Consumers duped by fake online reviews, experiment finds

Consumers are easily duped into choosing poor-quality products when shown fake positive reviews online, a behavioural experiment has revealed.
Consumers are swayed by positive reviews.Consumers are swayed by positive reviews.
Consumers are swayed by positive reviews.

The experiment, carried out by consumer watchdog Which?, found that shoppers shown fake reviews were more than twice as likely to choose poor-quality products when shopping online.

The research simulated fake reviews and endorsement labels and found they were hugely effective at manipulating consumers into picking poor quality products - items that Which?’s independent lab tests have found to be of such poor quality that they should be avoided at all costs.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Which? asked almost 10,000 people to complete a shopping task using images designed to look like the Amazon website. Pages and content that were shown to participants as part of the survey were not real Amazon pages or content. Amazon was chosen as it is the UK’s largest online shopping platform and was likely to be familiar to the greatest number of consumers - but Which? believes the findings of the experiment are equally applicable to other online platforms hosting user generated reviews.

Respondents were asked to pick one of three product types, headphones, dash cams or cordless vacuum cleaners, where Which? has previously found evidence of fake reviews.

They were then randomly allocated into one of six groups to determine the type of fake review activity they would see, varying from inflated star ratings to fake review text - tactics commonly used by unscrupulous sellers - as well as the addition of a platform endorsement label, which can often be influenced by high review ratings.

Participants were shown five identically-priced products in their chosen category: a Which? Best Buy, three ‘fillers’ with mediocre reviews and a Don’t Buy which may or may not have been manipulated by fake reviews. They reviewed the information about the five products, including seven reviews for each, before deciding which they would most like to buy in real life.

In the group that saw no fake reviews, one in 10 people chose a Don’t Buy product. However in the group where fake review text was added to this product, with phrases such as "oh...WOW! I love when I'm about to review an awesome product" alongside inflated star ratings pushing it up the search results, this jumped up by more than double, as 23 per cent of people were duped into choosing the Don’t Buy product.

The situation was even worse when a platform endorsement label was added to fake review text and inflated star ratings. It further increased the proportion of people choosing the Don’t Buy product to a quarter, a 136 per cent increase to the group that wasn’t exposed to any fake review activity, demonstrating the risk of consumers being misled by a recommendation label underpinned by fake reviews.

One group was even presented with reviews containing admissions that reviewers had been incentivised to leave positive reviews, with phrases such as “Very happy! Just waiting for the free gift as promised” and they “asked me to change my review to 4 or 5 stars” and signs that positive reviews of completely different products had been hijacked. Despite this, 22 per cent of the participants still chose the Don’t Buy product, a leap of 105 per cent versus those who saw no fake review activity.

Caroline Normand, Which? director of advocacy, said: “Which? has found categorical evidence that people are at huge risk of being misled by fake reviews, which is particularly worrying given people are shopping online more than ever during the coronavirus pandemic.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“Online platforms must put more effective measures in place to stop unscrupulous sellers gaming the system with ease, otherwise the CMA needs to take strong action against these major sites.”

The CMA has estimated that £23 billion a year of consumer transactions are influenced by online reviews.

An Amazon spokesperson said: “We want Amazon customers to shop with confidence knowing that the reviews they read are authentic and relevant. We have clear policies for both reviewers and selling partners that prohibit abuse of our community features, and we suspend, ban, and take legal action against those who violate these policies.”

Related topics: