Why do people trust restaurants with short menus?
Expertise often looks like subtraction.
One restaurant serves 150 dishes.
Another serves 12.
Many people immediately trust the second one.
The hidden mechanism is expertise signaling.
Humans often assume specialists are more competent than generalists.
A short menu implies focus.
The chef probably knows these dishes well.
Ingredients may be fresher.
Quality may be easier to maintain.
Whether these assumptions are true is another question.
But psychologically, fewer choices create stronger signals.
Researchers studying consumer behavior call this the paradox of choice.
Too many options can reduce confidence.
A small menu feels intentional.
People think they trust short menus because of food quality.
Very often, they trust them because limitations can look like expertise.
