Journal
JOURNAL OF THE ACADEMY OF MARKETING SCIENCE
Volume 49, Issue 4, Pages 703-722Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11747-021-00770-6
Keywords
Product testing; Online product reviews; Equity theory; Reactance; Multilevel analysis; Experimental study
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Online reviews have significant impacts on firm success, but product testing programs may not necessarily lead to higher quality reviews or better product ratings. Offering product testing programs only benefits the firm in certain circumstances.
Online reviews have profound impacts on firm success in terms of sales volume and how much customers are willing to pay, yet firms remain highly dependent on customers' voluntary contributions. A popular way to increase the number of online reviews is to use product testing programs, which offer participants free products in exchange for writing reviews. Firms that employ this practice generally hope to increase review quality and secure higher product rating scores. However, a qualitative study, experimental study, and multilevel analysis of a field study dataset of more than 200,000 online reviews by product testers combine to reveal that product testing programs do not necessarily generate higher quality reviews, nor better product ratings. Only in certain circumstances (e.g., higher priced products) does offering a product testing program generate these benefits for the firm. Therefore, companies should consider carefully if and when they want to offer product testing programs.
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