casual dining restaurant
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eCo-Buss ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 230-241
Author(s):  
Ho Gefi Lee ◽  
Renny Christiarini

The purpose of this study is to analysis the impact of three elements of service quality dimensions (reliability, responsiveness and tangible), food quality and atmosphere on satisfaction, and to analysis if customer satisfaction have an impact to customer revisit intention and positive word of mouth. Data were collected from customers who had visited casual dining restaurants in Batam city through a self-administered questionnaire. Research questionnaires were distributed by researchers via google form, and have collected 359 (three hundred and fifty-nine) respondent data. This study shows that the three dimensions of service quality and food quality were significant to customer satisfaction. Also, the customer satisfaction were significant to positive word of mouth. But this study also shows that atmosphere was found not significant to customer satisfaction, and customer satisfaction not significant to revisit intention. This research conjectured that factors that influence the customers to be more satisfaction and do revisit to the casual dining restaurant are worthy of repeat research because of the decrease COVID-19 cases in batam city.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (13) ◽  
pp. 5408 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jooa Baek ◽  
Yeongbae Choe

Online customer reviews increasingly influence customer purchase decisions. Indeed, many customers have highlighted the significance of online reviews as an influential source of information. This study reports an investigation of the differential effects of online reviews, such as valence and volume, on the customer share of visits. Our findings suggest that valence (i.e., star rating) had more effect, giving a higher average check size to restaurants on the share of visits, while number reviews (volume) did not drive the share of visits to restaurants regardless of the average check size. Therefore, the ideal for casual dining restaurant brands would be to manage highly positive ratings to retain their customers.


2019 ◽  
pp. 135481661986780 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun (Justin) Li ◽  
Woo Gon Kim ◽  
Hyung Min Choi

Social media sites serve as lead generators for achieving marketing communication and raising brand awareness for casual-dining restaurant firms. This study attempts to measure social media engagement across different social networking sites (SNSs) and promotional activities for the casual-dining restaurant industry. This study also explores the influence of the dimensionality of social media engagement on the performance of casual-dining restaurants. The findings show that the metrics of social media engagement are different across channels and promotional activities. The results also reveal that these metrics have significant positive impacts on casual-dining restaurant performance. Pragmatically, the findings provide an assessment that enables casual-dining restaurant marketers to select the most effective SNSs and implement the most appropriate promotional activities, given the limited marketing budget of small and medium-sized casual-dining restaurants.


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 233-252 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ananda Sabil Hussein

Purpose This paper aims to explore the dimensions of experience quality in the area of Indonesia casual dining restaurant. Furthermore, this study scrutinizes the interrelationships among experience quality, customer satisfaction, restaurant image, brand engagement and customer loyalty in Indonesia’s casual dining restaurant industry. Design/methodology/approach To achieve the research objectives, two consecutive studies were conducted. The first study was an exploratory study involving two focus group discussions and survey with self-administered questionnaires. The second study was an explanatory study, in which data were collected through self-administered questionnaires. A total of 405 respondents participated in this study. In the first study, the collected data were analysed by exploratory factor analysis, while partial least squares was used in the second study. Findings The result of exploratory factor analysis indicated that casual dining experience quality has four dimensions, namely, food aspects, interaction quality, physical environment and service outcome. This study also tests the interrelationship between experience quality and customer loyalty, customer satisfaction, restaurant image and brand engagement. The hypothesis testing shows that food aspect and interaction quality significantly affect customer satisfaction and restaurant image. Furthermore, customer satisfaction, restaurant image and customer engagement are noted as the antecedents of customer loyalty. Originality/value This study explores the dimension of Indonesian casual dining experience, and it proves that the casual dining experience construct based on Indonesian perspectives consists of four dimensions. Moreover, this study builds a comprehensive model to explain the interrelationship among experience quality, restaurant image, customer satisfaction, brand engagement and customer loyalty in the perspective of Indonesian casual dining restaurant.


2018 ◽  
Vol 27 (6) ◽  
pp. 599-614 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer A. Espinosa ◽  
David J. Ortinau ◽  
Nina Krey ◽  
Lisa Monahan

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to study how repeat customers utilize their established overall restaurant brand image (ORBI), overall restaurant loyalty, satisfaction and behavioral intentions (revisit, recommend) to reengage with a casual-dining restaurant brand. Design/methodology/approach The study design consists of a mixed-methods, two-phase research approach that includes both qualitative and quantitative data. First, focus groups and in-depth interviews with adult customers reveal preliminary insights on restaurant dining patterns and familiarity with franchised casual dining restaurants. Second, an online self-administered survey tests the influence of ORBI on repeat customers’ overall restaurant loyalty, satisfaction and behavioral intentions. Findings For repeat customers, ORBI positively predicts loyalty and satisfaction. Loyalty and satisfaction mediate the relationship between ORBI and intentions to recommend, while loyalty alone mediates the relationship between ORBI and intentions to revisit a casual dining restaurant. Practical implications Managers looking to stimulate recommendation intentions can increase ORBI, loyalty or satisfaction among repeat customers; or choose some combination of these three predictors. To improve revisit intentions, managers should first increase loyalty, followed by ORBI. Importantly, management needs to tailor information given to repeat customers differently than other customers. Originality/value This paper provides a first conceptualization of how both loyalty and satisfaction jointly mediate the relationships between ORBI and two behavioral intentions (revisit, recommend). The results show that loyalty plays a significant role in these predictive relationships and is more important than satisfaction for enhancing intentions to revisit a restaurant.


2018 ◽  
Vol 60 (3) ◽  
pp. 233-236
Author(s):  
Alex M. Susskind ◽  
Benjamin Curry

Using a table-service casual dining restaurant chain, we used direct observations to examine how guests’ use of tabletop technology affected their dining time and front of house labor usage. Results from our study showed that dining time was significantly reduced for guests who used the tabletop devices to either order, or order and pay for their meals by 17% and 31%, respectively. We also found that server contact time and table service time required by the servers to manage their guests’ experiences was significantly decreased for the tables that used the tabletop devices compared with the tables that did not use the devices. Practical and managerial implications are discussed.


Appetite ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 125 ◽  
pp. 474-485 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karen Byrd ◽  
Barbara Almanza ◽  
Richard F. Ghiselli ◽  
Carl Behnke ◽  
Heather A. Eicher-Miller

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