Planche 01 — Q3 2026 Strategic Comparison

NL Albert Heijn vs NL Picnic

Head-to-head across 4 Power Index axes: Momentum, Margin Discipline, Expansion Velocity, and Tech Adoption. Composite scores from 0–100. Source: Aisle Intelligence Power Index Q3 2026 — built from annual reports, trading updates, GS1 ESL data, and field observations.

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Planche 02 — Composite Score
Albert Heijn
67
/ 100 composite
vs
Picnic
69
/ 100 composite
Planche 03 — Four-Axis Breakdown
Momentum Gap: 2 pts · Picnic leads
NL Albert Heijn
71
NL Picnic
73
Margin Discipline Gap: 29 pts · Albert Heijn leads
NL Albert Heijn
68
NL Picnic
39
Expansion Velocity Gap: 20 pts · Picnic leads
NL Albert Heijn
48
NL Picnic
68
Tech Adoption Gap: 14 pts · Picnic leads
NL Albert Heijn
82
NL Picnic
96
Biggest strategic gap
Margin Discipline — Albert Heijn leads by 29 points.
Planche 04 — Quick Facts
NL Albert Heijn
Revenue€22B
Stores1,100+
GeographyNetherlands, Belgium
CountryNetherlands
Strategic read

"Albert Heijn's Belgian store concept is quietly becoming Ahold Delhaize's test infrastructure for continental rollouts."

NL Picnic
Revenue€1B+
StoresOnline
GeographyNL, Germany, France
CountryNetherlands
Strategic read

"Picnic's last-mile model is disrupting Dutch grocery logistics in a way that justifies the 96 tech adoption score."

Planche 05 — Strategic Analysis
Aisle Intelligence · Power Index Analysis

Albert Heijn vs Picnic: the Q3 2026 strategic read

Albert Heijn and Picnic are both major operators in the European grocery landscape, but their Q3 2026 strategic trajectories diverge sharply. Picnic holds a composite Power Index score of 69/100 vs 67/100 for Albert Heijn — a 2-point gap that is closer than it appears from the headline numbers. The most important comparison isn't the total score but where the gap sits.

On Margin Discipline, the 29-point lead belongs to Albert Heijn (68 vs 39). That is the strategically decisive dimension in this matchup. Picnic leads on Tech Adoption (82 vs 96), which drives unit-economics compounding over 5–7 years. Picnic leads on Expansion Velocity (48 vs 68) — the most visible near-term signal of where management is betting capex. Albert Heijn leads on Margin Discipline (68 vs 39), which determines how much optionality each operator has when the next consumer spending contraction arrives.

The strategic verdict: Picnic's edge on composite score is narrow and contested — watch the next 12–18 months for inflection. Albert Heijn's thesis — "Albert Heijn's Belgian store concept is quietly becoming Ahold Delhaize's test infrastructure for continental rollouts." — remains intact but faces pressure from the dimensions where Picnic leads. For a European grocery strategy function, the most important question from this comparison is not who wins but which of the four axes matters most for your competitive exposure. The full Aisle Intelligence deep-dive library has the retailer-level primary research behind every score.

Planche 06 — Full Portal Access
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