Vietnamese
businesses in pursuit of entry into Thai consumer market
Local
businesses will have to meet various requirements to achieve success
A
Thai customer shows interest in made-in-Vietnam silk scarves. Photo: Tuoi Tre
Vietnam has
been facing many challenges introducing local products to its neighbor,
Thailand.
While made-in-Thailand merchandise
is increasingly consumed by the Vietnamese market, the situation is not very
positive the other way round.
Many widely popular products in
Vietnam seem unfamiliar to Thai consumers as they have only been imported and
sold in small quantity by intermediate businesses and merchants.
To settle the issue, an event named
‘Vietnamese Product Week’ has recently been organized in Bangkok, with the
participation of over 40 brands from Vietnam.
At the stall of Vinamit, a
Vietnamese agricultural product company that has operated since 1988,
Jiratha, a Thai buyer, was having a taste of the firm’s dried fruit samples
and could not stop complimenting their flavor and crunchiness.
Jiratha recounted trying the food
during her previous trip to Phuket.
As she was impressed with the
quality, the Thai consumer has been looking for the product, to no avail,
after she returned to Bangkok because it is not widely sold in the city.
According to Vu Thanh Truc,
international business manager of Vinamit, this is the first time the company
has introduced its goods to the Thai market.
Its merchandise was previously
imported and sold by local merchants at airports and railway stations in
Thailand, Truc elaborated.
“We are confident that our
advantages in taste and quality can compete with similar merchandise in
Thailand,” the representative asserted.
Like Vinamit, other Vietnamese
businesses said they had been shying away from entering the Thai market due
to the lack of knowledge of local consumers’ preferences and distribution
systems.
Bui Thi Ngoc Tuyen from the
import-export department of Bich Chi Food Company said her enterprise had
only been working with their Thai partners via an intermediary.
During the event, Nguyen Xuan Ton,
director of Long Trieu Coffee Company, has spent his free time exploring the
trend at coffee shops in Bangkok, discovering that Vietnamese coffee is
offered at many locations.
“Given the potential market, all we
need to do is complete other phases such as pricing and packaging,” Ton said.
Originality
In order to make a deal with
partners in Thailand, a Vietnamese business has to undergo several stages of
negotiation and quality assurance to meet local standards.
However, such procedures are
considered a small challenge, Tran Thanh Hai, vice-president of Central Group
Vietnam, said, adding that product originality is more essential.
Agreeing with the opinion, Dinh Thi
My Loan, secretary-general of the Association of Vietnam Retailers (AVR),
said Vietnam and Thailand share many similarities in such merchandise as
agricultural products, consumer goods, and packaged foods.
For a successful entry into the Thai
market, products from Vietnam must have distinctive features in terms of
quality, packaging, and distribution, Loan stated.
According to Vu Dao, director of
Phong Son Tiem Company, which had exported two metric tons of lychee sourced
from the northern Vietnamese province of Bac Giang to Thailand, Vietnamese
lychee is tastier and sweeter than its Thai counterpart, though the two
countries share the same lychee season.
“The two metric tons accounted for
just one-tenth of our original goal. We need to be more persistent to extend
operations to this market,” Dao continued.
The firm previously had to meet a
series of qualifications before exporting the fruit to Australia, he said,
adding that such requirements also apply to the Thai market.
By Tuoi Tre News
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Chủ Nhật, 20 tháng 8, 2017
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