Do online reviews help? The contingent effect of perceived crowdedness and gender for restaurant selection

Purpose: This paper aims to investigate the impact of perceived usefulness of online reviews and crowd cues on restaurant selection. In addition, the authors also examine the moderating role of perceived crowding and gender in this process. Design/methodology/approach: The proposed hypotheses were t...

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Main Authors: Ali, M.A., Ting, D.H., Azeem, M.U., Abbasi, A.Z.
Format: Article
Published: Emerald Publishing 2022
Online Access:http://scholars.utp.edu.my/id/eprint/33935/
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85137437920&doi=10.1108%2fEMJB-04-2022-0077&partnerID=40&md5=7c054f7a557c0bb3066852ebc0cdac31
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spelling oai:scholars.utp.edu.my:339352022-12-20T03:51:03Z http://scholars.utp.edu.my/id/eprint/33935/ Do online reviews help? The contingent effect of perceived crowdedness and gender for restaurant selection Ali, M.A. Ting, D.H. Azeem, M.U. Abbasi, A.Z. Purpose: This paper aims to investigate the impact of perceived usefulness of online reviews and crowd cues on restaurant selection. In addition, the authors also examine the moderating role of perceived crowding and gender in this process. Design/methodology/approach: The proposed hypotheses were tested with survey data (N = 200) collected from customers visiting full-service restaurants in Malaysia. The data were analyzed using SEM through Smart PLS. Findings: The findings supported that the perceived usefulness of online reviews and perceived crowding have a positive effect on a consumer's purchase intentions, i.e. their decision of restaurant selection. Besides, a higher level of perceived crowding strengthens the relationship between the perceived usefulness of online reviews and their purchase intentions. This finding delineates that consumers prefer to dine in a crowded place with useful online reviews in an unfamiliar place. Finally, the results show that the effect of the usefulness of online reviews on purchase intentions does not vary with respect to gender (no significant contingent effect). However, the effect of perceived crowding varies with respect to gender � male customers have higher intentions to join crowded restaurants as compared to females. Research limitations/implications: Limitation of this study is its cross-sectional research design; data were collected in a single time frame. Longitudinal research design can be used to get in-depth knowledge of this phenomenon. Secondly, a non-probability sampling technique was used in this study, future research can used probability sampling technique to enhance generalizability of the study. Moreover, this study focused on the human crowding aspect, future studies can cover both aspects of crowding (human crowding and spatial crowding) in retailing or other service sectors (Blut and Iyer, 2020). Practical implications: This study has multiple practical implications. Originality/value: This study extends the current research on usefulness of online reviews and perceived crowding by investigating its direct and conditional effects. Specifically, the authors contribute in extant research by explaining its differential effects for male and female customers, when they select which restaurants to dine. © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited. Emerald Publishing 2022 Article NonPeerReviewed Ali, M.A. and Ting, D.H. and Azeem, M.U. and Abbasi, A.Z. (2022) Do online reviews help? The contingent effect of perceived crowdedness and gender for restaurant selection. EuroMed Journal of Business. ISSN 14502194 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85137437920&doi=10.1108%2fEMJB-04-2022-0077&partnerID=40&md5=7c054f7a557c0bb3066852ebc0cdac31 10.1108/EMJB-04-2022-0077 10.1108/EMJB-04-2022-0077 10.1108/EMJB-04-2022-0077
institution Universiti Teknologi Petronas
building UTP Resource Centre
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Petronas
content_source UTP Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utp.edu.my/
description Purpose: This paper aims to investigate the impact of perceived usefulness of online reviews and crowd cues on restaurant selection. In addition, the authors also examine the moderating role of perceived crowding and gender in this process. Design/methodology/approach: The proposed hypotheses were tested with survey data (N = 200) collected from customers visiting full-service restaurants in Malaysia. The data were analyzed using SEM through Smart PLS. Findings: The findings supported that the perceived usefulness of online reviews and perceived crowding have a positive effect on a consumer's purchase intentions, i.e. their decision of restaurant selection. Besides, a higher level of perceived crowding strengthens the relationship between the perceived usefulness of online reviews and their purchase intentions. This finding delineates that consumers prefer to dine in a crowded place with useful online reviews in an unfamiliar place. Finally, the results show that the effect of the usefulness of online reviews on purchase intentions does not vary with respect to gender (no significant contingent effect). However, the effect of perceived crowding varies with respect to gender � male customers have higher intentions to join crowded restaurants as compared to females. Research limitations/implications: Limitation of this study is its cross-sectional research design; data were collected in a single time frame. Longitudinal research design can be used to get in-depth knowledge of this phenomenon. Secondly, a non-probability sampling technique was used in this study, future research can used probability sampling technique to enhance generalizability of the study. Moreover, this study focused on the human crowding aspect, future studies can cover both aspects of crowding (human crowding and spatial crowding) in retailing or other service sectors (Blut and Iyer, 2020). Practical implications: This study has multiple practical implications. Originality/value: This study extends the current research on usefulness of online reviews and perceived crowding by investigating its direct and conditional effects. Specifically, the authors contribute in extant research by explaining its differential effects for male and female customers, when they select which restaurants to dine. © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited.
format Article
author Ali, M.A.
Ting, D.H.
Azeem, M.U.
Abbasi, A.Z.
spellingShingle Ali, M.A.
Ting, D.H.
Azeem, M.U.
Abbasi, A.Z.
Do online reviews help? The contingent effect of perceived crowdedness and gender for restaurant selection
author_facet Ali, M.A.
Ting, D.H.
Azeem, M.U.
Abbasi, A.Z.
author_sort Ali, M.A.
title Do online reviews help? The contingent effect of perceived crowdedness and gender for restaurant selection
title_short Do online reviews help? The contingent effect of perceived crowdedness and gender for restaurant selection
title_full Do online reviews help? The contingent effect of perceived crowdedness and gender for restaurant selection
title_fullStr Do online reviews help? The contingent effect of perceived crowdedness and gender for restaurant selection
title_full_unstemmed Do online reviews help? The contingent effect of perceived crowdedness and gender for restaurant selection
title_sort do online reviews help? the contingent effect of perceived crowdedness and gender for restaurant selection
publisher Emerald Publishing
publishDate 2022
url http://scholars.utp.edu.my/id/eprint/33935/
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85137437920&doi=10.1108%2fEMJB-04-2022-0077&partnerID=40&md5=7c054f7a557c0bb3066852ebc0cdac31
_version_ 1753790756733059072
score 13.18916