TY - JOUR
T1 - Air the anger: Investigating online complaints on luxury hotels
AU - Ekiz, E.
AU - Khoo, C.
AU - Memarzadeh, F.
N1 - Cited By :52
Export Date: 27 March 2022
Correspondence Address: Ekiz, E.; Department of Tourism and Hospitality, , Jeddah, Saudi Arabia; email: [email protected]
Funding details: National Natural Science Foundation of China, NSFC
Funding details: Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province, ZJNSF, R105008
Funding details: International Science and Technology Cooperation Programme, ISTCP, 2008DFR70410
Funding text 1: Acknowledgments. The work presented in this paper is support by International S&T Cooperation Program of China (No. 2008DFR70410) and Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China (R105008) respectively. Authors also would like to thank Dr. Umberto Scarfogliero and Dr. Gabriella Bonsignori of Scuola Supreiore Sant’Anna, Italy, for their valuable advices on the mechanical design as well as the outstanding work on the jumping locomotion investigation on leafhoppers.
Funding text 2: The work presented in this paper is support by International S&T Cooperation Program of China (No. 2008DFR70410) and Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China (R105008) respectively. Authors also would like to thank Dr. Umberto Scarfogliero and Dr. Gabriella Bonsignori of Scuola Supreiore Sant’Anna, Italy, for their valuable advices on the mechanical design as well as the outstanding work on the jumping locomotion investigation on leafhoppers.
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - Purpose: Given the importance of negative word of mouth and growing number of hotel customers who leave their complaints on the web, the purpose of this paper is to investigate the complaints posted by guests who have stayed at luxury hotels in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Design/methodology/approach: The dataset for this paper is a compilation of hotel reviews collected from TripAdvisor between November 2010 and January 2011. A thematic analysis was used in order to identify emergent themes from the dataset, which were explored and discussed in relation to the existing literature on complaining behavior as well as the aims of the study. The six phases of analysis outlined in the relevant literature was used to guide data analysis. Findings: Analysis of the 320 scripts produced a total of 1,453 different incidents. Results of the analysis produced 54 different themes. A frequency analysis conducted to rank these 54 themes in terms of how frequently they are stated. Some of the extracted themes and their frequency from the most significant to least are as follows; "rooms", "arrogant and/or clueless staff" and "failure to respond". Practical implications: Rooms as the setting of the accommodation services, received the highest number of complaints from the luxury hotel guests, and suggest that Malaysian hoteliers should focus on the basics of accommodation and provide tangible quality factors. Moreover, the findings of the analysis suggest that the luxury hotels are suffering from service failures caused by inexperienced, unprofessional, misbehaving staff, which calls for strong recruitment, training and continuous improvement on the hoteliers' part. The findings highlight some important measures that hoteliers can use as guidelines to further improve their service offerings. Originality/value: Customers who share dissatisfying experiences and disseminate negative word-of-mouth have been a significant challenge for companies who under-deliver. This problem is more of a major concern today with the aid of technology and the speed of internet. Despite the increasing importance, comparatively little has been written on how guests use the internet to share their experiences. © Emerald Group Publishing Limited.
AB - Purpose: Given the importance of negative word of mouth and growing number of hotel customers who leave their complaints on the web, the purpose of this paper is to investigate the complaints posted by guests who have stayed at luxury hotels in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Design/methodology/approach: The dataset for this paper is a compilation of hotel reviews collected from TripAdvisor between November 2010 and January 2011. A thematic analysis was used in order to identify emergent themes from the dataset, which were explored and discussed in relation to the existing literature on complaining behavior as well as the aims of the study. The six phases of analysis outlined in the relevant literature was used to guide data analysis. Findings: Analysis of the 320 scripts produced a total of 1,453 different incidents. Results of the analysis produced 54 different themes. A frequency analysis conducted to rank these 54 themes in terms of how frequently they are stated. Some of the extracted themes and their frequency from the most significant to least are as follows; "rooms", "arrogant and/or clueless staff" and "failure to respond". Practical implications: Rooms as the setting of the accommodation services, received the highest number of complaints from the luxury hotel guests, and suggest that Malaysian hoteliers should focus on the basics of accommodation and provide tangible quality factors. Moreover, the findings of the analysis suggest that the luxury hotels are suffering from service failures caused by inexperienced, unprofessional, misbehaving staff, which calls for strong recruitment, training and continuous improvement on the hoteliers' part. The findings highlight some important measures that hoteliers can use as guidelines to further improve their service offerings. Originality/value: Customers who share dissatisfying experiences and disseminate negative word-of-mouth have been a significant challenge for companies who under-deliver. This problem is more of a major concern today with the aid of technology and the speed of internet. Despite the increasing importance, comparatively little has been written on how guests use the internet to share their experiences. © Emerald Group Publishing Limited.
KW - Complaints
KW - Consumer behaviour
KW - Hotels
KW - Internet
KW - Luxury hotels
KW - Malaysia
KW - Online complaints
KW - Tourism
KW - TripAdvisor
U2 - 10.1108/17579881211248817
DO - 10.1108/17579881211248817
M3 - Article
SN - 1757-9880
VL - 3
SP - 96
EP - 106
JO - Journal of Hospitality and Tourism Technology
JF - Journal of Hospitality and Tourism Technology
IS - 2
ER -