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Hospitality Administration and Management Commons™
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Full-Text Articles in Hospitality Administration and Management
Vegetarians: A Typology For Foodservice Menu Development, Amir Shani, Robin B. Dipietro
Vegetarians: A Typology For Foodservice Menu Development, Amir Shani, Robin B. Dipietro
Hospitality Review
There is currently a lack of research about the needs of vegetarians, from a practitioner or academic perspective. This paper contributes to filling this research gap, by discussing the needs of vegetarians who dine out and their current difficulties in participating in the dining experience, in the present context. Specifically, it is argued that the typology of vegetarians presented in this paper, based on their motivations to adopt the chosen diet, might prove useful for restaurants in order to understand the vegetarian guest and develop menu items and services that will better cater to their needs. Recommendations for practitioners and …
Would A Restaurant Menu Item By Any Other Name Taste As Sweet?, Tim Lockyer
Would A Restaurant Menu Item By Any Other Name Taste As Sweet?, Tim Lockyer
Hospitality Review
The purpose of this paper is to examine the use of words on a restaurant menu, and to evaluate the impact that they have on the selection of menu items. The research comprised two distinct parts. First, four focus groups were held examining responses to five menus, each with the same menu items but using different wording. The results from the focus group analysis were used to develop a survey which was more widely distributed. From the focus group it was revealed that the occasion and participants in the dining experience influence the wording for menu item selection. Respondents discussed …
Labor And Menu Category: Effects On Analysis, Brett W. Horton
Labor And Menu Category: Effects On Analysis, Brett W. Horton
Hospitality Review
Menu analysis is the gathering and processing of key pieces of information to make it more manageable and understandable. Ultimately, menu analysis allows managers to make more informed decisions about prices, costs, and items to be included on a menu. The author discusses If labor as well as food casts need to be included in menu analysis and if managers need to categorize menu items differently when doing menu analysis based on customer eating patterns.
Placement For Profit: Menu Item Arrangement On Customer-Activated Computer Screens, Ken Smith, Susan Gregory, Susan Gould
Placement For Profit: Menu Item Arrangement On Customer-Activated Computer Screens, Ken Smith, Susan Gregory, Susan Gould
Hospitality Review
Can profitable menu items be placed on a computer screen where they will be selected more readily than other items? The author examines whether printed menu theories and techniques can be applied, with the same results, to a computer menu screen