Barriers to the practice of benchmarking in South African restaurants

The main purpose of this study is to find the barriers of benchmarking use in independent full-service restaurants in South Africa. The global restaurant industry entities operate in a highly competitive environment, and restaurateurs should have a visible ad¬vantage over competitors. A competitive...

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Main Authors: Carina Kleynhans, Joseph Roberson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives" 2017-07-01
Series:Problems and Perspectives in Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/8973/PPM_2017_02cont_Kleynhans.pdf
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spelling doaj-249cb5ed39094f71aba4b7624df7f9722020-11-25T01:34:31ZengLLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"Problems and Perspectives in Management1727-70511810-54672017-07-0115225526510.21511/ppm.15(2-1).2017.098973Barriers to the practice of benchmarking in South African restaurantsCarina Kleynhans0Joseph Roberson1Associate Professor, Department of Hospitality Management, Tshwane University of Technology, PretoriaPh.D., Department of Hospitality Management, Tshwane University of Technology, PretoriaThe main purpose of this study is to find the barriers of benchmarking use in independent full-service restaurants in South Africa. The global restaurant industry entities operate in a highly competitive environment, and restaurateurs should have a visible ad¬vantage over competitors. A competitive advantage can be achieved only if the quality standards in terms of food and beverage products, service quality, relevant technology and price are comparable to the industry leaders. This study has deployed a descriptive, quantitative research design on the basis of a relatively large sample of restaurateurs. The data was collected through the SurveyMonkey website using a standardised questionnaire The questionnaire was mailed to 2699 restaurateurs, and 109 respondents returned fully completed answer sheets. Descriptive and inferential statistics were used to analyze the data. The main findings were as follows: 43% of respondents had never done benchmarking; only 5.5% respondents considered themselves as highly knowledgeable about benchmarking; respondents thought that the most significant barriers to benchmarking were difficulties with obtaining exemplar (benchmarking partner) best-practice information and adapting the anomalous (own) practices to derive a benefit from best practices. The results of this study should be used to shape the knowledge about benchmarking practices in order to develop suitable solutions for the problems in South African restaurants.https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/8973/PPM_2017_02cont_Kleynhans.pdfbarriersbenchmarkingbest practicecompetitive advantagerestaurants
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carina Kleynhans
Joseph Roberson
spellingShingle Carina Kleynhans
Joseph Roberson
Barriers to the practice of benchmarking in South African restaurants
Problems and Perspectives in Management
barriers
benchmarking
best practice
competitive advantage
restaurants
author_facet Carina Kleynhans
Joseph Roberson
author_sort Carina Kleynhans
title Barriers to the practice of benchmarking in South African restaurants
title_short Barriers to the practice of benchmarking in South African restaurants
title_full Barriers to the practice of benchmarking in South African restaurants
title_fullStr Barriers to the practice of benchmarking in South African restaurants
title_full_unstemmed Barriers to the practice of benchmarking in South African restaurants
title_sort barriers to the practice of benchmarking in south african restaurants
publisher LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"
series Problems and Perspectives in Management
issn 1727-7051
1810-5467
publishDate 2017-07-01
description The main purpose of this study is to find the barriers of benchmarking use in independent full-service restaurants in South Africa. The global restaurant industry entities operate in a highly competitive environment, and restaurateurs should have a visible ad¬vantage over competitors. A competitive advantage can be achieved only if the quality standards in terms of food and beverage products, service quality, relevant technology and price are comparable to the industry leaders. This study has deployed a descriptive, quantitative research design on the basis of a relatively large sample of restaurateurs. The data was collected through the SurveyMonkey website using a standardised questionnaire The questionnaire was mailed to 2699 restaurateurs, and 109 respondents returned fully completed answer sheets. Descriptive and inferential statistics were used to analyze the data. The main findings were as follows: 43% of respondents had never done benchmarking; only 5.5% respondents considered themselves as highly knowledgeable about benchmarking; respondents thought that the most significant barriers to benchmarking were difficulties with obtaining exemplar (benchmarking partner) best-practice information and adapting the anomalous (own) practices to derive a benefit from best practices. The results of this study should be used to shape the knowledge about benchmarking practices in order to develop suitable solutions for the problems in South African restaurants.
topic barriers
benchmarking
best practice
competitive advantage
restaurants
url https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/8973/PPM_2017_02cont_Kleynhans.pdf
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