IIARD International Journal of Economics and Business Management (IJEBM )

E-ISSN 2489-0065
P-ISSN 2695-186X
VOL. 7 NO. 2 2021


Conjoint Analysis of Students’ Choice of Food Vendor and Menu in the University Community of Akungba Akoko, Nigeria

Edamisan Stephen Ikuemonisan


Abstract


Despite the importance of outdoor food vending as an important agribusiness enterprise that is playing a key role in distributing ready to eat food to consumers, there are still gaps that need to be addressed to ensure the interests of producer and consumers are sustainably catered for. Therefore, this study empirically examined students’ choice of joint food vendor and menu in the university community of Akungba Akoko. The study evaluated students’ socio-economic characteristics and their perceptions on how the hygienic environment and cleanliness of food products as well as vendors’ customer care and relationship at the point of sales affect their choice of vendor. Conjoint analysis was deployed to determine students’ preference for combined vendor and menu, and what they could afford to pay for their choice of combination. 120 students of Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba Akoko across departments and levels were selected using stratified random sampling. The study classified the food vendors into three categories – formal, informal and semi-formal, and found that more than 80% of the students interviewed spent more than 50% of their monthly stipends on ready to eat food bought from the vendors. The study also found that students’ monthly stipend (N14805.72 [$38.76]) was less than their average total monthly academic related expenditure (N38204.22 [$100.01]). The most preferred menus by students include rice with stew and swallow with egusi at the rate of $0.79 - $1.31 per plate in formal and semi-formal food vendors respectively but their capacity to afford only $0.68 per meal is a limiting factor. The study recommends an effective policy strategy to increase students’ stipends with a view to increasing their access to and demand for food.


Conjoint Analysis, ready to eat food, Food vendor, Menu, and Students


References:


Abiiro, G. A., Gyan, E. K., & Akanbang, B. A. A. (2019). Food vending characteristics and
students? preferences for food vending services: a discrete choice experiment. Ghana
Journal of Development Studies, 16(1), 68-91.

Anetor, F. (2015). An investigation into the value of street vending in Nigeria: A case of
Lagos
State. Journal of Marketing and Consumer Research, 11.

Askovic, B., & Kirchengast, S. (2012). Gender differences in nutritional behavior and weight
status during early and late adolescence. Anthropologischer Anzeiger, 69(3), 289-304.

Benson, K. (2020). Improving customer satisfaction at Mahorgany Health Foods Ltd.
Applied
project submitted to the Department of Business Administration, Ashesi University, in
partial fulfillment of Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration Ashesi
Institutional Repository. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11988/592

Bhuyan, S., & Govindasamy, R. (2020). Factors Affecting Consumption of RTE (Ready-To
Eat) International Food in The United States. International Journal of Food and
Agricultural Economics (IJFAEC), 8(1128-2020-1531), 257-269.

Caswell, J. A., Yaktine, A. L., & Council, N. R. (2013). Individual, household and
environmental factors affecting food choices and access. Supplemental nutrition
assistance program examining the evidence to define benefit adequacy.

Caswell, J.A.; Mojduszka, E.M. Using informational labeling to influence the market for
quality in food products. Am. J. Agric. Econ. 1996, 78, 1248–1253. [CrossRef]

Filimonau, V., & Krivcova, M. (2017). Restaurant menu design and more responsible
consumer food choice: An exploratory study of managerial perceptions. Journal of
cleaner production, 143, 516-527.

Franklin, S. and Badrie, N. (2015), “Vendor hygienic practices and consumer perception of food safety during the carnival festival on the island of Tobago, West Indies”,
International Journal of Consumer Studies, Vol. 39 No. 2, pp. 145-154

Glanz, K., Resnicow, K., Seymour, J., Hoy, K., Stewart, H., Lyons, M., & Goldberg, J.
(2007).
How major restaurant chains plan their menus: the role of profit, demand, and health.
American journal of preventive medicine, 32(5), 383-388.

Gössling, S., Garrod, B., Aall, C., Hille, J., & Peeters, P. (2011). Food management in
tourism:
Reducing tourism?s carbon „foodprint?. Tourism Management, 32(3), 534-543.

Han, J.; Ruiz-Garcia, L.; Qian, J.; Yang, X. Food packaging: A comprehensive review and
future trends. Compr. Rev. Food Sci. Food Saf. 2018, 17, 860–877. [CrossRef]

Harris, J. M., & Shiptsova, R. (2007). Consumer demand for convenience foods:
demographics
and expenditures. Journal of Food Distribution Research, 38(856-2016-57845), 22-36.

Herforth, A., Ahmed, S., Declerck, F., Fanzo, J., & Remans, R. (2017). Creating sustainab le,
resilient food systems for healthy diets. UNSCN News, (42), 15-22.

Herrera, J., Kuépié, M., Nordman, C., Oudin, X., & Roubaud, F. (2011). Informal Sector and
Informal Employment: Overview of Data for Eleven Cities in Ten Developing
Countries. WIEGO Urban Policies Resource Document. Retrieved from:
www.wiego.org

Hooker, N.H.; Caswell, J.A. Regulatory Targets and Regimes for Food Safety: A Comparison
of North American and European Approaches. In The Economics of Reducing Health
Risk from Food; Caswell, J.A., Ed.; Food Marketing Policy Center, Universiy of
Conneticut: Mansfield, CT, USA, 1996. Available online:
https://works.bepress.com/julie_caswell/71/ (accessed on 28 September 2019).

