4.5 Article

Information processing of food safety messages: what really matters for restaurant customers?

Journal

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/IJCHM-05-2022-0670

Keywords

Information quality; Information credibility; Information adoption; Trust; Health consciousness; Food safety knowledge

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This study examines how customers' perceptions of the quality and credibility of restaurants' food safety information influence their information adoption, trust in the restaurant, and purchase intention. It also explores the moderating effects of customers' food safety knowledge and health consciousness. The findings show that perceived information quality significantly affects perceived information credibility and has direct and indirect effects on information adoption, trust, and purchase intention. The study also confirms the moderating effects of health consciousness and food safety knowledge.
PurposeThis study aims to examine how customers' perceptions of the quality and credibility of restaurants' food safety information influence customers' information adoption and, consequently, their trust in the restaurant and purchase intention. It also explores the moderating effects of customers' food safety knowledge and health consciousness. Design/methodology/approachParticipants were asked to read a food safety message from a chain restaurant's website before taking a self-administered online survey. Using a cross-sectional design, a total of 526 valid responses were collected in the USA through Amazon Mechanical Turk. A two-step approach consisting of a measurement model and a structural equation model was applied to test the direct and indirect effects. Additionally, hierarchical regression models were developed to test the moderating effects. FindingsResults show that perceived information quality significantly affects perceived information credibility and has a significant direct and indirect influence on information adoption. Furthermore, information adoption has a direct positive influence on customers' trust in the restaurant and an indirect effect on purchase intention (full mediation effect of trust). Finally, the moderation effects of health consciousness and food safety knowledge were supported. Practical implicationsRestaurateurs can apply research findings to increase the likelihood that customers adopt their food safety information and to enhance customers' trust and, consequently, purchase intention in restaurants. Originality/valueReflecting on framing theory and information processing theory, this study examines the ways that customers process restaurants' food safety information by developing an original conceptual framework with strong empirical data support.

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