Sepon Travel: Connecting Vietnam with Southeast Asia

3:26:02 PM | 10/12/2011

During the past years, Sepon Travel has successfully organized field trips to Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia and Myanmar with a view to “having meals in three countries within a day” (i.e. breakfast in Vietnam, lunch in Laos and dinner in Thailand). So far, the company has established its own brand name in the field of organizing tours across Vietnam.
 
Sepon Travel organizes 15 tours monthly through the East West corridor and 4 tours to national famous landscape. In the first eight months of 2011, the company attracted 7,000 visitors, not a small number given the context of the difficult national and global economy.
 
Sepon Travel’s achievements are attributed to its determination to overcome challenges. When there was not a bridge connecting Vietnamese and Lao’s border gates, the company had organized tours and conferences to exchange cultural values among leaders of provinces and people of different nations. The inauguration of bridge No. 12 in December 2006 really facilitates cultural exchange among regional countries.
 
 Sepon Travel has established its own development strategy, churning out a professional team of tour guides with good knowledge of culture, national history and people of regional countries, as well as good capability of foreign languages. More importantly, with the motto of “Good understanding of Indochine,” Sepon Travel’s tour guide really acts as a diplomat. It’s these guides who help bring Vietnamese culture overseas and vice versa.
 
Sepon Travel currently has its representative offices in Laos and Thailand. The company operates high-quality trips capable of carrying 30 - 50 passengers to and from Dong Ha – Savannakhet on a daily basis. This is the best Vietnam - Lao tourism route.
 
The brand name of Sepon Travel is gaining more and more confidence from national and international tourists and is highly recommended by regional nations. The company is aiming at turning Quang Tri into a point connecting the North and South of Vietnam and a “station” for tourists to depart to regional countries.
 
Bich Huong