Abstract

Purpose This study aims to explain why online reviews in Airbnb are skewed toward positive ratings. The authors examine customer perceptions of the service quality of an Airbnb stay as a relevant antecedent of whether customers leave an online review of that Airbnb stay. To this end, the authors test the hypothesis that the relationship between service quality and leaving an online review is linear and positive. Design/methodology/approach To test the hypothesis, the authors rely on primary survey data from 177 Airbnb customers combined with secondary data coming from their personal online Airbnb accounts. The authors conducted a binary logistic regression analysis to test the hypothesis. Findings The results show that customers’ service quality perceptions are positively and linearly related to leaving an online review of an Airbnb stay. In other words, satisfied customers are more likely to leave a review after an Airbnb stay than those who are dissatisfied. Originality/value The study is original in two respects. First, it reconsiders the role of customer experiences in explaining online customer reviews. In doing so, it empirically shows that the conventional wisdom of a U-shaped relationship between customer experiences and online reviewing does not hold in the context of the sharing economy. Second, by relying on primary survey data, the authors reveal the risk of dissatisfied customers creating an underreporting bias in online reviews, which ultimately make online reviews of Airbnb skewed toward positive ratings.

Highlights

  • Online reviews by customers are of key importance to the hospitality industry

  • We argue that current expectation –confirmation thinking on online reviewing does not translate well to the sharing economy context

  • We argue that high quality service results in leaving an online review because of the intimate and personal exchanges that occur in the sharing economy

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Summary

Introduction

Online reviews by customers are of key importance to the hospitality industry. This especially holds where hospitality services are offered through Airbnb – a “sharing economy” platform that relies on online customer reviews to ensure safe consumer-toconsumer interactions through which strangers share personal, underused goods such as their home (Frenken and Schor, 2017; Oskam and Boswijk, 2016). Online customer reviews help to build trust among strangers that wish to engage in transactions through the sharing economy platform by instilling confidence that peers will not act opportunistically (Ter Huurne et al, 2017). Online reviews offer several tangible outcomes for those who rent out their personal, underused goods. Research has shown that average online ratings of an Airbnb listing are positively associated with the rate charged for the Jeroen Meijerink and Emma Schoenmakers are both based at the University of Twente, Enschede, The Netherlands.

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