%0 Journal Article %T Culturally Contingent Electronic Word %A Hsin-Chen Lin %A Manohar U. Kalwani %J Journal of International Marketing %@ 1547-7215 %D 2018 %R 10.1509/jim.17.0016 %X Electronic word of mouth (eWOM) is an important source of influence on consumer decision making, yet little is known about cross-cultural differences in both the occurrence of eWOM and the relationship between eWOM and sales. The authors draw on signaling theory to develop a conceptual model and assess the relationships between country and the occurrence of eWOM, as well as between online ratings and relative product sales according to country. Online reviews and sales rank data for books, CDs, and DVDs were collected from Amazon U.S. and Amazon Japan in 2009 and 2017. Results suggest cross-national differences in both the occurrence of eWOM (eWOM signaling) and the relationship between eWOM and relative product sales (eWOM screening). These national differences appear to change over time: some remain stable, some disappear, and others emerge. The proposed culturally contingent signaling and screening model may be adopted as a framework for future research on cross-cultural eWOM. The results also inform the literature on cultural change by suggesting that cultural differences in eWOM change in nuanced patterns over time %K cross-cultural marketing %K cultural convergence %K online reviews %K signaling theory %K word of mouth %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1509/jim.17.0016