attached so you don't need real coinage in you pocket, you just attach your keys to the cart that are freed up when you return the cart.
I wouldn't mind having smalltalk with the cashier - I just hate it if the guy in front of me does it!
woodywoodverchecker same 😆
you are paying the work time he spends smalltalking to you!
I don't mind the smalltalk as long as they keep working while they do it. It's not exactly rocket science to scan and bag groceries, so they can chat while they're doing it. I know this because I was a cashier for a very busy supermarket for ten years. I hate it when they just stand there gabbing, whether they're waiting on me or anyone else. Luckily that doesn't happen often, most stores won't allow it. I know which ones do and I cringe when I shop at one and it happens, telling myself - again - that I won't shop there again. Unfortunately, the one with the chatty, snail-speed cashiers is the only one on my way home from work.
lol
I dont mind if the small talk is ... small! If the boomer in front of me is telling the cashier her life story, its kinda annoying
As an EU citizen, I love to shop at Aldi and Lidl. Although Lidl seems to have a little more diversity. I also love the "weekly deals", which Americans seem to think are "random items". I am very receptive to change, if it is for the better. I don't understand why people resist change so much. I like this quote from Charles Darwin: "It is not the strongest of the species that survives, but the one most responsive to change."
Here in the UK the "random item" aisle has become known as the "What's in the middle of Lidl?" aisle.
The random seasonal row is the best. It’s like a special bonus catalogue. They send out in the post each week and you get excited sort of like kinder eggs to see the new things. As an English/German person :)
We have these seasonal/miscellaneous rows at American stores too. I was baffled by the claim that we don't.
I love that aisle!
@@debbiebankscell You do though in my experiences travelling to the US those aisles seem to always feature what feels like a rather excessive amount of themed decor and branding to make sure that even most legally blind people would be able to tell it was the seasonal aisle at a glance (Most can make out blurry shapes and colours to a limited degree). Least it felt somewhat overkill to me in most US stores and this coming from a British person so I'm used to a culture which features heavy American influences including having adopted that trend of overtly decorating seasonal aisles but it still felt like overkill in many US stores to me, regular seasons feeling more like Christmas type extreme. Christmas usually being more in your face here but that seems to be more to make it stand out as the whole store will be decorated for Christmas anyway so making a Christmas theme stand out in a store decorated with a Christmas theme is harder lol.
But by definition - they do offer things you never intended to buy. It's pure impulse shopping. That is not rational. In the shop you say "I could need it" at home you say "why did I buy this" ?
I moved from the US to the UK over twenty years ago and had forgotten just how incredibly spoiled most American shoppers are. The sheer vitriol in some of the screencapped comments absolutely floored me. Let's recap, shall we?
No, it's not ridiculous for a store to reduce staffing costs (and encourage personal customer responsibility) by using a coin/keyfob system for cart retention.
No, it's not "disorganised" or "dirty" to display individually-packaged food items in the same cardboard boxes they arrive at the store in.
No, cashiers are not "lazy" for sitting down at the registers. (Why would you want to increase the misery of staff by forcing them to stand for an 8- or 10-hour shift, you selfish jerks?)
No, they're not being "rude" by opting to ring up your groceries as quickly as possible rather than dilly-dallying with chit-chat. (News flash for Americans lucky enough never to have had to work in retail: staff at big chains like Walmart are punished for not putting on that fake "cheerful greetings" schtick. Perhaps you could engage in some basic human empathy and realise that overworked, underpaid staff are unlikely to be in a bright and bouncy mood and that you insisting that they put on such an act for your pleasure is cruel and entitled of you.)
It's staggering hypocrisy for shoppers to demand products as cheaply as possible, but to then feign shock and dismay that this entails some minor compromises in how they shop. It also highlights a crass consumerist culture in the USA that couldn't give a damn about workplace conditions or the mental and physical health of the workers.
Yes. Never understand this selfish attitude.
Also, cashiers engaging in small talk while there's a line behind you sucks for everyone in that line, too. I'd take a faster-moving line over an overly friendly cashier any time.
A comment about the "randomness" of Aldis selection of non-food products:
This is basically part of their idea: They provide you with everything you need through the course of a year - but on their own schedule.
For example you'll be able to buy kid's winter boots sometime during fall (just when you kids will be about to need new ones most likely!) and they'll be of awesome quality for a low price.
Then, in winter, they'll carry snow shovels one week, warm jackets and thick socks the next and so on.
Finally, when spring arrives, they'll provide you with most of your gardening needs and sell you new furniture for your patio a week after that.
