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EMAC 2021 Annual Conference


Too Much of a Good Thing? How Incongruent Signals of Popularity Diminish Product Appeal
(A2021-93584)

Published: May 25, 2021

AUTHORS

Sarit Moldovan, The Open University of Israel; Meyrav Shoham, Tel Aviv University; Yael Steinhart, Tel Aviv University

ABSTRACT

A high volume of sales or online reviews can make a product seem more popular and established and consequently enhance its appeal. However, sometimes these two signals are incongruent: the volume of sales considerably exceeds that of the reviews, or there are many reviews compared to sales. Findings from five experimental studies and an analysis of real-world data from Goodreads.com demonstrate how a lack of fit between the volume of sales and reviews can affect consumer inferences and reduce product appeal. We further show that each of the two types of non-fit leads to distinct inferences: when sales clearly exceed the volume of reviews, consumers infer that the product was not popular enough with fellow consumers to spur them to write reviews. When the there are many reviews compared to sales, consumers question reviewer trustworthiness, as it is unclear who posted these reviews given the volume of sales. The effects are attenuated when justification is available.

REFERENCES

This research was supported by research grants from the Jeremy Coller Foundation, the Henry Crown Institute of Business Research, the ISRAEL SCIENCE FOUNDATION (grant No. 1197/15) and The Open University research fund.