Partial-least-squares path modeling (PLS-PM), a composite-based form of structural equation modeling (SEM), offers great practical advantages to researchers and practitioners. It has been gaining increasing attention in various disciplines, including management information systems, marketing, strategic management, accounting, family business research, operations management, and organizational research. Yet advanced PLS-SEM techniques are not broadly used in hospitality and tourism research, which spells missed opportunities in terms of detailed analyses and actionable findings.
Applying Partial Least Squares in Tourism and Hospitality Research provides a forum for leading names in the field to discuss the major topical issues and to demonstrate the usefulness of PLS path modeling for academics and practitioners in hospitality and tourism. Its ten chapters discuss key aspects of advanced PLS analysis and its practical applications, covering new guidelines and improvements in the use of PLS-PM as well as individual topics such as multi-group analysis (PLS-MGA), the predictive qualities of PLS models, minimum sample size estimation methods, the reporting of mediation and moderation analysis, the assessment of the reliability of reflectively measured constructs, and the assessment of overall model fit through consistent PLS and the bootstrap-based test. This comprehensive coverage serves both as an introduction to PLS for the uninitiated and as a go-to reference work for researchers and practitioners interested in the most recent advances in PLS methodology.
Applying Partial Least Squares in Tourism and Hospitality Research is a must-read for academics in hospitality and tourism research and for hospitality and tourism practitioners such as industry consultants. Insofar as it can serve as a guidebook to recent advances within PLS-SEM, it is also of interest to researchers from other disciplines including management, business, and marketing.
Chapter 1. Minimum sample size estimation in PLS-SEM:An application in tourism and hospitality research;
Ned KockChapter 2. New guidelines for the use of PLS pathmodeling in hospitality, travel and tourism research; JörgHenseler, Tobias Müller and Florian Schuberth
Chapter 3. Predictions from partial least squaresmodels; Nicholas P. Danks and SoumyaRay
Chapter 4. PLS Path Modeling in Hospitality andTourism Research: The Golden Age and Days of Future Past; Hengky Latan
Chapter 5. Hotel employees’ use of smartphones andperformance: reflective-formative estimation approach; Minwoo Lee, Kawon Kim, Kyung Young Lee and Jung Hwa Hong
Chapter 6. Loyalty to rural tourism in Brazil: Themoderating effect of the purchase frequency; Mara Mataveli and Alfonso J. Gil
Chapter 7. HRM practices and employee retention: Themoderating effect of work environment; PalwashaBibi, Ashfaq Ahmad and Abdul H. A. Majid
Chapter 8. Do museums’ websites boost visitors’ intentions? APLS multi-group comparison; Jesús García-Madariaga, Nuria RecueroVirto, María Francisca Blasco López and Joaquin Aldas Manzano
Chapter 9. The effect of high and low environmentalconscious regarding Brazilian restaurants: A multi-group analysis using PLS; Carlos Alberto Alves, Claudio José Stefanini and Leonardo Aureliano daSilva
Chapter 10. Analyzing the effects of online andoffline communication in the hotel and restaurant industry: The PLS approach; Maja Šerić and ĐurđanaOzretić-Došen
Faizan Ali is an Assistant Professor within the College of Hospitality & Tourism Leadership at the University of South Florida Sarasota Manatee.
S. Mostafa Rasoolimanesh is a Senior Lecturer within the Faculty of Hospitality, Food & Leisure Management at Taylor’s University.
Cihan Cobanoglu is a McKibbon Endowed Chair and Professor within the College of Hospitality and Tourism Leadership at the University of South Florida Sarasota-Manatee.