The ALDI effect: Australia’s changing supermarket scene

June 22 2015
Finding No. 6297
Topic: Press Release
Source: Roy Morgan Single Source (Australia), April 2006 – March 2015 (average 12-monthly sample size n=13,134). Base: Australian grocery buyers 14+, weighted to Australian households
As German supermarket chain ALDI continues its expansion across the country, with South Australia and Western Australia set firmly in its sights (and plans), its market share continues to rise. In fact, ALDI’s market share has more than tripled from 3.1% to 11.6% over the last 10 years while heavyweights Woolworths Group and Coles Group have seen their share decrease, the latest findings from the Roy Morgan Research Supermarket Currency Report reveal.
As it did a decade ago, Woolworths holds the largest slice of the market, but this has declined slightly from 40.3% in the 12 months to March 2006 to 38.5% as of March 2015. Coles’ share has decreased more markedly, from 37.0% to 31.8%. ALDI remains a distant third, but its push beyond the Eastern seaboard suggests that its upward trajectory is not about to plateau any time soon.
Market share over time: supermarket grocery market dollars

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Source: Roy Morgan Single Source (Australia), April 2006 – March 2015 (average 12-monthly sample size n=13,134). Base: Australian grocery buyers 14+, weighted to Australian households
In an average four weeks, 35.1% of Australian grocery buyers shop at ALDI: an impressive statistic for a chain with stores located in just three states. It has been particularly successful in Victoria and New South Wales, with just over 47% of each state’s grocery buyers shopping in ALDI stores any given four weeks.
In the last two years alone, ALDI’s share of the Victorian market has grown from 13.3% to 15.5%. Over the same time period, Coles’ slice of the pie has declined from 36.0% to 31.6%, while that of Woolworths has remained static at around 35%. It’s a similar story in NSW, with ALDI gaining ground (from 13.4% to 15.9%), Coles losing ground, and Woolworths flat-lining.
Attitude counts
Recently we reported that ALDI shoppers are more likely than other supermarket customers to buy store’s own products than well-known brands, and to go out of their way in search of a bargain.
Further analysis of supermarket shoppers’ attitudes reveals that grocery buyers who usually shop at ALDI are dramatically more likely than those who usually shop at Coles, Woolworths/Safeway or IGA to agree that good value and low prices are ‘very important’.
On the other hand, people who usually shop at Coles, Woolworths/Safeway and IGA are more concerned that their supermarket is located close to home than whether it has good value and low prices.
Michele Levine, CEO, Roy Morgan Research, says:
“The planned entry of German discount supermarket chain Lidl into Australia, with its first store most likely to be in Melbourne, means all eyes will be on Victoria.
“While the threat of a new entrant with global buying power, expertise and experience will be a challenge, the main players in Australia are well placed with large existing customer bases. However, with its regular shoppers placing such importance on price and value, ALDI will need to be vigilant — once its old rival Lidl opens its doors in Australia, there will likely be some customer crossover.
“In any case, we expect to see Aussie supermarkets focusing more on ‘customers’ than ever – understanding who they are, what their needs and drives are, and how to communicate with them and engage their loyalty. Supermarket credit cards are one example of how they are already doing this; another is pre-paid mobile phone services such as ALDImobile.
“Certainly, consumers stand to benefit from this increasingly competitive market, with wider choices and better prices as supermarkets work even harder to consolidate or grow their customer bases.”

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