Vietnam's e-commerce market value will increase by more than 30 percent this year, exceeding 15 billion USD and reach 52 billion USD by 2025. (Photo: congthuong.vn) |
Industry insiders were speaking at a seminar on exporting local goods through e-commerce, held by the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI) and the Innovative Hub Company in Hanoi on November 24.
In the context of the COVID-19 pademic, the supply chains are disrupted and e-commerce shows its superiority and strengths that can help SMEs continue their business, maintain operations and create a breakthrough more clearly, said Pham Hoang Tien, Director of the VCCI’s Small and Medium Enterprise Promotion Center.
Sharing how Singapore has practised effective e-commerce, Zoe Zuo, CEO of Innovative Hub said Vietnamese businesses need to acquire and do some things that are considered useful in Singapore with positive values to help promote the implementation of e-commerce in the country.
Zuo advised firms to select and carefully identify customers, focus on different groups and select products suitable for them, adding they should also select e-commerce platforms and interfaces appropriate to the objectives of the business and find qualified staff.
According to the Vietnam E-Commerce Association, the country's e-commerce market value will increase by more than 30 percent this year, exceeding 15 billion USD and reach 52 billion USD by 2025.
Doan Thuy, a representative of Glovimex which produces handicrafts for export, said her enterprise has accelerated transactions through e-commerce and reported positive results.
Thuy said e-commerce platforms have helped her overcome difficulties and maintain growth amid the pandemic.
Lawyer Le Trong Thiem, from the law firm LTT & Lawyers, said e-commerce transactions bring benefits but create many potential risks of cash flow, security on international payment transactions, transaction costs, technology risks or fraud and hackers.
Thiem recommended businesses develop a full, detailed and specific sales policy, learn and grasp the rules of the game and ensure the deadline to receive money in any transaction.
He added there should be a clear agreement with the partner while the enterprises must make a careful investment in technology and have knowledge about the geopolitical situation when trading via e-commerce.
The Asian Development Bank (ADB)'s Asian Development and Outlook 2020 Report forecasts that Vietnam's economic growth will reach 2.8 percent in 2020 amid a global economic slowdown due to COVID-19. The growth was expected to increase by 6.3 percent in 2021. Notably, the report assesses that Vietnam is showing stronger resilience compared to similar economies.
Like other countries, Vietnam faces a very difficult period with more risks of cybersecurity and also the dependence on digital technologies.
Trinh Minh Anh, Head of Office of the Inter-sectoral Steering Committee for Global Economic Integration suggested that the government should give priority to developing digital identity in Vietnamese, build smart barriers and strongly develop electronic payment methods.
Vu Tu Thanh, a representative of the US-ASEAN Business Council, said the pandemic is having uneven impacts in each geographical area and business sector, by firm size and by digital transformation level, so Vietnam should take its chance to take advantage of the digital economy.
With the scale of the local internet economy of 14 billion USD, which was increasing 16 percent from the previous year despite the pandemic, Vietnam was forecasted to reach a scale of 50 billion USD in the next five years and be second only to Indonesia in the regional digital economy.
“Doing business on digital platforms with goods and services transactions over the internet is a great opportunity for Vietnam," Thanh said./.VNA
Vietnam e-commerce expected to see boom
Despite Covid-19, online shopping in Vietnam has been growing steadily. Analysts believe that online sales will soar in the last months of the year.