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Vietnam News – Latest Updates, Headlines, and AnalysisVietnam News – Latest Updates, Headlines, and Analysis">

Vietnam News – Latest Updates, Headlines, and Analysis

Alexandra Blake
by 
Alexandra Blake
7 minutes read
물류 트렌드
11월 2025년 1월 17일

Adopt rfid tagging across retailers now to increase supply chain visibility; integrate with existing software modules; minimize manual reconciliation.

Academics; an international group of partners work to understand store processes; test software integrations; game-changing potential.

Retailers pursue yearset milestones toward zero latency; the player in this shift is robotics-driven automation, complemented by a manual onboarding plan for frontline staff.

For international coverage, retailers curating data stores across markets share insights with partners; robotics, rfid powered systems raise throughput, while yearset benchmarks guide future upgrades in other sectors.

INTERVIEW SwipBox’s Kasper Cort and Brian Jonasson at Parcel+Post Expo

Recommendation: deploy SwipBox locker networks in high-traffic stores to cut last-mile costs, improve pickup times, reduce manual handling.

In the Parcel+Post Expo interview, Kasper Cort describes including smart module updates, generated analytics, a complete path to fulfillment for retailers.

Brian Jonasson shares crisp data on logistics performance, including north region pilots over months, focusing on reducing risks.

pickingrobots deployments within SwipBox flow: automated selection, secure access, parcels anonymously retrieved. The system uses intelligent pathing to optimize queue times.

Plugin ecosystem accelerates retailers’ learning; loyalty programs utilize intelligence to adjust locker availability, shipping windows, commercial promotions.

youtube clips from the expo illustrate week-by-week adoption trends; they forecast monthly capacity, reveal customer preferences anonymously.

A clear blueprint emerges for retailers to adopt SwipBox tech at the north locus, boosting fulfillment reliability, lowering shipping times, reducing misrouting risks.

Vietnam Logistics Trends: Trade, e-commerce growth, and cross-border flows

Vietnam Logistics Trends: Trade, e-commerce growth, and cross-border flows

Recommendation: implement centralized warehousing with rfid tracking and robotics, integrated via a plugin to a unified software platform, to reduce cross-border cycle times from 4 days to 3 days, cut emissions by 12%, and increase on-time delivery from 86% to 92%. In november, data show e-commerce volumes rising 22%, underscoring the need for scalable replenishment.

These gains are driven by international merchants expanding cross-border trade and by group retailers boosting direct-to-consumer channels through targeted fulfillment modernization. The opening of new fulfillment centers supports a 34% rise in cross-border orders year over year, with supply networks becoming more interconnected throughout regional corridors.

Operational steps include rfid tagging on pallets and cases, centralized site picking, and robotics-assisted handling. The addition of services such as insourced last-mile and returns processing improves reliability. Analytics generated from rfid and videos provide unique, actionable insights for routing, inventory placement, and capacity planning. This approach increases throughput by 25% and targets optimal inventory placement; a centralized site acts as the control point for inventory, transport, and returns. tech-enabled analytics support proactive adjustments.

Cross-border flows benefit from standardized customs data and portal interoperability; opens routes and digitized paperwork reduce dwell times. In november, import and export volumes grew by 18% in key corridors, while private-label product flows expanded rapidly. Industry analyst says the move translates into smoother throughput and lower handling costs.

Guests visiting facilities can access live videos of operations, while group-level dashboards show performance metrics in real time. Using centralized warehousing, these improvements extend across site networks, and the plugin-enabled system scales with additional sites to support regional expansion.

Locker Network Deployment: City-by-city rollout, capacity, and user adoption in Vietnam

Recommendation: begin tiered city-by-city rollout focusing on high-traffic hubs; partner with third-party logistics providers; measure adoption monthly. Point: this always minimizes risks of idle capacity while enabling rapid feedback loops to improve configuration.

Deployment plan targets several cities in the initial phase, with capacity to host 200 units per hub, rising to 400 units in metro corridors. The deployment includes dhls bays; robust supply lines; temperature-controlled storage for sensitive items. Locker types like dry, humidity-controlled units address diverse needs.

Adoption metrics reveal trends across locales; rates rise in north districts; throughput in campuses; their users favor store pickup over doorstep options.

Analytical framework to analyze outcomes relies on capabilities of several companies; daysgoogle insights corroborate these findings; third-party networks enable scalable operations; unrivalled visibility informs planning.