Good thing is that their stuff is mostly high quality and since they buy in bulk (or have manufacturers work for them directly) they are able to offer great prices and a very wide range of stuff.
Several years back, Aldi started selling computers two to three times a year and caused a riot with people waiting in line hours before stores opened in order to get one of the computers because the price was just that good...
I believe back in the mid-2000s my dad got a brand new Medion PC from Aldi. It managed to keep going for roughly 10 years or so.
@@TheJH1015 Medion ONLY sell through supermarkets.Having said that my printer died and lo Aldi came to the rescue they were selling Canon printers. Again.
Lidl has the same idea. They encourage you to buy as you cannot think a week and then go back and buy. The item will not there anymore.
I got my keyboard (piano thing) at aldi about ten years ago. It‘s by far not the best you can get but it brought me a lot of joy. It also shows the notes on the little display so I was able to teach myself songs without taking lessons. I mean I have taken lessons in college years later because they were free. Only then I realized that a real piano‘s keys need a lot more pressure to give a sound. Took me a while to get used to but I have no regrets haha
17:05 you said, that germans are emotional about bagging teir groceries. I am german and don‘t think that‘s the case, but when we can sort groceries it makes a lot more sense. For example, we put milk and frozen stuff in a spezial cooled bag. In the other bags we put the heavy stuff in the bottom of the bag, so that nothing gets squezed. I don‘t think walmart cashiers sort it that well.
F B Walmart and grocery store cashiers are trained to keep frozen foods together, refrigerated foods together, meat, poultry, seafood and cooked foods separate from each other and everything else and bag bulk items together. They’re not savages.
@@afcgeo882
I lived in the US from 1984 til 1987 and the baggers I experienced were very efficient in packing groceries into brown paper bags. But I remember that they also expected to be paid for their services.
I wouldn't call it emotional, but I definitely have a strategy how I place products in the cart and later on the belt. Heavy and hard (or not delicate) stuff first so they got to the bottom of the baskets. Bottles in six packs stay in the cart and divide the heavy from the light. Cool or frozen stuff goes to a special container for camping or special bags when I come to the car. Mostly I do not use bags for the unrefrigerated stuff, but three big open plastic baskets that I have been using for >10 years and which are quickly filled. On the way to Aldi I bring along the empty bottles and cans for redeemer and the cardboard from Aldi products and return them both before the shopping starts. It is my personal logistics concept, if you will.
@@angelafriedemannnecef6984 Maybe at mom-and-pop stores, where there were baggers in addition to cashiers? At all the big chains, you don't pay the cashiers for bagging.
corporate does not train their employees anything because they think it cost more money to do so that is why many do not know the basic stuff in life, that is why customer service in the US lacks tremendously nowadays
The "random" limited non-food offers get me every time. Because they are gone the next week and are so cheap, I always feel like I need to buy them. Which I guess is the idea behind the whole thing.
Its worth having a look you might see something that you need at a cheap price
They always see, where they get a good bulk offer for their thousands of stores and then sell them there as a limited sale. Just to always be the cheapest and get the people to look in their advertisement for new offers
Pizza goes splat Honestly, this is one of the things I like about them. If you are on a tight budget you can still get a lot of stuff that is relatively cheap and has an overall decent quality.
Well, since I can guess from your name that you're probably German, you should be familiar with the scenarios occurring every now and then at Aldi's entrance when they got extremely cheap offers.
We don't need Black Friday in Germany, when Aldi can offer TVs for 300€ on Monday.
As an American, Aldi sounds like a dream! No small talk, low waste, you get to bad your own groceries the way you want. Nice !
Very thorough view on American vs. German shopping habits. I think the reason why Aldi is successful in the US and Walmart had to fold in Germany is that the annoyances of Aldi are paid for by cheaper goods whereas Walmart asked Germans to pay extra for the annoyance. That's of course oversimpified especially since Walmart used price dumping in Germany.
As a German I don't like shopping at Aldis. Americans are without a doubt right, the customer service is non-existant. But like you pointed out - that's the point! It saves cost and makes the products cheaper. So you have a choice. Surely Walmart offered something that hasn't been in Germany. But there was no demand for it either. I'm mostly put off by people who are constantly smiling. It appears fake to me. There are service oriented grocery shops in Germany like REWE. You will always find help there, all the brand name items, but it is more expensive. However they are still efficient.
I cannot however concur on the emotionality of grocery packing. When I pack my bag it's heavy, solid items on the bottom, lighter and more delicate items on top so they don't get smashed. In my experience when a store clerk packs my bag, they bag it the way the items are checked out. Some products get damaged. So there is nothing emotional about that as far as I am concerned.
