Government calls on local firms to improve foreign market
strategies
HA NOI - The
Government has approved a plan to help Vietnamese businesses directly
participate in foreign distribution networks through 2020 to help Vietnamese
goods penetrate international markets, a senior Government official said.
The project aims to promote exports
by ensuring that Vietnamese products are directly sold into major
distribution systems of countries in Europe, North America, Southeast Asia
and Northeast Asia that signed free trade agreements with Viet Nam.
In a recent interview with the Viet
Nam News Agency, Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Ho Thi Kim Thoa
said Viet Nam recently signed many free trade agreements, adding the
integration process required enterprises to enhance their competitiveness.
Thoa said local businesses have made
great efforts to expand their markets, adding that many Vietnamese products
with high quality and reasonable prices were favoured by consumers.
"For example, Viet Nam is
currently the world's fourth-largest footwear producer. Vietnamese
agricultural products and food also have a strong foothold in many foreign
distribution systems," she said.
According to the Phap Luat
TPHCM (HCM City Law) newspaper, Vietnamese food and foodstuffs have
been successful in penetrating some foreign markets via the export channels
of the supermarket system, which has made remarkable efforts to take local
goods to world markets.
Nguyen Thi Thuy, deputy general
director of Sai Gon Co.op that owns the Co.opmart supermarket chain, said
they exported more than 80 containers of food and foodstuffs to Singapore
last year, such as dragon fruits, fresh coconuts, pangasius fillets and many
other processed food products.
"In the future, Sai Gon Co.op
will continue to support domestic enterprises to export more products to this
market," Thuy told Phap Luat TPHCM (HCM City Law)
newspaper.
A representative from Lotte Mart
Vietnam said currently 24 Vietnamese enterprises exported their products to
Korea via the distribution channels of the Lotte Mart supermarket chain, with
more than 100 types of products.
Vietnamese products accounted for
seven to 10 per cent of the products sold at the Lotte Mart supermarket chain
in foreign countries, he said.
The most common products were dragon
fruits, coconuts, durian and dried fish and squid as well as raw and
processed coffee, he told Phap Luat TPHCM newspaper.
He said Vietnamese producers were
increasingly manufacturing high-quality products with reasonable prices, but
the consumption in South Korea remained relatively low.
Therefore, the company was trying to
enhance customer awareness about Vietnamese goods and was focusing on
advertising some key Vietnamese export products such as fruits, seafood,
confectionery and snacks, besides tea, sauces, spices and handicraft
products, he said.
Le Van Khoa, vice-chairman of the
HCM City People's Committee, told Phap Luat TPHCM newspaper
that some large supermarkets in HCM City recently participated in trade
promotion activities, especially trade fairs, in foreign markets such as
Singapore, Korea and some European countries.
They held the fairs to connect
enterprises with distribution channels and foreign partners, and to encourage
customers to buy Vietnamese products, Khoa said.
Different taste
Ly Truong Chien, deputy head of
consulting committee of the Viet Nam Marketing Association (VMA) and a member
of the International Committee Management Consultant (ICMC), told Phap
Luat TPHCM newspaper that in foreign markets, most of the Vietnamese
products were mainly consumed by overseas Vietnamese.
However, overseas Vietnamese
consuming these exported products was anyway a stepping stone for Vietnamese
food manufacturers to gradually approach foreign customers, Chien said.
Explaining the low consumption of
foreign buyers, Chien said Vietnamese food and foodstuff producers who
exported their goods to foreign markets focused mainly on selling the goods
favoured by the Vietnamese community.
They had not paid adequate attention
to the tastes and preferences of the foreign customers, Chien said.
For example, Chien said, many mam
tom (fermented shrimp paste) manufacturers and nuoc mam (fish
sauce) suppliers were trying to enter foreign markets. Many Vietnamese people
enjoy these sauces, but their challenging taste and smell do not easily
appeal to foreigners.
Okihiko Ishikawa, a Japanese
businessman who has spent more than 10 years working in Viet Nam, said he
could hardly get used to the unpleasant smell of mam tom, which he called a
pungent sauce.
"I'm a durian-hater, too, as I
cannot stand its smell, which is quite stinky and persistent. However, my
wife is a huge fan of the fruit. I'm really annoyed when she stores durian in
the fridge," Ishikawa said.
But he said he enjoyed bun cha, a
Vietnamese popular traditional dish made of grilled pork, rice noodles and a
dipping fish sauce as well as other ingredients such as sugar, chilli, pepper
and lime juice, besides garlic.
Ishikawa said he really enjoyed the
savoury taste of the dipping sauce.
"Whenever I return to Japan, I
often buy a lot of Vietnamese fruits such as limes, mangosteen and rambutan
as gifts for my friends and relatives, and also other local specialties such
as salted dry apricots and instant coffee," he said.
Ishikawa said Vietnamese food and
foodstuffs had their own attraction with special flavour, but local
businesses needed to have a stronger branding strategy and research more
about cultural preferences, hobbies and buying habits of each type of
customer in different markets.
Deputy Minister Thoa told Vietnam
News Agency that in the context of the deeper integration, domestic
businesses had to further improve their competitiveness, including enhancing
the quality of manpower and management capacity and formulating
brand-building strategies to conquer the regional and global markets, and
fully meet the needs of consumers.
The government needed to further
improve policy mechanisms consistent with international practices, creating a
fair and competitive environment for businesses, Thoa said. - VNS
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Thứ Hai, 15 tháng 2, 2016
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