Cross-border pilots with singapore unlock international routes; dhls utilization rises; supply resilience improves more.

Temperature considerations guide store placement; route optimization along north corridors; operations aim to utilize more reliable weather windows.

Policy Shifts: Customs reforms, tax rules, and cross-border compliance for shipments

Policy Shifts: Customs reforms, tax rules, and cross-border compliance for shipments

Implement a unified digital declaration platform across singapore centers to lower clearance costs by 15–25% within months; increase throughput by 10–20%; align customs data, tax data, packaging details; carrier software into one workflow.

Tax rules: adopt digital invoicing, de minimis thresholds, VAT/GST regimes, cross-border compliance rules for each trade unit.

Cross-border compliance for shipments: establish pre-arrival data sharing, risk-based clearance, post-clearance audit within social media transparency.

Media across asia report on policy shifts; news briefings reflect practical cues for shippers, customs staff, logistics hubs.

Globalized supply chains require optimal, scalable workflows; opening of space for innovation across workplace units; more opportunities for digital collaboration.

Implementation plan: set one week review cycle; monitor last-mile performance; track space utilization; upgrade software; adjust policies monthly; heutger protocol tests throughout the process to improve understandings among units; facilitate trade.

Process controls across units: monitor processes; last-mile performance; social compliance; various stakeholders.

SwipBox Interview Highlights: Kasper Cort and Brian Jonasson on hardware, software, and service approach

Implement a three-layer SwipBox deployment: centralized hardware modules; software with a centralized policy; service centers opening to regional partners.

In the americas market, this model provides three core capabilities: hardware; software; services.

Shipping efficiency rises as centers open worldwide; temperature controls keep items within spec; items being stored monitored in real time; post-activation telemetry collected anonymously. Americas network opens new routes for cross-border shipping.

Policy governance; post events analytics; customer transparency centralized via a single interface. In addition, role-based access controls; yearset milestones; risk mitigation via anonymized telemetry.

측면 Deliverable KPIs
Hardware Modular units; hot-swappable; robust cooling uptime 99.9%
Software Centralized policy; real-time telemetry; secure access policy conformance 100%
서비스 Last-mile support; customer success; partner network on-time delivery 98%
Policy, governance Compliance; privacy controls; anonymized data handling privacy incidents zero
Yearset plan Three-phase rollout; americas first; then broader coverage milestones met

Long-run impact targets include zero downtime, complete scalability, and a centralized, temperature-controlled storage footprint across world-wide networks; emerge as a template for post-market support, with several pilots under way among Americas partners and emerging trade corridors.

Practical Steps for Shippers: Immediate actions to leverage expo insights

Launch a 72-hour sprint to translate expo insights into three live pilots across americas and regional hubs, anchored by a compact supplyboard and clear metrics.

  1. Clarify three pilots: 1) real-time tracking for fast-moving shipments using a unified data feed; 2) deployment of pickingrobots and robotics in regional warehouses to boost throughput; 3) policy-aligned routing to minimize disruption during peak cycles. Define success criteria and the data sets needed to judge progress.
  2. Build a data pathway and showcase plan: feed data into a dedicated website page and a site dashboard; create a repeatable feed for some suppliers and players; publish updates in a news-like feed; ensure data quality and privacy.
  3. Establish a cross-functional regional board with representatives from shipping, operations, IT, and commercial; assign owners, sets of KPIs, and schedule regular reviews every 72 hours during the sprint.
  4. Partner with academics to validate the heutger framework and test hypotheses in space and lab settings; collect insights on supplychain resilience; integrate findings into the action plan.
  5. Invest in pickingrobots to handle rapid storage needs and fast-moving inventory; pilot in select space and warehouses; measure accuracy, cycle time, and failure rate; track results in the dashboard.
  6. Enhance tracking across worldwide networks: implement carrier-level tracking, ETA accuracy, and disruption signals; feed into the site for users and commercial teams; trigger alerts when disruption risk rises.
  7. Align with policy constraints: map regulatory requirements, trade lanes, and customs; set a policy score to decide routing and vendor selection; tune the pilot to reduce compliance friction.
  8. Define a lean 30/60/90-day timeline with transparent milestones; commit to weekly reviews and a public-facing showcase on the website to attract broader participation from academics, shipping partners, and suppliers (some).
  9. Document learnings and share outcomes on a concise site page; capture data, disruption metrics, and user feedback; ensure the board can act on sets of actionable recommendations.