Follow the herd or be myself? An analysis of consistency in behavior of reviewers and helpfulness of their reviews

Publication Type

Journal Article

Publication Date

3-2017

Abstract

sults emerge from the econometric analyses using publicly available data from TripAdvisor.com. First, reviewers' rating behavior is consistent over time and across products. Furthermore, most of the variation in their future rating behavior can be explained by their rating behavior in the past rather than by the observed average rating. Second, reviews by reviewers with higher absolute bias in rating in the past receive more helpful votes in future. We further divide the bias in rating into intrinsic bias (driven by intrinsic reviewer characteristics) and extrinsic bias (driven by influences beyond intrinsic bias) and document that intrinsic bias plays a more significant role in influencing helpful votes for reviews than extrinsic bias. Our results are robust to different product categories and different definition of bias. Overall our results indicate that in the online review context, the observed average rating or an attention grabbing strategy may not be as important as believed in the past. This study provides insights into reviewers' rating behavior and prescribes actionable items for online vendors so that they can proactively influence online opinion instead of passively responding to them.

Keywords

Consistency in rating, Helpful votes, Online hotel reviews, Rating bias, Rating difference, Tripadvisor

Discipline

Databases and Information Systems | E-Commerce | Numerical Analysis and Scientific Computing

Research Areas

Information Systems and Management

Publication

Decision Support Systems

Volume

95

First Page

1

Last Page

11

ISSN

0167-9236

Identifier

10.1016/j.dss.2016.11.005

Publisher

Elsevier

Copyright Owner and License

Authors

Additional URL

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dss.2016.11.005

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