Misreading of consumer dissatisfaction in ...
Document type :
Compte-rendu et recension critique d'ouvrage
Title :
Misreading of consumer dissatisfaction in online product reviews: Writing style as a cause for bias
Author(s) :
Antioco, Michael [Auteur]
EDHEC Business School [EDHEC]
Coussement, Kristof [Auteur]
Lille économie management - UMR 9221 [LEM]
EDHEC Business School [EDHEC]
Coussement, Kristof [Auteur]
Lille économie management - UMR 9221 [LEM]
Journal title :
International Journal of Information Management
Pages :
301-310
Publisher :
Elsevier
Publication date :
2018-02
ISSN :
0143-6236
English keyword(s) :
Online consumer review
Post-launch product feedback
Information management
Language-style analysis
Judgment bias
Post-launch product feedback
Information management
Language-style analysis
Judgment bias
HAL domain(s) :
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Gestion et management
English abstract : [en]
This study improves our understanding of managers’ misreading of negative online reviews. Our findings are derived from a sample of 1014 written online reviews and 507 experienced marketing managers. By building on the ...
Show more >This study improves our understanding of managers’ misreading of negative online reviews. Our findings are derived from a sample of 1014 written online reviews and 507 experienced marketing managers. By building on the judgment-bias literature and psychometric language-style analysis, we find several key results that can ultimately contribute to more effective information management for marketing decisions. Managers tend to better interpret negative reviews when consumers use more cognitive language markers in the form of insight and discrepancy words and more third-person pronouns (i.e., undefined social referents) in their reviews. The inverse relationship exists for the use of causality words and future tenses (i.e., behavioral intentions), as managers tend to underestimate the gravity of the situation under these conditions. Expressions of positive and negative emotions in reviews do not significantly affect managers’ readings of negative reviews. Furthermore, more experienced managers and female managers are better at identifying negative reviews, and longer consumer reviews make it more difficult for managers to correctly identify negative reviews.Show less >
Show more >This study improves our understanding of managers’ misreading of negative online reviews. Our findings are derived from a sample of 1014 written online reviews and 507 experienced marketing managers. By building on the judgment-bias literature and psychometric language-style analysis, we find several key results that can ultimately contribute to more effective information management for marketing decisions. Managers tend to better interpret negative reviews when consumers use more cognitive language markers in the form of insight and discrepancy words and more third-person pronouns (i.e., undefined social referents) in their reviews. The inverse relationship exists for the use of causality words and future tenses (i.e., behavioral intentions), as managers tend to underestimate the gravity of the situation under these conditions. Expressions of positive and negative emotions in reviews do not significantly affect managers’ readings of negative reviews. Furthermore, more experienced managers and female managers are better at identifying negative reviews, and longer consumer reviews make it more difficult for managers to correctly identify negative reviews.Show less >
Language :
Anglais
Popular science :
Non
Collections :
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