Tante Enso alternative
Tante Enso is a well-known model of digital local supply with citizen participation. Those weighing up alternatives should compare the concepts factually.

Tante Enso has implemented the model of the digitally operated village shop with citizen participation in many places. Municipalities and operators looking for alternatives benefit from a sober comparison of concepts — detached from brand names.
Comparing models factually
When comparing digital local supply, it is worth looking at the operating logic: how is the shop operated outside service hours, how flexible is the building type, and how well can the concept be adapted to the frequency and structure of the specific village?
- adaptability to an existing building, container store or new build
- suitability for municipal and cooperative ownership models
- opening hours up to 24/7
- integration of regional producers into the product range
- scalability across several locations within a region
Where friedas comes in
friedas places the emphasis on a flexible concept adapted to the village: different building types, municipal suitability, long opening hours around the clock, the integration of regional products and the ability to build up several locations within a region.
What matters is not the brand, but the question: which concept fits the frequency, the ownership model and the strategy of your municipality?
Conclusion
Tante Enso and friedas share the basic idea of digital local supply, but set their own priorities. Those seeking an alternative should put flexibility, municipal suitability and regionality at the centre — and begin with a location analysis.
Check local supply for your community
The site analysis is free and non-binding.