Iwarere, H. T., & Fakokunde, T. O. (2011). Consumers? perception of product and service
quality and price in the Nigerian fast food industry: A case of selected outlets in Ekiti
State, Nigeria. European Journal of Social Sciences, 19(2), 198-207.

Ji, M. F., & Wood, W. (2007). Purchase and consumption habits: Not necessarily what you
intend. Journal of Consumer Psychology, 17(4), 261-276.

Kani, J. (2015). Factors That Influence Consumers? Buying Behavior. The Marketing OER
ToolKit.

Katajajuuri, J. M., Silvennoinen, K., Hartikainen, H., Heikkilä, L., & Reinikainen, A. (2014).
Food waste in the Finnish food chain. Journal of Cleaner Production, 73, 322-329.
Kavoura, A., Kefallonitis, E., & Theodoridis, P. (2019). Strategic innovative marketing and
tourism. Springer Proceedings in Business and Economics, seen at https://doi.
org/10.1007/978-3-030-12453-3_101.
Kramer, A.; Twigg, B. Measure of frozen food quality and quality changes. In The Freezing
Preservation of Foods; AVI Pub. Co: Westport, WA, USA, 1968; Volume 2. 29.
Lancaster, K. Consumer Demand: A New Approach; Columbia University Press: New York,
NY, USA, 1971.

McCullough, D. (2002). A user's guide to conjoint analysis. Marketing Research, 14(2).

Merve Yanar G, Barry A F. (2020). Ready-to-Eat Food Consumption Behavior. Nutri

Food Sci Int J. 2020. 9(5): 555775. DOI: 10.19080/NFSIJ.2019.09.555775.
Molnar, P. A model for overall description of food quality. Food Qual. Prefer. 1995, 6, 185
190. [CrossRef]

Morakinyo, A. O., Samuel, T. A., & Adegoke, O. A. (2016). Mineral composition of
commonly
consumed local foods in Nigeria. African Journal of Biomedical Research, 19(2), 141-
147.
Morano, R. S., Barrichello, A., Jacomossi, R. R., & D?Acosta-Rivera, J. R. (2018). Street
food:
factors influencing perception of product quality. RAUSP Management Journal,
53(4), 535-554.

Mustapha, A. M., Fakokunde, T. O., & Awolusi, O. D. (2014). The quick service restaurant
business in Nigeria: Exploring the emerging opportunity for entrepreneurial
development and growth. Global Journal of Commerce and Management Perspective,
3(3), 8-14.

Onodugo, V. A., Ezeadichie, N. H., Onwuneme, C. A., & Anosike, A. E. (2016). The
dilemma
of managing the challenges of street vending in public spaces: The case of Enugu
City, Nigeria. Cities, 59, 95-101.

Parsa, H. G., & Kwansa, F. A. (2001). A Typology for Hospitality Franchise Systems:
Strategic
Choices for Hospitality Franchisees. Journal of Restaurant & Foodservice Marketing,
4(2), 5-34.

Payne-Palacio, J., & Theis, M. (2015). Foodservice management. Pearson Education UK.

Petrescu, D. C., Vermeir, I., & Petrescu-Mag, R. M. (2020). Consumer understanding of food
quality, healthiness, and environmental impact: A cross-national perspective.
International journal of environmental research and public health, 17(1), 169.

Popovic, M., Kuzmanovi?, M., & Savi?, G. (2018). A comparative empirical study of
Analytic Hierarchy Process and Conjoint analysis: Literature review. Decision Making:
Applications in Management and Engineering, 1(2), 153-163.
PwC – PricewaterhouseCoopers, 2013. UK casual dining market. Discussion document.
December 2013. Available at: http://pwc.blogs.com/Restaurant%20discussion.pdf
[Accessed 20 June 2016].

Rao, V. R. (2008). Developments in conjoint analysis. In Handbook of marketing decision
models (pp. 23-53). Springer, Boston, MA.

Sen, S., Antara, N., & Sen, S. (2019). Factors influencing consumers to take ready-made
frozen
food. Current Psychology, 1-10.

Shtudiner, Z. E., Zwilling, M., & Kantor, J. (2017). Field of study choice: using conjoint
analysis and clustering. International Journal of educational management.

Unni, J. (2010). Inclusive Cities: The Indian Case”. Draft Report Commissioned by Women
in
Employment, Globalising and Organising (WIEGO)

Verma, V. K., Rout, I. S., Rai, A. K., & Gaikwad, A. (2013). Optimization of parameters
affecting the performance of passive solar distillation system by using Taguchi
method. IOSR Journal of Mechanical and Civil Engineering, 7(2), 37-42.

Winarno, F. G. (2017). Street food in Asia: An industry that is much better than its
reputation.
Perspectives Asia: Political Analysis and Commentary, 5(February), 20-26.
Zeithaml, V.A. Consumer perceptions of price, quality, and value: A means-end model and
synthesis of evidence. J. Mark. 1988


DOWNLOAD PDF

Back