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Category: Courtland Brooks Press

Mobile Apps Tap The Changing Face Of Online Dating

Posted on February 14, 2013

Mobile dating apps1USA TODAY – Feb 13 – The mobile dating revenue is projected to double over the next five years ($415M). There is a site for everybody, many with their own apps as well. The niches range from ethnic, religious or age-based to sites for occupations (FarmersOnly.com) or eating preferences (VeggieDate.org). For gay men, there's Grindr.com and Stagg, DateMyPet for pet lovers. With the dating industry moving so rapidly, the phrase "online dating" will soon disappear from the lexicon, says Sam Yagan, CEO of Match. "The idea of differentiating online and offline in five years will be anachronistic," he says. Nielsen reports that the number of Americans using apps or a mobile version of a dating site was 13.7M in November 2012, more than double the previous year's 5.8M. Mark Brooks, a consultant who has studied the industry from its infancy, says the online and mobile dating industry is more than just a business: "Going from where it is now and where it's going to be in the next 20 or 30 years time, I'd be hard-pressed to think of a business — outside of the medical industry — that will have more impact on society."

by Sharon Jayson
See full article at USA Today

See all posts on Match.com         See all posts on Stagg
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Why Online Dating Is Struggling To Go Global

Posted on February 14, 2013

Online dating internationalTHE DAILY BEAST – Feb 14 – Different countries date differently. Cupid Plc burned a lot of money when it tried to expand its BeNaughty website with becoquin.fr in France and gibsmir.de in Germany. Match.com sold its entire European business to the French site Meetic.com. These companies were sometimes felled by practical idiosyncrasies such as offering credit cards as the sole payment method in Europe, not knowing that only 25% of Germans own them. Australians take a more relaxed approach to dating. “In Australia you can never really be sure if you are on a date or you are just hanging out as friends,” says Katrina, an Australian who spent a year in Texas. Taiwan offers a more conservative scene. Potential partners are mainly set up through friends, and romance must be found within one’s social circle. Mark Brooks, editor of Online Personals Watch, predicts that the Chinese online dating industry alone will generate $350M in revenue in 2014, and forecasts growth in developing markets such as Russia and Latin America. Gian Gonzaga, chief scientist for eHarmony, sent out thousands of questionnaires in countries including Brazil, Australia, and the U.S. “We found Brazilian couples value passion the most,” Gonzaga says. “The importance of similar levels of spirituality is highest in the States.” eHarmony then adjusted its websites’ algorithms to reflect Gonzaga’s findings.

by Ella Delany
See full article at Daily Beast

See all posts on Cupid Plc          See all posts on Meetic
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Edmonton Couple Wins $100,000 In POF Wedding Contest

Posted on February 14, 2013

Pof contest winnersCTV EDMONTON – Feb 13 – David Mazur and Andrea Ellis met on POF. The couple entered a contest put on by the site, for a chance to win $100K towards a dream wedding. On Wednesday, the couple found out they had beat out thousands of couples from around the world for the ultimate wedding prize. Markus Frind, founder and CEO of Plenty of Fish, says January and February are typically the busiest months of the year. “~80% of people are now using a mobile app or mobile device for meeting people or arranging dates and last year, the start of last year, everyone was doing it on a desktop or on a computer so it’s totally changed in the span of 12 months,” Frind said.

by Linda Hoang
See full article at CTV Edmonton

See all posts on POF.com

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The Fishing’s Been Pretty Good So Far For Markus Frind

Posted on February 11, 2013

Pof markus frind sepiaTHE GLOBE AND MAIL – Feb 10 – When Markus Frind sat down at his home computer in 2003 to build a website, he had only one goal: to teach himself a programming language. But a decade later, his programming exercise has grown into one of the largest dating sites in the world, with ~50M registered users visiting POF more than 430M times each month. In Canada alone, ~400K people log in every day.

Q: How does Plenty of Fish’s matching system work?
Markus Frind: We look at hundreds of thousands of people who left the site in relationships and we look at what combinations of attributes made them successful. For instance, we know that a doctor will never date a carpenter.

Q: Do you have any interesting statistics that relate to Canada specifically?
A: Edmonton and Calgary have a lot of singles. It’s mostly because those are singles towns; with the oil boom and whatnot it’s harder to meet people.

Q: Does the site see any patterns, such as dips or spikes, over certain holidays?
A: We see 15- 20% increase from two days after Christmas and it goes all the way until the Wednesday after Valentine’s Day.

Q: What have been the biggest changes to the site lately?
A: ~60% of our users now access the site from mobile. We also launched top prospects a few weeks ago, which shows all the people you have communicated with and then we predict which one of those you’re most likely to enter into a relationship with and also stay in it.

by Andrea Woo
The full article was originally published at Globe and Mail, but is no longer available.

See all posts on POF.com

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10 Things Dating Sites Won’t Tell You

Posted on February 11, 2013

Online_dating_sitesMARKETWATCH – Feb 8 –

1. Finding a soul mate is expensive
The industry is now worth about $1.2 billion, up 4% from a year ago. eHarmony, launched in 2000 and marketed toward people seeking long-term relationships, blazed a trail with its prices, charging some of the highest in the industry, says Mark Brooks, a dating-industry analyst and the editor of Online Personals Watch.

2. Everyone is single sooner or later
The fastest-growing segment is baby boomers.16% of online daters are 50+. In January, the advocacy group AARP launched its own dating service, AARP Dating, powered by HowAboutWe.com. The number of HowAboutWe users 50+ grew 173% in the past year. It’s a good fit, says Brooks, especially given that 25% of AARP’s 37M members are single.

