Perceived Service Quality and Customer Revisiting Intention: The Case of “all you can eat” Asian Restaurants in Southern Taiwan

Purpose of this paper is to report on an investigation of the expected and perceived service quality at “all you can eat” restaurants in southern Taiwan. The findings of this study indicated that the service quality factors had a positive impact on overall customer satisfaction and revisiting intent...

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Main Author: Anastasia Spyridou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Hellenic University 2017-12-01
Series:Journal of Tourism, Heritage & Services Marketing
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jthsm.gr/vol3iss2/3-2-5.pdf
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spelling doaj-f5d145d2b32f43f0a7e463c81cee5ce72020-11-25T02:36:32ZengInternational Hellenic UniversityJournal of Tourism, Heritage & Services Marketing2529-19472017-12-0132303810.5281/zenodo.1209129Perceived Service Quality and Customer Revisiting Intention: The Case of “all you can eat” Asian Restaurants in Southern TaiwanAnastasia Spyridou0Technological University of GdanskPurpose of this paper is to report on an investigation of the expected and perceived service quality at “all you can eat” restaurants in southern Taiwan. The findings of this study indicated that the service quality factors had a positive impact on overall customer satisfaction and revisiting intention. The results also showed that the “all you can eat” restaurant in Chiayi had a higher level for service related factors for “all you can eat” restaurants than Kaohsiung thus reflecting some regional differences in overall service quality. The analysis revealed a number of central and important properties attached to the consumption values associated with context of an “all you can eat” restaurant meal. Such insights can be of use to the management of restaurants in their efforts to improve the experience/quality for their customers and to increase customer loyalty. The consumer values identified here could also be used as suggestions concerning what to look for within more comprehensive empirical studies done in the future. This is the first study to are knowledge that examines "all you can eat" hospitality sector in Taiwanhttp://jthsm.gr/vol3iss2/3-2-5.pdfAll you can eatTaiwanService Quality
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anastasia Spyridou
spellingShingle Anastasia Spyridou
Perceived Service Quality and Customer Revisiting Intention: The Case of “all you can eat” Asian Restaurants in Southern Taiwan
Journal of Tourism, Heritage & Services Marketing
All you can eat
Taiwan
Service Quality
author_facet Anastasia Spyridou
author_sort Anastasia Spyridou
title Perceived Service Quality and Customer Revisiting Intention: The Case of “all you can eat” Asian Restaurants in Southern Taiwan
title_short Perceived Service Quality and Customer Revisiting Intention: The Case of “all you can eat” Asian Restaurants in Southern Taiwan
title_full Perceived Service Quality and Customer Revisiting Intention: The Case of “all you can eat” Asian Restaurants in Southern Taiwan
title_fullStr Perceived Service Quality and Customer Revisiting Intention: The Case of “all you can eat” Asian Restaurants in Southern Taiwan
title_full_unstemmed Perceived Service Quality and Customer Revisiting Intention: The Case of “all you can eat” Asian Restaurants in Southern Taiwan
title_sort perceived service quality and customer revisiting intention: the case of “all you can eat” asian restaurants in southern taiwan
publisher International Hellenic University
series Journal of Tourism, Heritage & Services Marketing
issn 2529-1947
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Purpose of this paper is to report on an investigation of the expected and perceived service quality at “all you can eat” restaurants in southern Taiwan. The findings of this study indicated that the service quality factors had a positive impact on overall customer satisfaction and revisiting intention. The results also showed that the “all you can eat” restaurant in Chiayi had a higher level for service related factors for “all you can eat” restaurants than Kaohsiung thus reflecting some regional differences in overall service quality. The analysis revealed a number of central and important properties attached to the consumption values associated with context of an “all you can eat” restaurant meal. Such insights can be of use to the management of restaurants in their efforts to improve the experience/quality for their customers and to increase customer loyalty. The consumer values identified here could also be used as suggestions concerning what to look for within more comprehensive empirical studies done in the future. This is the first study to are knowledge that examines "all you can eat" hospitality sector in Taiwan
topic All you can eat
Taiwan
Service Quality
url http://jthsm.gr/vol3iss2/3-2-5.pdf
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