Recently, global food trends that simultaneously capture health, sustainability, and convenience are receiving significant attention. Amid this flow, Thailand's major food group, 'Vudhichai Group', and its subsidiary 'Global Food Trading Co., Ltd.', with over 20 years of export expertise, are actively exploring entry into the Korean market. Seeking Korean partners at the 2025 ASEAN Trade Exhibition business meeting, this company highlights food safety and authentic Thai taste as its key strengths.
However, breaking into the Korean market with just taste and quality is not easy. Discerning consumers, a fierce distribution structure, and a unique marketing culture pose significant challenges. Here are four strategic elements that Global Food Trading must review for success in the Korean market.

A Positioning Strategy Leveraging the Duet of 'Health' and 'Convenience'
Korean consumers no longer choose food products based on 'taste' alone. Particularly among the MZ generation, they ask questions like 'Is it good for my body (Well-being)?' and 'Is it good for the planet (Sustainability)?', while also pursuing 'convenience' by avoiding cumbersome cooking processes.
The plant-based foods and healthy ready-to-cook (RTC) and ready-to-eat (RTE) meals held by Global Food Trading and 'O-Cha Food Pack' are core items that can satisfy both these trends. They should be positioned not simply as "Thai food" but as "differentiated Asian food for health-conscious modern consumers." For example, a strategy is needed to market products from the 'Little Angel' brand as 'healthy snacks for families with young children,' and plant-based products as 'a new Thai taste for vegans and flexitarians.'
A Channel Strategy Optimized for the Korean Distribution Structure
Korea's distribution channels are highly diverse and complex. The spectrum is broad, ranging from large marts, department stores, and SSMs (Super Supermarkets) to convenience stores, online comprehensive malls, social commerce, and direct purchase platforms.
Considering that Global Food Trading emphasizes its 'one-stop service' as a strength, focusing initially on B2B supply to small-scale Thai restaurants/bars, hotels, and specialty food ingredient distributors is a realistic approach. After building local adaptability through this, the mid-to-long-term goal should be to place lines of healthy frozen/convenience foods in the HMR (Home Meal Replacement) sections of large marts or major convenience stores like CU and GS25. Particularly, online channels such as CJ THE MARKET, Coupang, and Market Kurly are optimal platforms for directly conveying the product's story to younger generations and quickly gauging their response.
A 'Localization' Strategy Tailored to Korean Palates
Koreans may not prefer the intense and spicy flavors of authentic Thai cuisine in their original form. Subtle adjustments (e.g., reducing gluten content, adding a hint of sweetness, toning down spiciness) are necessary, respecting the 'authentic taste' while catering to Korean consumers' preferences. This should go beyond simple recipe changes and lead to accurate nutritional labeling and eco-friendly packaging that reflect Koreans' health concerns (e.g., sodium and sugar content).
Furthermore, utilizing comparative expressions in product names and descriptions that Koreans can find familiar, such as "Mapa Tofu flavor" or "Bulgogi flavor," or developing small-portioned products suited to Korean dining culture (e.g., 1-2 person households, the 'honbap' eating alone trend) are also worth considering.
Marketing Communication that Builds Trust
Korean consumers value 'trust' above all when choosing food products. The international certifications held by Global Food Trading, such as GHP, HACCP, ISO, and BRC, are powerful assets in building this trust. This information must be actively promoted.
For marketing strategies, creating video content that showcases local Thai farms and advanced production facilities to convey 'pride in quality,' and collaborating with Korean food influencers to spread recipe development and tasting reviews would be effective. In particular, a brand like 'O-Cha' has a name similar to the Korean word for tea ('Cha'), lending a sense of familiarity, which can be leveraged for brand storytelling.
Global Food Trading is a company that lives up to its name, possessing solid global market experience and a diverse portfolio. The Korean market is challenging, but it is riding the global wave of health, convenience, and sustainability, and Korean consumers' interest in and receptiveness to food are very high. If the company establishes a detailed localization strategy through Korean partners and delivers a clear message that captures the hearts of Korean consumers, it could contribute to making Korea an attractive 'Asian Food Hub,' following the K-Food boom. We hope the 2025 ASEAN Trade Exhibition becomes a meaningful platform connecting this excellent company with Korean partners.
Michael Yoon / The K Media & Commerce, kyoweon@naver.com


















