Six in 10 Indian e-commerce shoppers report their low ratings or negative reviews were not published at least once in the past year, according to community platform LocalCircles. The survey found 8 in 10 consumers favour government-mandated standards for online reviews and ratings.
The review manipulation issue arises as Indian consumers increasingly rely on peer feedback to evaluate product quality, performance, and service reliability across the country’s rapidly expanding digital commerce ecosystem.
Forty-one per cent of consumers always check ratings and reviews before making a purchase, while 60 per cent prefer apps with high-quality review information, according to the LocalCircles survey of 64,000 respondents across 314 districts. The survey included 62 per cent male and 38 per cent female respondents.
The nationwide study indicates that government voluntary standards have not reduced fake and incentivised reviews, highlighting ongoing challenges in maintaining authentic consumer feedback on digital platforms.
“We conducted a new survey to find out consumers’ experiences in the last 12 months and whether it is time to make the standards and guidelines mandatory and enforceable,” said LocalCircles.
Nearly 60 per cent of consumers who posted low ratings or negative reviews on e-commerce platforms in the past year said their feedback was not published some or most of the time.
The standard prescribes specific responsibilities for both reviewers and review administrators. Organisations are required to identify the review author by prescribed methods. Reviews and ratings by sponsored individuals and influencers must also be identified by the platforms, which are not permitted to edit or alter negative comments.
“Despite these voluntary guidelines and standards, consumer complaints about fake, sponsored, incentivised, and manipulated reviews and ratings on online platforms have not reduced, indicating that there is a strong need to make them mandatory and enforceable,” said LocalCircles.