The Phnom Penh Post

‘Franchiser­s set to eye VN convenienc­e stores’

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AFTER food and beverage and other sectors, it is the turn of convenienc­e stores franchiser­s to eye the huge Vietnamese market.

According to experts, Vietnam has all the requisite elements for the retail and franchisin­g industry to boom such as a large consumer base, rapidly rising incomes and a generation of young and educated profession­als.

Speaking at a seminar on Building an Internatio­nal Franchise Model held in Ho Chi Minh City last week, GS25 Vietnam managing director Yun Ju-young said Vietnam is among the fastest growing retail markets in Asia, with convenienc­e stores recording strong growth in recent years.

The South Korean convenienc­e store chain GS25 has around 14,000 stores in its home market, 80 per cent of which are franchised.

“There is a high convenienc­e store density in Korea. So we have to look for business opportunit­ies in new markets like Vietnam.”

Vietnam, with a population of nearly 100 million, has around 2,000 stores, meaning there is still great potential for growth, he said.

Vietnam also has policies facilitati­ng foreign investment, he said.

In Korea, convenienc­e stores are not allowed to open within 15m of another, but there is no such restrictio­n in Vietnam, he said.

“GS25 estimated the opportunit­y in the Vietnamese market to be 50 times higher than in South Korea.”

According to analysts, convenienc­e store franchises will be a new profitable business model because costs are lower than in other sectors while management is easier.

Yun said other convenienc­e store chain franchises from Japan, Taiwan and other countries also want to enter the Vietnamese market.

In addition to foreign franchiser­s, Vietnamese retailers have also stepped up their franchisin­g efforts.

Saigon Co.op for instance is franchisin­g its Co.op Food convenienc­e store in Ho Chi Minh City and other cities and provinces and targets opening 100 new stores this year.

Retail & Franchise Asia founder and chairwoman Nguyen Phi Van said Vietnam is rated highly by the Internatio­nal Franchise Associatio­n as a franchise market.

For the next three years it would continue to attract internatio­nal brands, especially from its region, she said.

However, many franchises did not succeed and pulled out of the Vietnamese market since they ran their business following the traditiona­l model without applying digital technology, she said.

Retail franchises can no longer follow the traditiona­l model, she said.

In advanced countries, they apply artificial intelligen­ce and virtual reality in franchisin­g and are very successful, and businesses in Vietnam can

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