Abstract

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to determine whether different scales and ways to collect reviews and ratings found on online travel agencies (OTAs) can affect hotels, and whether hotels obtain the same or different evaluations. Design/methodology/approach Hotel ratings from five OTAs in four European markets were collected and compared in pairs. An initial comparison was made with the hotel scores of each OTA to show what a typical user would see. Then, a rescaled score (0-10) was used to compare all the OTA scales appropriately and to distinguish between what customers observe and what the reality is. Findings The results reveal that Booking.com that uses a scale (2.5-10) and Agoda with a scale (2-10) seem to give higher rating scores than Atrapalo (1-10), Travel Republic (0-10) and hotel reservation service (1-10). However, when the scores are rescaled (0-10), the worst ratings are found on Booking.com followed by Agoda. Practical implications OTAs should include, next to the scores, the scale used to rate hotels so as to provide users with better and clearer information. Moreover, rating questionnaires should match the verbal denominations with their numerical values to avoid biased ratings. Social implications OTAs and hotel managers are losing information provided by customers because customers are not aware of the scale when rating hotels. Moreover, hotel ratings are used by potential customers to obtain a clearer image of an establishment. However, if some hotels are being overrated by some scales, customers might have higher expectations, which may not be met. Originality/value The unique rating scales of Booking.com and Agoda provide additional insights into their hotel evaluations, which seem to be apparently higher when in fact they are not.

Highlights

  • Online travel reviews (OTRs) have grown exponentially in recent years, transforming the tourism industry (Buhalis and Law, 2008), especially the exchange of information and the social media have changed consumer behaviour (Femenia-Serra et al, 2019)

  • To provide additional insights about online travel agencies (OTAs) rating scales, this study aims to analyse the rating scales that apparently use a 0-10 or a 1-10 scale by answering the research question: Do OTA rating scale systems provide the same score results for the same hotels? do the rating scales lead to significant rating variations? Which OTA rating scale produces better/worse scores for the same hotels?

  • We show the results a user of any of those OTAs can observe with rescaled ratings (0-10), the results are different because the worst scores are obtained on Booking. com followed by Agoda

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Summary

Introduction

Online travel reviews (OTRs) have grown exponentially in recent years, transforming the tourism industry (Buhalis and Law, 2008), especially the exchange of information and the social media have changed consumer behaviour (Femenia-Serra et al, 2019). OTRs are written by tourists who provide opinions and evaluations about their travel experiences on platforms belonging to community-based sites or transaction-based online travel agencies (OTAs) (Xiang et al, 2017). These OTRs consist of text space for users to describe their travel experiences and a numeric questionnaire that allows customers to rate the services offered or the overall experience. In this sense, recent research shows that more priority is given to rating symbols than to textual material (Aicher et al, 2016) because of an excess of information. A better score contributes to increasing reservations (Vermeulen and Seegers, 2009), increasing online hotel room sales (Cezar and Ogut, 2016) and leads to increased occupancy rates (Viglia et al, 2016)

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