Online Product Opinions: Incidence, Evaluation, and Evolution

被引:378
作者
Moe, Wendy W. [1 ]
Schweidel, David A. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Maryland, Robert H Smith Sch Business, College Pk, MD 20472 USA
[2] Univ Wisconsin, Wisconsin Sch Business, Madison, WI 53706 USA
关键词
online social media; word of mouth; social dynamics; Bayesian estimation; Internet marketing; user-generated content; ELECTION NIGHT PROJECTIONS; BANDWAGON; SELECTION; DYNAMICS; UNDERDOG; RATINGS; CHOICE; POLLS; WEST;
D O I
10.1287/mksc.1110.0662
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Whereas recent research has demonstrated the impact of online product ratings and reviews on product sales, we still have a limited understanding of the individual's decision to contribute these opinions. In this research, we empirically model the individual's decision to provide a product rating and investigate factors that influence this decision. Specifically, we consider how previously posted ratings may affect an individual's posting behavior in terms of whether to contribute (incidence) and what to contribute (evaluation), and we identify selection effects that influence the incidence decision and adjustment effects that influence the evaluation decision. Across individuals, our results show that positive ratings environments increase posting incidence, whereas negative ratings environments discourage posting. Our results also indicate important differences across individuals in how they respond to previously posted ratings, with less frequent posters exhibiting bandwagon behavior and more active customers revealing differentiation behavior. These dynamics affect the evolution of online product opinions. Through simulations, we illustrate how the evolution of posted product opinions is shaped by the underlying customer base and show that customer bases with the same median opinion may evolve in substantially different ways because of the presence of a core group of "activists" posting increasingly negative opinions.
引用
收藏
页码:372 / 386
页数:15
相关论文
共 37 条
[1]   BRILLIANT BUT CRUEL - PERCEPTIONS OF NEGATIVE EVALUATORS [J].
AMABILE, TM .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1983, 19 (02) :146-156
[2]   THE ANTECEDENTS AND CONSEQUENCES OF CUSTOMER SATISFACTION FOR FIRMS [J].
ANDERSON, EW ;
SULLIVAN, MW .
MARKETING SCIENCE, 1993, 12 (02) :125-143
[3]  
[Anonymous], 1998, J. Serv. Res., DOI 10.1177/109467059800100102
[4]   Internet recommendation systems [J].
Ansari, A ;
Essegaier, S ;
Kohli, R .
JOURNAL OF MARKETING RESEARCH, 2000, 37 (03) :363-375
[5]   What Drives Immediate and Ongoing Word of Mouth? [J].
Berger, Jonah ;
Schwartz, Eric M. .
JOURNAL OF MARKETING RESEARCH, 2011, 48 (05) :869-880
[6]  
Berinsky A.J., 2004, Silent voices: Public opinion and political participation in America
[7]   Google Trends: A Web-Based Tool for Real-Time Surveillance of Disease Outbreaks [J].
Carneiro, Herman Anthony ;
Mylonakis, Eleftherios .
CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2009, 49 (10) :1557-1564
[8]   The effect of word of mouth on sales: Online book reviews [J].
Chevalier, Judith A. ;
Mayzlin, Dina .
JOURNAL OF MARKETING RESEARCH, 2006, 43 (03) :345-354
[9]   A statistical measure of a population's propensity to engage in post-purchase online word-of-mouth [J].
Dellarocas, Chrysanthos ;
Narayan, Ritu .
STATISTICAL SCIENCE, 2006, 21 (02) :277-285
[10]  
DELLICARPINI MX, 1984, J POLIT, V46, P866