Formation of customer-based Brand equity via authenticity: the mediating role of satisfaction and the moderating role of restaurant type
Metadatos
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2020Patrocinador
The authors appreciate the financial help provided via a research project of group ADEMAR (University of Granada) under the auspices of the Spanish National Research Programme (R+D+i Research Project ECO2017-88458-R); Research Program from the Faculty of Education, Economy and Technology of Ceuta.Resumen
Purpose – This study aims to examine the extent to which customers’ perceptions of restaurant authenticity
facilitate the establishment’s customer-based brand equity (CBBE) – both directly and indirectly – via customer
satisfaction. The study also analyzes whether restaurant type moderates the antecedent relationships of CBBE
formation.
Design/methodology/approach – Two restaurants of different types were selected for the study: a midscale
and a moderate/casual restaurant. Based on a final total sample of 402 customers of both restaurant
types, a moderatedmediation regression model was used.
Findings – It was found that the level of authenticity perceived by the restaurant visitor during the
gastronomic experience is an antecedent of restaurant brand equity formation, both directly and indirectly,
via customer satisfaction. Furthermore, these antecedent relationships were found to be partially moderated
by restaurant type.
Research limitations/implications – Only two restaurants were used for the study. This study could
be replicated by comparing other types of restaurants with differentiated characteristics to test whether the
results obtained for these two types can be extrapolated to the rest.
Originality/value – There is no empirical evidence in the literature regarding the possible moderating
effect of restaurant type on brand equity formation, so the particular note is the simultaneous
application of CBBE measurement to the analysis of two different types of restaurant and the
differences in their brand equity formation. On the other hand, there are few studies that use moderated
mediation regression analysis as a methodological technique in the field of restaurants, so this is an
interesting methodological contribution.