To read this content please select one of the options below:

How do weather factors drive online reviews? The mediating role of online reviewers’ affect

Dandan He (School of Economics and Management, Beihang University, Beijing, China)
Zhong Yao (Department of Information Systems, School of Economics and Management, Beihang University, Beijing, China) (Institute of Economics and Business, Beihang University, Beijing, China)
Futao Zhao (Department of Information Systems, School of Economics and Management, Beihang University, Beijing, China)
Jiao Feng (School of Economics and Management, Beihang University, Beijing, China)

Industrial Management & Data Systems

ISSN: 0263-5577

Article publication date: 19 October 2020

Issue publication date: 27 October 2020

694

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to investigate the mediating effect of online reviewers' affect (ORA) on the relationship between weather and online review ratings (ORR).

Design/methodology/approach

The consumers' online review data were collected from the third-party restaurant website, and the weather data were obtained from the weather part of Chinese e-government website. SnowNLP was utilized to analyze sentiment and further extract ORA. Furthermore, the mediating effects of ORA on temperature and ORR, rain and ORR were explored separately using PROCESS 3 Macro Model 4, and the interaction effect of temperature and rain was tested through PROCESS 3 Macro Model 7.

Findings

The findings of this work demonstrate that ORA mediates the relationship between temperature and ORR and the relationship between rain and ORR. Besides directly leading to higher ORR, a higher temperature can bring about higher ORR by elevating ORA. On the other hand, little rain and heavy rain have a direct negative influence on ORR, and they can also lead people into a bad mood state, thus leading to lower ORR. Furthermore, temperature moderates the effect of rain on ORA. When the temperature is higher, the differences of ORA are larger between different types of rain than that of lower temperature.

Originality/value

This study appears to be the first to investigate the relationship among weather, ORA and ORR using online data. The results could help managers understand when consumers are more likely to provide negative eWOM under corresponding weather conditions and adopt appropriate strategies to improve ORR.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Funding: This research is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China No. 71271012, No. 71671011 and No. 71332003.

Citation

He, D., Yao, Z., Zhao, F. and Feng, J. (2020), "How do weather factors drive online reviews? The mediating role of online reviewers’ affect", Industrial Management & Data Systems, Vol. 120 No. 11, pp. 2133-2149. https://doi.org/10.1108/IMDS-02-2020-0121

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles