Saigon News
Exporting
Vietnamese products to Cambodia is beneficial to both countries,
however, in order to hold onto this market, Vietnamese firms must remain
proactive and consistently advertise their brands and improve quality
of their products and services.
A Vietnamese food stand in Cambodia. (Photo: SGGP) |
In the last few
years, Vietnamese exporters have seen Cambodia as a potentially
lucrative market for investments and consumer products. Because most
consumer goods in Cambodia are imported, Vietnam can easily fulfill this
void and offer products of quality, better design and price.
According to Vu Thinh
Cuong, commercial counselor of Vietnam in Cambodia, trade between
Vietnam and Cambodia reached US$2.8 billion last year, of which trade
surplus from Vietnam was around $2 billion.
During the first months of
this year, Vietnam intensified trade links with Cambodia. As a result,
exports from Vietnam are expected to top $3.5 billion with potential for
more consumer goods to flood the market.
A representative of Ba Vi
Milk Joint Stock Company said that his company has started to sell their
products at Vinamart -- the supermarket that specializes in
made-in-Vietnam products in Cambodia, since the beginning of the year.
The business results achieved in this market have urged the company to
increase exports of dairy products to Cambodia.
Tang Quang Trong, sales
manager of Dai Dong Tien Plastic Company for Indochina, said that demand
for consumer goods in Cambodia is huge and several Vietnamese products
already have the upper hand. As for household plastic goods, Vietnamese
products surpass Thai products, holding 80 percent of market share. In
2011, revenues of Dai Dong Tien topped VND20 billion from sales in
Cambodia. For this purpose alone the company has built a warehouse in
Cambodia to increase its distribution network.
The Cambodian market offers
many business opportunities for Vietnamese retailers, who have an array
of consumer products. At the end of 2010, the first Vietnamese
supermarket was established by Z38 Company, a member of Vietnam
Businessmen’s Association in Cambodia, which made its debut in Cambodia
with an investment of more than $3 million. This supermarket has helped
open doors for Vietnamese products to be in easier reach of Cambodian
consumers.
In order to develop more
distribution channels for Vietnamese products, Saigon Co.op set up its
trade center in Phnom Penh. According to Nguyen Thi Hanh, CEO of Saigon
Co.op, retail business in Cambodia is very poor hence retailers still
have a lot of space to develop. However, when building a retail network,
firms should coordinate with a Cambodia-based company for support and
guidance.
Currently, Saigon Food
Joint Stock Company and Vissan Company have been promoting their sales,
established representative offices and retail stores in cities and
provinces to serve Cambodian consumers.
After being in the
Cambodian market for a few years, the ABC Bakery Company opened four
stores with revenues surging by 40 percent annually. The company now
plans to open 10 more stores to expand its network.
Although a compliance
market, businessmen who enter this market first advise that it takes
time and patience to succeed in Cambodia. Saigon Cosmetics Company
entered the market a long time ago and has now opened stores in some
provinces with revenues growing steadily. However, every year the
company still has to register to join brand promotional programs to
retain a hold in the Cambodian market, as it constantly faces fierce
competition from China, Thailand and Japan. If the company fails to
promote its brand, its products will possibly be sidelined or remain
unsold in this brutal market.
Doan Xuan Nghi, head of the
representative office of Thien Long Group, said that in order to
achieve its current revenue of $1 million a year, the company had to
consistently join brand promotional programs for nine years. Cambodian
consumers are compliant but it does not mean that they will buy
anything.
According to Vietnamese
firms, trading is extremely vibrant between Vietnam and Cambodia. Firms
have shifted from simply buying and selling to joint-venturing and
associating to bring their products into this market. Moreover, the
Cambodian government allows foreign companies to set up companies,
branches, shopping centers, supermarkets, and stores with same benefits
as domestic ones. This makes for a favorable environment for Vietnamese
firms.
Imported goods from Vietnam
have become more diversified and sell at reasonable prices. In many
trade fairs, Vietnamese made products sell out soon after being
displayed--in a matter of hours.
Firms should however remain
cautious and alert, as Cambodia is an open market, and other countries
may tap into the market very easily, increasing competition. Thus, firms
should promote products professionally, offer attractive designs and
packaging and focus on building brand image to be able to compete with
products from other countries and to be able to retain their hold on
this market.
2 comments:
Vietnamese products are loved by Cambodians because there are millions of Youns in Cambodia. Real Khmers don't shop at youns shops, only youn descendants do. Look at those shoppers, who do they look like?
Cambodia under Hun Sen for 33 years, means millions of Youn freely living in Khmer. Billions of export from Youn.
This is why millions of Khmer are living with no land and on $50 a month.
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