4,436 research outputs found

    Management Responses to Online Reviews: Big Data From Social Media Platforms

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    User-generated content from virtual communities helps businesses develop and sustain competitive advantages, which leads to asking how firms can strategically manage that content. This research, which consists of two studies, discusses management response strategies for hotel firms to gain a competitive advantage and improve customer relationship management by leveraging big data, social media analytics, and deep learning techniques. Since negative reviews' harmful effects are greater than positive comments' contribution, firms must strategise their responses to intervene in and minimise those damages. Although current literature includes a sheer amount of research that presents effective response strategies to negative reviews, they mostly overlook an extensive classification of response strategies. The first study consists of two phases and focuses on comprehensive response strategies to only negative reviews. The first phase is explorative and presents a correlation analysis between response strategies and overall ratings of hotels. It also reveals the differences in those strategies based on hotel class, average customer rating, and region. The second phase investigates effective response strategies for increasing the subsequent ratings of returning customers using logistic regression analysis. It presents that responses involving statements of admittance of mistake(s), specific action, and direct contact requests help increase following ratings of previously dissatisfied returning customers. In addition, personalising the response for better customer relationship management is particularly difficult due to the significant variability of textual reviews with various topics. The second study examines the impact of personalised management responses to positive and negative reviews on rating growth, integrating a novel method of multi-topic matching approach with a panel data analysis. It demonstrates that (a) personalised responses improve future ratings of hotels; (b) the effect of personalised responses is stronger for luxury hotels in increasing future ratings. Lastly, practical insights are provided

    Three Essays on the Role of Unstructured Data in Marketing Research

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    This thesis studies the use of firm and user-generated unstructured data (e.g., text and videos) for improving market research combining advances in text, audio and video processing with traditional economic modeling. The first chapter is joint work with K. Sudhir and Minkyung Kim. It addresses two significant challenges in using online text reviews to obtain fine-grained attribute level sentiment ratings. First, we develop a deep learning convolutional-LSTM hybrid model to account for language structure, in contrast to methods that rely on word frequency. The convolutional layer accounts for the spatial structure (adjacent word groups or phrases) and LSTM accounts for the sequential structure of language (sentiment distributed and modified across non-adjacent phrases). Second, we address the problem of missing attributes in text in constructing attribute sentiment scores---as reviewers write only about a subset of attributes and remain silent on others. We develop a model-based imputation strategy using a structural model of heterogeneous rating behavior. Using Yelp restaurant review data, we show superior accuracy in converting text to numerical attribute sentiment scores with our model. The structural model finds three reviewer segments with different motivations: status seeking, altruism/want voice, and need to vent/praise. Interestingly, our results show that reviewers write to inform and vent/praise, but not based on attribute importance. Our heterogeneous model-based imputation performs better than other common imputations; and importantly leads to managerially significant corrections in restaurant attribute ratings. The second essay, which is joint work with Aniko Oery and Joyee Deb is an information-theoretic model to study what causes selection in valence in user-generated reviews. The propensity of consumers to engage in word-of-mouth (WOM) differs after good versus bad experiences, which can result in positive or negative selection of user-generated reviews. We show how the strength of brand image (dispersion of consumer beliefs about quality) and the informativeness of good and bad experiences impacts selection of WOM in equilibrium. WOM is costly: Early adopters talk only if they can affect the receiver’s purchase. If the brand image is strong (consumer beliefs are homogeneous), only negative WOM can arise. With a weak brand image or heterogeneous beliefs, positive WOM can occur if positive experiences are sufficiently informative. Using data from Yelp.com, we show how strong brands (chain restaurants) systematically receive lower evaluations controlling for several restaurant and reviewer characteristics. The third essay which is joint work with K.Sudhir and Khai Chiong studies success factors of persuasive sales pitches from a multi-modal video dataset of buyer-seller interactions. A successful sales pitch is an outcome of both the content of the message as well as style of delivery. Moreover, unlike one-way interactions like speeches, sales pitches are a two-way process and hence interactivity as well as matching the wavelength of the buyer are also critical to the success of the pitch. We extract four groups of features: content-related, style-related, interactivity and similarity in order to build a predictive model of sales pitch effectiveness

    Towards Question-based Recommender Systems

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    Conversational and question-based recommender systems have gained increasing attention in recent years, with users enabled to converse with the system and better control recommendations. Nevertheless, research in the field is still limited, compared to traditional recommender systems. In this work, we propose a novel Question-based recommendation method, Qrec, to assist users to find items interactively, by answering automatically constructed and algorithmically chosen questions. Previous conversational recommender systems ask users to express their preferences over items or item facets. Our model, instead, asks users to express their preferences over descriptive item features. The model is first trained offline by a novel matrix factorization algorithm, and then iteratively updates the user and item latent factors online by a closed-form solution based on the user answers. Meanwhile, our model infers the underlying user belief and preferences over items to learn an optimal question-asking strategy by using Generalized Binary Search, so as to ask a sequence of questions to the user. Our experimental results demonstrate that our proposed matrix factorization model outperforms the traditional Probabilistic Matrix Factorization model. Further, our proposed Qrec model can greatly improve the performance of state-of-the-art baselines, and it is also effective in the case of cold-start user and item recommendations.Comment: accepted by SIGIR 202
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