2007 Annual International CHRIE Conference & Exposition
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A recent VNU Food Service Network survey showed that 44% of respondents from the quick service restaurant
sector said they had added menu choices in the past year targeted to help customers manage their weight and all
without mandates from lawmakers (Tyson Foods Inc., 2004). This would seem to indicate that even companies in
the fast food restaurant sector are stepping forward in order to take advantage of this changing customer eating
trend.
Even though consumers are not all alike and the number of consumers looking for healthy menu items is only a
portion of total sales, the increase of reporting of the obesity epidemic worldwide has resulted in the prediction that
customers choosing healthy menu items will increase in the future. Nevertheless, we should not overlook that the
taste is the core factor at point of menu selection, even with the increasing healthy eating trend. Hence, successful
restaurant professionals, regardless of restaurant sectors, should focus on the development of the taste of menu items
as well as the healthfulness in the variety of their menu choices.
The comparative results of relative importance by expenditure level
It can be assumed that one’s expenditure level for a meal may be related with their perception of relative importance
of menu attributes at point of menu selection. So, the relative importance of menu attributes was analyzed separately
according to subjects’ expenditure levels for a lunch, based on a low expenditure (less than $4.00), moderate
expenditure ($4.00 ~ $6.00), and high expenditure (more than $6.00) in campus dining (Table 3). These levels were
based on results from the pre-survey.
†
Utility value,
*
p < .05,
**
p < .01,
***
p < .001
Overall result shows that respondents in all the levels consider taste as the most important menu attribute.
But the relative importance results in the moderate level group showed that they consider the price as more
important than other groups. That is, the relative importance percent for the price in each group were 4.02 (low
expenditure), 22.53 (moderate expenditure) and 15.38 (high expenditure) respectively. What this seems to indicate is
that when the price is low, its importance in comparison to other attributes is also low, but when the price increases
to a moderate level, its relative importance to other attributes increases considerably. This would seem logical.
However, as the price increases higher to the highest expenditure level, its relative importance drops off somewhat.
A possible explanation of this result might be that when menu items are perceived as expensive, they had better taste
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