VietSmart

Launch Sales in Vietnam With a Managed Entry Model

One operator instead of ten contractors. VietSmart handles certification, marketplace launch, logistics, and operations — with unit economics calculated before you start.

Local infrastructure in Ho Chi Minh City
Shopee, Lazada, TikTok Shop
Unified operational framework
Window of Opportunity

Why Vietnam — And Why Now

Vietnam combines a growing consumer market, a strong digital channel, and an earlier stage of competition. For international brands, this is one of the few windows where systematic entry is still possible.

100M+

Consumer Market

Young, digital-first market with a growing consumer base and active e-commerce demand

E-com

Digital & Online Sales

Online retail remains a key growth driver, providing clear entry channels for brands

Window

The market can still be claimed systematically

Competition is lower than in mature markets. Early entry allows faster niche positioning

For your brand, this means: you can still claim the market, not chase it after the fact

Infrastructure

The VietSmart Operating System

Not a patchwork of services, but an integrated operational framework for your business in Vietnam

01 / Foundation

Legal & Regulatory Layer

HS codes & customs classification
Product certification
Trademark registration
Legal setup & entity
Import permits
02 / Engine

E-commerce Engine

Shopee, Lazada, TikTok Shop
Content localization
Storefront design
Ad accounts
Analytics & optimization
03 / Execution

Operations & Last Mile

Warehouse logistics
Fulfillment & packaging
Delivery across Vietnam
Operational reporting
Customer support
Transparent Economics

Calculate your Vietnam market entry potential in 30 seconds

Enter basic product parameters and proceed to full calculation including marketplaces, taxes, logistics and entry scenario.

Quick Estimate

Preliminary calculation based on VietSmart market model

Roadmap

From Request to Sales — A Guided Journey

1
Phase 13–5 days

Audit

Niche analysis, unit economics calculation, entry model selection.

A ready strategy backed by numbers
2
Phase 214–21 days

Onboarding

Legal preparation, logistics, storefront creation, content localization.

Infrastructure ready for launch
3
Phase 3Ongoing

Scaling

Operational support, sales growth, reporting, optimization.

Sustainable market growth
Expertise

We're not consultants drawing slides. We're an operational team that lives and works in Vietnam — and does everything hands-on.

Dmitry Vasenin

Founder of VietSmart

5+ years in VietnamHo Chi Minh City, Vietnam50+ launch projects
Дмитрий Васенин

Media Mentions

Oborot.ruRBCКоммерсантъForbes
Sharing expertise

Checklist: Launching Business in Vietnam

PDF-документ с пошаговым планом, актуальными требованиями и контактами ведомств

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Checklist

VietSmart 2026

Choosing legal entity type
Authorized capital requirements
Industry licensing
Tax regimes and incentives
Opening a bank account
Certification and permits
Trademark registration
Logistics and customs clearance

+ ещё 10 пунктов

Start Your Vietnam Market Entry

Submit a request — we'll contact you within 24 hours and prepare a preliminary plan

What's next?

1

We'll contact you within 24 hours

2

Conduct qualification

3

Prepare a plan with economics calculation

#147A Tran Hung Dao Street, District 1, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

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FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions About Entering Vietnam

Answers to key questions about launching, testing, and operating in the Vietnamese market

The cost depends not on the fact of market entry itself, but on the entry model. One scenario involves a pilot launch through marketplaces or a local operator with a limited assortment and demand testing. Another includes certification, localization, logistics, sales setup, content, advertising, and further scaling. In practice, the budget is calculated not abstractly, but for a specific task: product category, sales channels, legalization requirements, depth of localization, and volume plan. A sound approach always starts with a model calculation, not with trying to name a universal figure.

The timeline depends on the category, product readiness, and chosen entry model. If it is a pilot with a limited number of SKUs, clear packaging, and no complex regulatory requirements, the launch can be relatively fast. If the product requires certification, labeling adaptation, legal preparation, import, multi-channel setup, and local content, the timeline becomes noticeably longer. In practice, most time is lost not on the market itself, but on unpreparedness of source materials, weak offer packaging, and lack of a clear launch owner on the brand side.

No, this is not always required for the first stage. In many cases, it makes more sense to first test the market through a local partner, importer, distributor, or e-commerce model without immediately opening your own entity. This approach allows you to verify demand, economics, and operational manageability without excessive capital investment. Your own company usually becomes relevant when the business already understands the market, sees repeatable sales, and wants to build a long-term presence in the country.

This depends on the product, category, price, purchase frequency, and end-customer behavior. For some products, it is better to start with marketplaces and digital demand testing. For others, it makes more sense to work through a local distributor, B2B partners, retail chains, or a mixed model. Channels alone do not solve the market entry challenge. What matters more is understanding which combination provides a manageable test, transparent economics, and a clear path to scaling. Usually, the first channel chosen is not the most prestigious one, but the one that delivers real market feedback fastest.

Yes, and this is often the most sensible way to enter a new country. Instead of a large launch with high stakes on uncertain demand, it is more effective to run a limited pilot: a small assortment, a clear hypothesis, localized packaging and content, a chosen sales channel, and specific result metrics. This approach helps you understand whether there is real demand, what the economics look like, and what barriers hinder growth. A small budget is not a problem in itself. The problem starts when money is spent without a test model, without localization, and without clear success criteria.

This is one of the most sensitive questions when entering a new market, and it is important to think it through in advance, not after the first sales. In practice, the working scheme depends on the launch structure, how supplies are formalized, who is the contracting party, where payments are received, and how the tax and accounting framework is set up. The right model should not be gray or temporary, but legal, transparent, and clear in terms of settlements, document flow, and further profit movement. This is why financial architecture should be designed simultaneously with the market entry model, not separately from it.

It is better to start not by searching for a random partner or trying to scale immediately. The right starting point is verifying the entry model itself. You need to understand whether the product has market potential, what restrictions are associated with the category, through which channels it can realistically be sold, what the unit economics will look like, and what needs to be adapted for local demand. After that, a pilot scenario is formed: a limited assortment, a clear channel, budget, roles, and result criteria. The sooner a business replaces this work with a chaotic launch, the more expensive the mistakes become later.