Showing posts with label goods rural. Show all posts
Showing posts with label goods rural. Show all posts

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Plan to sell goods in rural areas succeeds

A Government programme to distribute domestically made goods in rural
areas had benefited both companies and rural consumers, delegates told a
meeting in HCM City on Sept. 23.


Initiated in
March last year by the Ministry of Industry and Trade and the HCM
City-based Business Study and Assistance Centre, it sought to help
domestic producers understand rural customers, creating links between
producers, distributors and retailers, and educating rural consumers,
said Vu Kim Hanh, the centre's director.


The first
phase of the programme, which was reviewed at the meeting, saw 50 trade
fairs held in 18 provinces and sales of more than 30.4 billion VND (1.55
million USD), she said.


Around 649,300 people
visited the fairs while 132 firms were involved in the programme. More
than 2,000 small traders benefited from training courses held to improve
their sales skills.


The programme has enabled many
rural people to buy quality products at reasonable prices. For a long
time they have been accustomed to buying shoddy goods without clear
origins.


Tang Quang Trong of My Hao Cosmetic Company
said: "Through the trade fairs, rural customers know more about many of
our products. We also learnt to tailor our product models, prices,
quality and distribution system to suit consumers."


Do Hoang Nam of Namilux Company said the rural market was very promising
for gas stove makers since many people there still used coal or
firewood for cooking.


"By introducing Namilux gas
stoves in rural areas, our company has achieved strong growth in terms
of market share, especially for mini gas stoves," he said.


Hanh said the early results proved that rural areas were markets of
great potential that have never received the attention they deserve.


"Sales have been so high that even some companies have been surprised," she said.


The second phase of the programme, which opened this month, would see
the distribution of goods in more provinces and districts and
organisation of more training courses for traders, Hanh said.


She urged the ministry to encourage enterprises taking part in the programme for the first time./.

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Monday, August 30, 2010

Expo eyes quality of Mekong producers

TIEN GIANG — Forty-five companies are participating in a four-day fair in the Mekong Delta province of Tien Giang as part of a national programme to promote high-quality goods in the rural market.

The event is part of the Ministry of Industry and Trade's programme of bringing Vietnamese-made goods to rural areas.

The fair, held in Cai Lay and Go Cong Dong districts, is organised by the Viet Nam Business Studies and Assistance Centre (BSA) and the Tien Giang Province People's Committee.

The 45 companies, which produce high-quality products, are showcasing processed food, garment and textile products, household utensils and cosmetics.

Since the programme's first fair in the Cuu Long Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta province of An Giang last year, the BSA has organised 46 such fairs in 18 cities and provinces, with total participation of 132 companies.

The fairs have earned VND30 billion (US$1.5 million) in revenue and helped raise consumer awareness of Vietnamese-made products.

Under the programme, more than 60 companies have committed to regularly sell goods in rural areas at the fairs.

This year, Vissan, one of the companies in the programme, has participated in 15 fairs in several provinces, including Dong Thap, Ben Tre, Lam Dong, Vinh Long and Bac Lieu. It also reduced the prices of its processed foods by 10 per cent.

In addition, the Sai Gon Co-op supermarket chain is organising at least 20 trips to sell Vietnamese products in rural areas every month, according to its marketing department.

Sai Gon Co-op uses vans as mobile shops to sell essential goods, including fish sauce, cooking oil and monosodium glutamate.

Vu Kim Hanh, BSA director, said: "We plan to continue the programme of taking goods to rural areas, industrial parks and export processing zones."

Ever since the campaign was launched by the Government more than one year ago, 58 per cent of consumers have shown an interest in locally-made goods, compared to 23 per cent previously, according to a survey conducted by the TV Plus Company. — VNS

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