2Pirates2Princesses
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2010
Of course you don't. But the typical Aldi customer is very different from the typical Whole Foods customer. That's the article's point.
I read the article and I don't see their point for presenting these kinds of generalized shopper profiles as Whole Foods and Aldi are two distinctly different types of stores. I've never viewed Whole Foods as being an everyday grocery store to fill a grocery cart at, but more so as a specialty food store. My oldest son has autism, so years ago when it was almost impossible to find glutein-free foods in regular grocery stores, Whole Foods was one of the few places we could shop for him. So the article's projected dichotomy of who the typical shopper at one vs. the other is says nothing that would make me question the quality and value of Aldi's food and merchandise.