4.7 Review

Online Review Solicitations Reduce Extremity Bias in Online Review Distributions and Increase Their Representativeness

Journal

MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
Volume 67, Issue 7, Pages 4420-4445

Publisher

INFORMS
DOI: 10.1287/mnsc.2020.3758

Keywords

online review solicitations; reporting biases; representative reviews; extremity bias; social influence; conformity; online reviews; online word-of-mouth; third-party review platforms; TripAdvisor

Funding

  1. Goizueta Business School at Emory University
  2. Singapore of Education Academic Research Fund Tier 1 [C207MSS18B014]

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Representative online customer reviews are crucial for the Internet economy, and this study explores how extremity bias and conformity impact the representativeness of online review distributions. The research shows that online review solicitations can partially de-bias ratings and increase engagement, particularly among customers with moderate experiences. Additionally, the study highlights that both solicited and unsolicited reviews tend to overstate the average customer experience.
Representative online customer reviews are critical to the effective functioning of the Internet economy. In this study, I investigate the representativeness of online review distributions to examine how extremity bias and conformity impact it and explore whether online review solicitations alter representativeness. Past research on extreme distribution of online ratings commonly relied solely on observed public online ratings. One strength of the current paper is that I observe the private satisfaction ratings of customers regardless of whether they choose to write an online review or not. I show that both extremity bias and conformity exist in unsolicited online word-of-mouth (WOM) and introduce online review solicitations as a mechanism that can partially de-bias ratings. Solicitations increase all customers' engagement in online WOM, but if solicited, those with moderate experiences increase their engagement more than those with extreme experiences. Consequently, although extremity bias still exists in solicited online WOM, solicitations significantly increase the representativeness of rating distributions. Surprisingly, the results demonstrate that without conformity, unsolicited online WOM would be even less representative of the original customer experiences. Furthermore, I document that both solicited and unsolicited reviews equally overstate the average customer experience (compared with average private ratings) despite stark differences in their rating distributions. Finally, I establish that solicitations for reviews on the company-owned website, on average, decrease the number of one-star reviews on a third-party review platform.

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