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BYOB of wine, but which one? Unveiling new boundary conditions and moderating effects for restaurant patrons' consideration set formation

Kleopatra Konstantoulaki (University of West Attica, Athens, Greece)
Ioannis Rizomyliotis (University of West Attica, Athens, Greece)
Ioannis Kostopoulos (Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, UK)
Solon Magrizos (University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK)
Thi Bich Hang Tran (Thuongmai University, Hanoi, Vietnam)

British Food Journal

ISSN: 0007-070X

Article publication date: 30 June 2023

Issue publication date: 10 October 2023

72

Abstract

Purpose

Departing from conflicting findings on the role of involvement in the formation of the consideration set, the authors of this study seek to shed light to the wine consumer behaviour and expand previous findings in the bring-your-own-bottle (BYOB) of wine restaurant industry. The authors seek to determine the contradictory effect of involvement on the consideration set size and variety.

Design/methodology/approach

Three empirical studies were conducted. In Study 1, the relationships were tested in a personal consumption situation and in Study 2 in a gift-giving context. Finally, in Study 3, inconsistencies in the intensity of the hypothesised relationships were explored by testing the triple interaction amongst the three variables (i.e. involvement, decision-making context and decision domain).

Findings

According to the authors' findings BYOB of wine consumers form larger considerations sets in memory-based decision contexts. Involvement's effect on wine consideration set size is stronger in memory-based decisions. BYOB restaurant patrons form smaller sets of alternatives for personal consumption. BYOB restaurant patrons form more heterogeneous sets of alternatives in wine gift-giving. BYOB of wine restaurants should facilitate consumers' wine-selection process.

Originality/value

The authors make an effort to explain and determine the up-to-date contradictory effect of restaurant patrons' involvement on the BYOB of wine consideration set size and the amount of variety contained therein. The study offers new insights, by unfolding the moderating effect of decision-making contexts (i.e. memory-based versus stimuli-based) and decision domains (i.e. personal consumption versus gift-giving) on this effect of involvement on the properties of consideration sets.

Keywords

Citation

Konstantoulaki, K., Rizomyliotis, I., Kostopoulos, I., Magrizos, S. and Tran, T.B.H. (2023), "BYOB of wine, but which one? Unveiling new boundary conditions and moderating effects for restaurant patrons' consideration set formation", British Food Journal, Vol. 125 No. 10, pp. 3640-3655. https://doi.org/10.1108/BFJ-01-2023-0055

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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