Are Amazon Comments Truly Helpful?

Posted on May 8th, 2008
By J.W. Crump in Other

If you own a computer and have a disposable income, chances are good that you have bought something via Amazon.com, a well-known site dedicated to being the Internet's largest store.  The site boasts many features, including discount prices, lists of recommendations for frequent users, and intuitive search features.  A past blog post on The Bivings Report highlights one of Amazon's recent user-friendly upgrades.

An associate of mine recently praised Amazon because of the comments feature on the individual items' pages.  At the bottom of a specific product's page, after the official description and details are listed, comments from users/buyers are shown.  The comments deemed "Most Helpful" are the first ones that you will see, while on the right side of the page are the most recent ones.  Directly above the Most Helpful comments is a small graph of metrics, showing the number of votes, what were those votes, and the overall average of the votes.  Users can assign a numeric rating to the product-a ‘star' system-on a scale from one to five.

Amazon Comments Example

Being the skeptic that I am, I questioned my friend's praise of the comment system.  Typically, sites with comments vary wildly in usefulness.  Comments on websites can come in many forms: helpful, useless, curse word heavy, angry, naive, etc.

However, I was pleasantly surprised as I delved into the comment sections on Amazon.  Most of the posts were valuable, or at the very least, civil.  There were few, if no, drunken rants to be found.  I did notice that the overall rankings for the products seemed a little high.  I figured that it may be just a coincidence, but I decided to do a quick analysis to comfort me.

After selecting a product category that had many similar, yet different products (TV show box sets on DVD), I went through 100 product pages.  On each, I noted the number of 1 star, 2 star, 3 star, 4 star, and 5 star reviews, as well as the overall average of the reviews.  I only rated one randomly-selected season per TV show.  The complete data set can be found in a spreadsheet below.

The first detail of interest is the fact that a vast majority of votes were for 5 stars.  In fact, the number of 5-star reviews is nearly triple the amount of all the other scores put together.  The results are summarized below in a pie chart, made using ImpactWatch:

Amazon Comments Pie

Why so many 5-star reviews?  I came up with many conclusions as to why users dominate the clickable 5-star vote button:

  • Users typically rate products that they would buy or enjoy already, instead of ones that they hate and to which they'd give lower scores
  • Users are more generous online than they would be offline
  • TV show box sets are rated by quality of the show, and not the quality of the actual DVD, leading to higher scores
  • Users think little about the rating; a 5-star rating essentially being "I liked it!"

Of course, this tendency to give out high ratings led to the majority of products being rated an average of 4.5 or 5.  Results are summarized below:

Amazon Comments Bar

The overall average of the averages is 4.545.  I suppose that I should start saving my money, because the Amazon community suggests that I purchase every DVD box set available. 

Perhaps a different product selection would have yielded different results, but I doubt it.  While Amazon is a great online resource, its comments feature seems to have fallen prey to fanboy-ism, resulting in ratings skewed higher than they should be.

While it would not be simple to overhaul the entire site, my suggestion to combat this problem would be to expand the ratings feature, just by increasing the available ranking choices from 5 to 10.  I have found on other websites that ten-point scales lend themselves to a greater variety of ratings.  Amazon probably does not want to change a thing though, because higher ratings may lead to more sales.  Was this rating system a clever marketing idea from the start, or did the company luck out?  I guess that's for only the CEO to know.

[This blog post has been rated 6 stars.]

Amazon Comments Data Spreadsheet 

PDF of Amazon Comments Graphs

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Comments

  1. Chris

    I think newspapers could learn from Amazon to find a way to tame its out-of-control comments sections of their stories.

    One key, to me, is the fact Amazon reviewers use their real names, which make sit less likely someone would spew bile.

    If newspapers allowed users to rate comments and promote ones with a thumbs up, and gave prominent play to real-name users and buried comments from people using nicknames I bet the environment there would get much better.

    Amazon’s easy navigation and display of both pro and con is outstanding as well.

  2. Doza

    I think that if you took a look at a different product selection you would see different results.

    I imagine that people generally buy TV show box sets for shows that they already know they like. Any negative reviews you get at that point are probably based on DVD quality or features.

    For instance, from your data list, Happy Days and WKRP got a lot of negative ratings. A quick glance through the reviews on those pages shows that the people were upset about the DVDs not having the original music.

    I happen to find the comments on Amazon particularly helpful. I review comments on an item on amazon.com even if I plan to purchase the product elsewhere.

  3. Hannah

    I think that your findings probably apply to most of the media products on Amazon.

    But books, games and DVDs are generally pretty much like people expected and are often purchased based on previous experience (having seen 24 on tv before buying on dvd) or by recommendation.

    For electronics, appliances and any item that can malfunction or be broken, people are more likely to bother writing a review when they are dissatisfied (see Blenders).

    I always use the amazon reviews and find that they often align closely with consumer reports ratings.

  4. Todd Zeigler

    When I read Amazon reviews for electronics I pretty much only read the negatives. It is a great way to figure out if products have chronic problems that effect lots of devices.

    I also have always wondered how many are done by plants from the companies. Many sound like professional reviews and it always seemed a little fishy to me.

  5. Anne Wayman

    I dunno… when I read the reviews on my book, only two of which I asked someone to post, they seem to reflect my email… a few totally hate it, a few more than that love it and the rest fall somewhere in the middle.

    Anne Wayman… oh, the book? Powerfully Recovered!

  6. Milan Negovan

    I find Amazon ratings very ineffective. The 1…5 criterion doesn’t reflect much. They need to capture much more than that.

    At one point I went through lots and lots of book reviews to understand what people were looking for and what they were dissatisfied with in the end. Based on what I found, I started PositiveLookeahead.com where readers rate programming books on multiple criteria. I think this is a more realistic reflection of what’s good or bad about a book (or any other product, for that matter)

  7. Milan Negovan

    Sorry, I mistyped the site name: PositiveLookahead.com :)

about this blog

The Bivings Report (TBR) is a source of news, insight, research and analysis on the web-based communications industry. TBR content is posted, created and managed by internet strategists, media/communications analysts, web developers, designers and programmers, all of whom are employees of The Bivings Group.

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