Measuring the Causal Relationships of Restaurant Service Quality and Perceived Sacrifice, Value, Satisfaction and Intention to Revisit in Tourist Area

관광지에서의 음식점 서비스 질, 지각된 희생, 가치, 만족과 재방문 의도의 인과 관계 평가

  • Kang, Jong-Heon (Dept. of Cooking Science, Sunchon National University) ;
  • Ko, Beom-Seok (Dept. of Hotel Culinary Arts & Wine.Coffee, Daegu Health College)
  • 강종헌 (순천대학교 조리과학과) ;
  • 고범석 (대구보건대학 호텔조리음료계열)
  • Published : 2007.08.31

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to measure the effects of the perceived sacrifice, service quality, value and satisfaction on the intention to revisit restaurants. A total of 273 questionnaires were completed. The equation model was used to measure the causal effects. The results demonstrated that the confirmatory factor analysis model provided an excellent model fit. The modified model yielded a significantly better fit to the data than the service quality model, and accounted for a greater share of the variance in intention to revisit than the service quality model. The effects of value and service quality on intention to revisit were statistically significant in both the service quality model and modified model. The effects of perceived sacrifice and service quality on value were statistically significant in the service quality model and modified model. As expected, service quality had a significant effect on satisfaction in the modified model. Satisfaction had a significant effect on intention to revisit in the modified model. Satisfaction also had a significant effect on service quality in the service quality model. Moreover, service quality had an indirect influence on intention to revisit through value and satisfaction in the modified model. Service quality had an indirect influence on the intention to revisit through value in the service quality model. The overall findings offer strong empirical support for the intuitive notion that improving service quality can increase favorable intention to revisit, and decrease unfavorable intention to revisit.

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