Publication | Closed Access
How Does the Variance of Product Ratings Matter?
642
Citations
52
References
2011
Year
Customer SatisfactionNiche ProductDigital MarketingConsumer StudyInformational RoleConsumer ResearchProduct RatingsOnline Customer BehaviorBuying BehaviorCustomer ReviewProduct Ratings MatterManagementConsumer BehaviorConsumer ChoiceReliabilityProduct QualityFood QualityMarketingInteractive MarketingBusiness
This paper examines the informational role of product ratings. We build a theoretical model in which ratings can help consumers figure out how much they would enjoy the product. In our model, a high average rating indicates a high product quality, whereas a high variance of ratings is associated with a niche product, one that some consumers love and others hate. Based on its informational role, a higher variance would correspond to a higher subsequent demand if and only if the average rating is low. We find empirical evidence that is consistent with the theoretical predictions with book data from Amazon.com and BN.com. A higher standard deviation of ratings on Amazon improves a book's relative sales rank when the average rating is lower than 4.1 stars, which is true for 35% of all the books in our sample. This paper was accepted by Pradeep Chintagunta, marketing.
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