Museum experience and satisfaction: moderating role of visiting frequency in national museum of Ghana
Abstract
This research aims to investigate how tourist experience elicits satisfaction and contributes to
loyalty and willingness to pay more for a museum destination. More specifically, this study also investigates
the significant moderating role of visiting frequency on the relationship between satisfaction and willingness
to pay more. Museums offer unique collections for tourists’ education and recreation while providing a better
understanding of the cross‑cultural diversity of societies. The research was conducted with 285 tourists visiting
the National Museum in Ghana, with questions relating to experience, satisfaction, loyalty and willingness to
pay more. Structural equation modelling was used to test the effects of the museum experience, satisfaction
and loyalty on willingness to pay more. Responses emanating from the questionnaire on the National
Museum of Ghana was analysed and the study findings suggest the significant effects of tourist experience on
satisfaction as well as the significant effects of satisfaction on loyalty and willingness to pay more. In addition,
the significant moderating effect of visiting frequency was reported on the relationship between satisfaction
and tourist willingness to pay more. In this regard managers should develop marketing strategies that promote
museum tourism in the travelling experience and that guarantee greater satisgfaction on site.