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Restaurant chefs and purchasing managers who have bought local foods in the past are more likely to continue adding them to menus and store shelves, research shows.

“Past experiences will have an impact on buying local foods,” says Amit Sharma, associate professor of hospitality management at Penn State. “Restaurant managers who buy local foods currently are significantly more likely to keep purchasing locally.”

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In a study of the cost and benefits of purchasing local foods in restaurants, managers and chefs indicated that certain actions of local food producers stand out as reasons why they continue to buy local foods.

For instance, managers says that a local farmer’s or producer’s response time—the time it took a business to respond and process an order—was more important than delivery time—how long it takes to actually receive the goods—as a factor when they considered buying local food products.

“Interestingly, we did not find that delivery time mattered as much for those who purchased food, not to say that delivery time wasn’t a concern at all,” says Sharma. “However, what was more important to these managers was the response time of a local food producer.”

Local is good. Variety is better

Food purchasers also indicated that they would not stock local food just because it is local. Local foods must have a unique selling point, according to the researchers, who report their findings in current issue of the International Journal of Hospitality Management.

For instance, a special variety apple used in an apple pie may be more important to the food manager than just a locally grown apple.

“Simply saying ‘local food’ was not enough; chefs really want to provide their customers with a dish that is unique,” says Sharma. “You can’t just slap a label on it that says it’s ‘local’, and expect it to sell, in other words.”

While many studies have explored the reasons that customers would want local food, this study was focused on management’s buying decisions.

“We’re not discounting customer demand; we recognize that consumers have to want it—in fact our previous studies suggest consumers are willing to pay more for local foods,” says Sharma. “But the manager has to make decisions before the food is served.”

Food safety

Clear labeling is another selling point for restaurant managers who are purchasing foods in grocery stores and markets. The labels should be accurate and easy to read, containing specifications including weight, date, and product details, for example, according to Sharma, who worked with Joonho Moon, doctoral student in hospitality management, and Catherine Strohbehn, state extension specialist and adjunct professor in apparel, events, and hospitality management, Iowa State University.

Training staff to handle local foods properly and to communicate the advantages of local foods with customer was also an important factor that could explain the decision to purchase local foods.

“Training tells us a lot about the commitment of an operation to local foods,” says Sharma. “Local foods may or may not be delivered or processed in the same way as non-local foods, so the staff should be trained and, particularly, chefs need to be trained in developing unique menus using local foods.”

Managers did not seem to think food safety was an issue with handling local food.

“That’s not to say food safety isn’t important to managers, it just isn’t an obstacle to purchasing locally,” says Sharma. “It’s not a constraint.”

The researchers sent surveys to independently owned restaurants in Midwestern states to investigate management’s attitudes toward the decision to purchase locally grown foods.

“In this project, we investigated the cost-benefit analysis of restaurants purchasing local foods, along the foodservice value chain, which ranged from the sourcing of local food all the way to serving local foods to customers,” says Sharma.

The Leopold Center for Sustainable Agriculture at Iowa State University supported this work.

Source: Penn State