Published2012Economic Journal
Learning from the crowd: Regression discontinuity estimates of the effects of an online review database
Authors: Anderson, Magruder
Abstract
Internet review forums increasingly supplement expert opinion and social networks in informing consumers about product quality. However, limited empirical evidence links digital word-of-mouth to purchasing decisions. We implement a regression discontinuity design to estimate the effect of positive Yelp.com ratings on restaurant reservation availability. An extra half-star rating causes restaurants to sell out 19 percentage points (49%) more frequently, with larger impacts when alternate information is more scarce. These returns suggest that restaurateurs face incentives to leave fake reviews but a rich set of robustness checks confirm that restaurants do not manipulate ratings in a confounding, discontinuous manner.
Keywords
Sports eventsmediaOlympicsOlympic stocksretail investorsvaluationfundamentalscomovementcategorizationinvestor sentimentinvestor recognitioncommon factorstay-at-homememe
Tags of Social Finance
#Manager & Firm Behavior#Media and Textual Analysis#Consumer Decisions#Archival Empirical