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by yoz-y
3222 days ago
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Maybe the problem is with stars and wording. Currently most of systems are worded (e.g. amazon) in a way that 3 stars is the base and people would add stars if their expectations were exceeded and remove them if they were not met. However at all places that I have seen it is like you say 5 stars is for expectations being met and it only goes downhill from that. I think that a wording and iconography in 4 steps could be useful. -2 = something really bad happened, -1 = below expectations, 0 = happy customer, 1 = exceeded expectations. Forcing people to write a detail on any rating other than 0 would make most ratings 0. Angry people usually like to write comments anyways. |
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To use an example I gave elsewhere. I order a cable from Amazon. It works. Therefore it met my expectations of a working cable. Yet, I think most people would interpret a 3-star rating as my being lukewarm on my purchase. I'm not. But what the heck do I expect a cable to do other than being a fair price and to work?
With respect to movies. Some movies get really built up and I go in expecting great things (e.g. Fury Road). I come out thinking they were just OK. So maybe 3 stars. But definitely not -1 or 2 stars. My personal expectations aren't necessarily a good baseline.