Vietnam firms reap success through
branding
The Ministry of
Planning and Investment (MPI) recently unveiled that as of December 31, 2014
it had approved 930 outward foreign direct investment (FDI) projects
registered at VND14.85 billion.
In calendar
year 2014 alone, the MPI reported it approved domestic businesses request for
90 new and supplementary outward investment projects calling for total
investment of US$4.93 billion.
According to the report,
Vietnamese businesses chiefly focused on investment projects in
telecommunication sector followed by the agro-forestry-fishery sectors.
It also reported that many
Vietnamese businesses are achieving a high level of success competing in
overseas markets.
Vinamilk – Vietnam’s
largest milk producer – is one of the success stories. With an aggressive
overseas marketing campaign aimed at developing its brand, the company
reportedly is on target to realising US$3 billion in overseas revenue by
2017.
One of its more high
profile projects is a US$3 billion dairy project in Poland, which
the firm considers as the gateway to the European market. The company also
has a controlling (51%) interest in a US$23-million dairy plant in Cambodia for
which it recently announced expansion plans.
Military-run telecom group
Viettel has also had success in the Cambodian market. In 2009 it
initially dumped millions into a Met-fone project in its Southeast Asian
neighbour.
With a well-thought out and
innovative marketing plan it is well on its way to becoming a major player in
the international telecommunications and information industry.
Last year, the group
launched a number of telecom services in Peru
and Cameroon.
So far, Viettel has been conducting business in nine countries and has
achieved an average growth rate of 25% in recent years with revenues
approximating US$1.2 billion annually.
Leading market analysts have
said the key to the success of the aforementioned three companies is that
they implemented a strategic marketing campaign aimed at building their
brand.
In an integrated world,
Vietnamese companies need to make the case to the consumers who they want to
buy their product that it is high quality and distinctively different than
all of the other products.
Companies that can’t make
the case that their product is uniquely different and innovative can’t
compete are at a severe disadvantage in a highly integrated marketplace.
The importance of building
a brand is a lesson that spills over to competing in the domestic marketplace
as well.
Take the case of Da Lan
toothpaste, Tribeco beverage and Bibica confectionery. All three of these
companies failed to brand their products and instil in the consumer a brand
loyalty.
That mistake opened the
door to companies like Uni-President of Taiwan
and Lotte of the Republic
of Korea to move in and
takeover.
On the other hand Bidrico
strategically marketed their brand both at home and abroad in since it was
first establishment in 1995. At present, Bidrico’s products are available at
over 100 supermarkets nationwide and exported to more than 15 countries and
territories-including the US,
Germany, Japan, Myanmar,
Laos, and Cambodia.
ITA RICE is another
successful model of branding that other domestic businesses should follow.
The company invested heavily in its brand and it is paying huge dividends.
Today the company’s name is
synonymous with Vietnamese Good Agricultural Practices (VietGAP) and Global
GAPand internationally-recognised set of farm standards that follows GAP.
The firm pays meticulous
attention to ensuring food hygiene and safety and increasing product quality
by applying modern farming techniques and advanced technology for
post-harvest preservation.
Lien Viet Post Bank is
another prime example of the importance of branding as its name conjures up
an immediate image of a company with a strong corporate social responsibility
(CSR) and that is what branding is all about.
VOV
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