The influence of e-word-of-mouth on hotel occupancy rate
Authors: Viglia, G., Minazzi, R. and Buhalis, D.
Journal: International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management
Volume: 28
Issue: 9
Pages: 2035-2051
ISSN: 0959-6119
DOI: 10.1108/IJCHM-05-2015-0238
Abstract:Purpose: Online consumer reviews have become increasingly important for consumer decision-making. One of the most prominent examples is the hotel industry where consumer reviews on websites, such as Bookings.com, TripAdvisor and Venere.com, play a critical role in consumers’ choice of a hotel. There have been a number of recent studies analyzing various aspects of online reviews. The purpose of this paper is to investigate their effects in terms of hotel occupancy rates. Design/methodology/approach: This paper measures through regression analysis the impact of three dimensions of consumer reviews (i.e. review score, review variance and review volume) on the occupancy rates of 346 hotels located in Rome, isolating a number of other factors that might also affect demand. Findings: Review score is the dimension with the highest impact. The results suggest that after controlling for other variables, a one-point increase in the review score is associated to an increase in the occupancy rate by 7.5 percentage points. Regardless the review score, the number of reviews has a positive effect, but with decreasing returns, implying that the higher the number of reviews, the lower the beneficial effect in terms of occupancy rates is. Practical implications: The findings quantify the strong association of online reviews to occupancy rates suggesting the use of appropriate reputational management systems to increase hotel occupancy and therefore performance. Originality/value: A major contribution of this paper is its comprehensiveness in analyzing the relation between online consumer reviews and occupancy across a heterogeneous sample of hotels.
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/24868/
Source: Scopus
The influence of e-word-of-mouth on hotel occupancy rate
Authors: Viglia, G., Minazzi, R. and Buhalis, D.
Journal: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY HOSPITALITY MANAGEMENT
Volume: 28
Issue: 9
Pages: 2035-2051
eISSN: 1757-1049
ISSN: 0959-6119
DOI: 10.1108/IJCHM-05-2015-0238
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/24868/
Source: Web of Science (Lite)
The influence of e-word-of-mouth on hotel occupancy rate
Authors: Viglia, G., Minazzi,, R. and Buhalis, D.
Journal: International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management
Publisher: Emerald
ISSN: 0959-6119
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/24868/
Source: Manual
The influence of e-word-of-mouth on hotel occupancy rate
Authors: Viglia, G., Minazzi, R. and Buhalis, D.
Journal: International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management
Volume: 28
Issue: 9
Pages: 2035-2051
ISSN: 0959-6119
Abstract:Purpose Online consumer reviews have become increasingly important for consumer decision-making. One of the most prominent examples is the hotel industry where consumer reviews on websites, such as Bookings.com, TripAdvisor and Venere.com, play a critical role in consumers’ choice of a hotel. There have been a number of recent studies analyzing various aspects of online reviews. The purpose of this paper is to investigate their effects in terms of hotel occupancy rates.
Design/methodology/approach This paper measures through regression analysis the impact of three dimensions of consumer reviews (i.e. review score, review variance and review volume) on the occupancy rates of 346 hotels located in Rome, isolating a number of other factors that might also affect demand.
Findings Review score is the dimension with the highest impact. The results suggest that after controlling for other variables, a one-point increase in the review score is associated to an increase in the occupancy rate by 7.5 percentage points. Regardless the review score, the number of reviews has a positive effect, but with decreasing returns, implying that the higher the number of reviews, the lower the beneficial effect in terms of occupancy rates is.
Practical implications The findings quantify the strong association of online reviews to occupancy rates suggesting the use of appropriate reputational management systems to increase hotel occupancy and therefore performance.
Originality/value A major contribution of this paper is its comprehensiveness in analyzing the relation between online consumer reviews and occupancy across a heterogeneous sample of hotels
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/24868/
Source: BURO EPrints