Stay safe and healthy!
What I do to solve items being bagged wrong is put the heaviest items in the conveyor belt first; then, the lighter items. Works beautifully.
just what type of customer service do you require when picking up milk, cheese, mineral water, lettuce and some onions for example? In the US, I hated having to permanently fend off shop assistants hovering around me like outhouse flies instead of leaving me alone and letting me just do my shopping!
Well said and stay safe and healthy to you as well!!
At most major grocery store chains in the U.S., the cashiers/baggers are specifically taught how to pack bags. They are supposed to put the heavier items on the bottom, as you said. They are not to put soaps or anything fragrant in the same bag as food. Things like that. In my own experience, I find that the vast majority of them do these things. Only when there is someone new or on a rare occasion does someone do it wrong. Or if I provide my own bag, which I'm trying to do, then they're kind of forced to put everything into the same bag.
Lets not forget the one thing, that Walmart had to face in Germany as well: worker rights. A company in Germany cannot forbid its employees to fraternize. Its against the law in Germany to try something like that and Walmart got sued over it by unions and lost.
I am Dutch and we have a lot of Aldi's in the Netherlands. The way the Dutch stores operate are like the German ones, with minor differences. Most of the differences between US grocery stores apply to the Dutch too. In my opinion most of the differences are not that bad. One however is: the attitude of the costumers towards the employees. These employees have a right to a safe and healthy environment and the right to a secure and well payed job. In this time they are the heroes that stay on the job and make the living in social quarantine for the other people possible thus preventing the breakdown of the health system.
Excellent post.
That's why I'm currently thanking those people each time I go shopping and tell them that I wish them health and strength (especially to deal with the annoying irrational customers and the workload)
I love Albert Heijn. It's so modern!
They do? A right to a secure and well paid job....??? Wow....thanks interesting, I have never heard of a place where that was a right. We have a right to quit our job if we don’t like it , demand more pay, or go to work somewhere else. It is basically all based on supply and demand I guess. The more skills one has, the more pay that he/she can demand, as long as those skills are in demand they will have a job. It’s interesting how other countries do things. The only question I would have is, how does one define what is well paid??
@@ike7933 Would you wish someone a non-secure job that is badly paid, Ike? And on what grounds? Do you think someone working at a low paid job therefore must have a lack of skills? Do you think skilled people who have skills that are not in demand should starve?
This is so good. I knew I hated Aldi but didn’t know why! I’m Australian so Aldi hasn’t been around that long. The latest toilet paper shortage changed my mind. We had tried out biggest two supermarkets (Coles and Woolies) and no toilet paper. I sat and waited for my daughter to go into Aldi to get some wine and she came out with 4 rolls of toilet paper! The cashier asked every customer if they wanted to buy some
Toilet paper. She had some hidden behind her. I nearly cried because I was down to two rolls between 4 adults!
smalltalk with a cashier? i would never ask one how he or she is doing, when i know he or she can not answer honestly.
hallo. (hello.)
guten tag. (good morning)
beep!
beep!
beep!
...
...das auch von Ihnen? (this is also yours?)
ja. (yes.)
beep!
...
...
macht 22,40 bitte. (it's 22,40)
...
25, danke. (25, thank you)
2,60 für sie. (2,60 back)
danke. ( thank you)
schönes wochenende. (have a nice weekend.)
danke, Ihnen auch. (thank you, you also.)
that's all you need. no false blabla and grant them the freedom to be faceless
Yeah, those empty phrases have always given me a bad feeling. I used to work for the US Army at the end of the eighties. My boss, a captain, always asked me how I was when he came to my office. At one time I just felt like saying that I'm not well (although I was quite okay) just to see his reaction. He didn't react at all by asking me why I wasn't well. He didn't care and ignored my answer , just another empty phrase, small talk, no real interest in my well being. That is exactly the difference between Anglosaxons, US as well as UK, and continental European mentality. So glad to be living in Europe :).
I work as a cashier in an American Aldis and I can say that it's really difficult trying to make small talk when I'm trying to move customers through the line. The company really does encourage efficiency (so do I), but when I'm trying to ring up a line of 3-4 people quickly while also trying to accommodate America's small talk culture, it can be a little frustrating...especially when I don't mean half the things I ask or reply to.
Frankly, as an American, I'm fine without small talk from the cashier. I've been queuing for 10 minutes, the last thing I need is a chatty cashier. Get it rung up and get me out!