In addition to cooperation work, signing agreements to establish an AI center, Nvidia billionaire - Mr. Jensen Huang - spent a lot of time visiting Hanoi, especially on a very interesting culinary tour. The interesting thing here is his way, close, friendly and showing interest in Hanoi's food and drinks.
This romantic billionaire experiences the nightlife with traditional dishes at the restaurant of artisan Anh Tuyet, Bat Dan beef pho, Giang coffee, Ta Hien beer... Mr. Jensen Huang drinks beer, eats "street food", surrounded by young Vietnamese people who seem very excited and love him.
Vietnamese youth "idolize" Jensen Huang not because he is a billionaire, but because he is the owner of a world-famous technology corporation. His appearance on the street, mingling with everyone, has transmitted very positive energy. An atmosphere "as happy as Tet", the host and guests just eat and drink. So great.
As the owner of the world's largest chip manufacturing corporation with a market value of more than 3,000 billion USD - a world billionaire - every step of CEO Jensen Huang "shakes" the media. Many lenses "focus" on him and news stories describe his every step. Therefore, Jensen Huang's "food tour" is a great PR "hit" for Hanoi. And from there, visitors from all over the world know more about Vietnam, learn about the beautiful and peaceful country of Vietnam, the hospitable Vietnamese people, unique Vietnamese dishes...
A great figure, with a wide influence around the world, appeared on the streets of Hanoi as a tourist, attracting the attention of not only Vietnamese people but also many other countries. Many thanks to Mr. Jensen Huang for what he has done for Vietnam tourism.
The story of an American billionaire wandering around Hanoi's Old Quarter enjoying food shows that we need to invest in tourism with more products that are in-depth and "rich in Vietnamese identity".
Give visitors not only delicious food, but also the smiles of Vietnamese people and the hospitality of local people. Don't just sell visitors a souvenir, but give visitors a trust in honesty.
We must do everything we can to build a Vietnamese tourism environment that is free of the practice of luring and ripping off tourists; and that Vietnamese shops and streets are clean and hygienic. If we cannot do this, then even if we have many other spectacular PR stunts, it will not help Vietnamese tourism at all.