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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

More stores offer online reviews

Associated Press The Spokesman-Review

NEW YORK — Retailers are giving vocal online shoppers more opportunities to sound off about products this holiday season — and in return are hoping to convert more surfers into buyers.

Shoppers have been able to review and rate purchases on online-only retailers like Amazon.com for more than a decade. This year, a number of traditional retailers like Federated Department Stores’ Macy’s and Home Depot Inc. have added the feature, while destinations such as Yahoo! Shopping have made customer reviews more central.

“I live by this hammer. I would never swing another,” reads one tool review on Home Depot’s Web site. Thirteen fishermen weighed in with five stars for a particular lure on Bass Pro Shops’ online store, while on Macy’s site, two women exchanged notes on the fit of a certain winter coat.

Sam Decker, vice president of marketing and products at Bazaarvoice, which provides retailers the technology for such word-of-mouth marketing, said people who click on top-rated products from Bass Pro Shops’ home page are 59 percent more likely to buy than the average window shopper. At Petco Animal Supplies Inc., people who browse top-rated products are 50 percent more likely to buy. They also spend more money on the site, Decker said.

Until now, many retailers balked at the challenge of building the technology and screening every review for obscenity or spam, according to Andy Chen, CEO of Bazaarvoice’s main competitor, PowerReviews. The formal launch of the two companies, which also have the manpower to screen reviews, has helped accelerate the trend.

Retailers were also reluctant to cede control over carefully crafted brands and expose products to negative customer contents.

Even Amazon saw hesitation from manufacturers worried about bad reviews at first, according to Patty Smith, a spokeswoman for the company. But, she said, “once people actually saw it in action, saw that people could have honest debate and dialogue about a particular product, manufacturers and publishers realized it was good for them as well.”

Hewlett-Packard Co. started testing a reviews-and-ratings feature for its line of printers on Nov. 9. So far, thousands of reviews have been posted, and the company expects them to convert more browsers into buyers on shopping.hp.com.