from voanews.com: McDonald’s marked its first birthday in Vietnam with a fourth
restaurant earlier this month, reflecting a mixed year in Asia even as
the company struggles to compete at home in the United States.
When the golden
arches rose over Vietnam for the first time last year, there was
international buzz for the new, long-awaited market, but the excitement
was tempered by cultural and demographic challenges. Could consumers
afford a value meal that costs as much as four bowls of pho? Would
Vietnamese tastes give way to beef patties and fries?
Sean Ngo, CEO of VF Franchise Consulting, said companies focus on
emerging countries like Vietnam as a strategy to “counter-balance” weak
sales in industrialized countries.
“Many fast-food restaurant chains have been developing markets in
Asia for the past two decades as a means of future growth for the brands
in the U.S.,” said Ngo, who is based in Ho Chi Minh City and has
offices in Thailand and Singapore.
Tainted meat scandal
Last summer the Big Mac maker suffered a tainted meat scandal that hit China and Japan, which plunged its Asia-Pacific, Middle East and
Africa profits 55 percent. When asked if that affected consumers in
Vietnam, marketing manager Thai Nguyen said, “A little bit.”
But Nguyen also said he was pleasantly surprised with the performance
of the three restaurants in Ho Chi Minh City, which dished out more
than one million burgers from February to December 2014.
“We did meet the target,” communications manager Tram Le said.
But one McDonald’s supplier said that, although the company believed
in the future of McDonald’s, the first year did not go as expected. “I
think they had hoped for something better,” the person said, asking not
to be named. “We had volume projections that were not met this year.”
Observers say this may have something to do with local diets and
incomes. McDonald’s is associated with beef because of its burgers,
while Vietnamese traditionally eat more pork and chicken, which creates
an opening for the likes of U.S.-based KFC and Japan’s Lotteria.
Reclining on his motorbike outside of the fourth McDonald’s on Thursday, Tran Quoc Dinh said he makes $5 to $10 a day from driving.
Reclining on his motorbike outside of the fourth McDonald’s on Thursday, Tran Quoc Dinh said he makes $5 to $10 a day from driving.
“Oh gosh, I drive a motorbike, where would I get money to eat
McDonald’s? I need money to raise my kids,” Dinh said, digging into his
Styrofoam box of fried tofu and rice.
But Dinh, 57, said many people have been walking by in recent days
and asking him when the newest McDonald’s would open. He also pointed
across the street to a KFC joint, saying his children went there on
weekends and would try McDonald’s next.
Target market
In fact, family is a key demographic for the franchise, as 65 percent
of Vietnam’s 90 million people are below 35. Nguyen said McDonald’s
aims to create a “magical” experience and a weekend destination for
Vietnamese families, which would jibe with corporate strategy elsewhere.
In the United States, playgrounds and children’s meals hook customers
early on and foster a nostalgia that carries into adulthood.
“We do it really well, kids love us,” Nguyen said.
The fourth McDonald’s is 30 minutes from downtown Ho Chi Minh City,
where fast food rivals have flooded the market and real estate remains
expensive. Incomes are lower on the city’s outskirts, but Nguyen said
that away from the crowds there’s potential for growth. McDonald’s,
after all, started off in U.S. suburbs.
“Really, our strategy is still the same, there’s huge opportunity to go to the outer areas,” he said.
Any chain will lose luster after the hubbub of a grand opening, as
locals get familiar with a brand, but Ngo said that doesn’t mean the
McDonald’s influence will decline. He said the company is playing the
long game in Vietnam, planning to roll out 100 locations in a decade.
“While McDonald's revenues in Vietnam are expectedly down from
initial sales when it first opened,” Ngo said, “they are still selling
significantly more than competitors on a per unit basis and will
continue to help shape the fast-food market in Vietnam.”
Decline in US
Growth in the Southeast Asian country is part of expansion plans
across emerging markets. McDonald’s said in its 2013 annual report that
it planned to open 800 restaurants in Asia, Africa, and the Middle East
in 2014, compared with 300 in Europe and 250 in the United States.
Nguyen said that in young markets like Vietnam, his company has the
chance to offer consumers something new, from motorbike drive-thrus to
24-hour service. But on its home turf, McDonald’s may be feeling the
weight of an aging empire.
CEO Don Thompson resigned in January, after a year in which U.S. fast
food workers went on strike and pricier rivals like Chipotle and Shake
Shack nabbed market share. As the U.S. economy recovers, diners are more
willing to shell out for higher-end burgers. That’s not the case in
developing Asia, where people start to eat McDonald’s as their incomes
grow.
“We should expect that rising consumerism of western — and
specifically American — products in Asia will continue for decades to
come,” Ngo said, “and will provide a counter-balance to likely declining
sales in mature markets such as the U.S.”
SOURCE: VOA News

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