3. Cupid’s arrow often misses
Dating sites pride themselves on the wizardry of their algorithms. “It’s very early in the online dating industry,” says Dan Slater, author of “Love in the Time of Algorithms”. "Sites have gotten better at cross-referencing what people say and do, but there’s still a lot of room for improvement,” he says.

4. So many liars, so little time
Over half of U.S. online daters lie on their profiles. On the plus side, people who lie online tend be people-pleasers and very self-aware, says Jeffrey A. Hall, assistant professor of communications at the University of Kansas.

5. And you thought Facebook was nosy
The more people learn about each other before the first date, the better, author Slater says. “But nothing is free,” he says, “you’re giving them a ton of data.”

6. This place is a hotbed of adulterers
While most sites don’t promote infidelity, some make it easy. AshleyMadison now has 18M members worldwide. Some experts say, the marriage and divorce rate has been unaffected by the Internet.

7. Don’t judge a person by their photo
“Men like it when a woman is looking into the camera, as a man wants to believe that a woman is focused on them exclusively,” says Slater, the author. Men who stare into the lens, on the other hand, should take care not to appear intimidating, he says.

8. Keep a close eye on your wallet
Consumers lost $50M to romance scams in 2011. On newer, smaller sites, as many as one in 10 profiles could be fake, according to Brooks. “Scammers come in droves, and they’re very aggressive.” He advises talking to someone on the phone before meeting.

9. Objectification: It’s what’s for dinner
On-the-go dating seems to be a hit. Mobile dating revenue is expected to nearly double over the next five years, from an estimated $251.2M in 2013, according to IBISWorld. Crazy Blind Date app, which pixelates user photos, was downloaded ~100K times in the first 24 hours of its launch last month.

10. Endless love — or endless chat?
The endless supply of fresh faces, and the modern worker’s lack of leisure time make it difficult for people to ever actually go out on a date, says Hall, of the University of Kansas. Match says it’s responsible for 12% of all dates in the U.S., while eHarmony is saying its service accounts for 5% of all weddings in the U.S. Users, meanwhile, typically stick to a site for three months before moving on, says Brooks. But then roughly one-fifth of members on the big sites return within 18 months, he says.

by Quentin Fottrell
See full article at MarketWatch

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NPR Radio, Show On Point: Monogamy And Online Dating

Posted on January 24, 2013

Internet dating keyboard with kissON POINT – Jan 9 - Is online dating making it too easy to move on? Dan Slater raised this question in his article in The Atlantic – A Million First Dates. Tom Ashbrook from NPR Radio invited Mark Brooks, Eli Finkel and Amanda Hess (Slate Magazine) to discuss this topic in his radio show On Point. Listen to the radio interview

Tom: Dan Slater’s conclusion is there are so many fish in the digital sea that people aren’t going to necessarily make commitments anymore and settle down. What did you think?

Mark: People like choice and they are paralyzed by choice. On one hand, it’s very empowering and very attractive to jump online and go find another one. But on the other hand, it is having an effect on commitment.

Eli: I disagree with the premise that good relationships are frequently under new pressure because of the existence of all these alternatives. Because the vast majority of people who are in good committed relationships are happy to be there.

Mark: Getting someone who is compatible and keeping them are 2 different things. So yes you broke up and maybe you’ll break up again, but what have you learned from that? How can this industry help him do better next time?
I think there is an opportunity there and we can see that reflected in the number of couple’s apps that are springing up.

Eli: Online dating is marvelous because it decreases the likelihood that you will be a single person wishing you weren’t single and having no options. One thing that Dan Slater’s article really does is illustrate you now have a whole bunch of available options out there and relative to 20 years ago it is a chiasmic leap forward in terms of giving people access to face to face meetings with potential partners.

Read the full transcript here

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Online Dating Has Changed Everything

Posted on January 24, 2013

Love in the time of algorithms 3dUSA TODAY – Jan 23 - In his new book, Love in the Time of Algorithms: What Technology Does to Meeting and Mating,
writer Dan Slater argues that online dating has changed society
profoundly.

Q: What is it about online dating today that you believe has made such a big difference?
A:
It's the vast expansion of the dating pool. People tended to be moving
from one relationship to the next a lot faster than they seemed to
before online dating existed.

Q: You suggest that online dating has made relationships more disposable. Why?
A: It made a lot more people feel they are part of a larger mating pool than they were used to.

Q: How much science is really involved in matching people the way online dating does?
A: Online dating does seem to be improving at is the likelihood of two
strangers getting along well on a first date.  The psychological science
has not provided the ability to predict long-term compatibility between
a couple who have never met.

Q: How did you meet your wife, Sophie?
A: I used a total of two
sites through which I dated on and off about 12 months.Sophie and I
actually met in a yoga class in January 2009. I asked her out, but she
had a boyfriend. We went our separate ways for 2½ years. Then we
reconnected on Facebook.

by Sharon Jayson
See full article at USA Today

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Mark Brooks On NPR’s On Point: Monogamy And Online Dating

Posted on January 9, 2013

OPW – Jan 9 – I'm interviewing for an hour on NPR's On Point with Tim Ashbrook starting 4pm EST. You can listen here. I'm on with Dr Eli Finkel, a professor of psychology at Northwestern University who's disputed the effectiveness of iDating, and Amanda Hess, a writer for Slate. 

I'll be discussing this white paper where I asked the iDating industry executive 'How Has Internet Dating Changed Society.'  Dan Slater (former Wall Street Journal reporter) wrote 'A Million First Dates' for The Atlantic for Jan 3, and quoted “Internet dating has made people more disposable, and may be partly responsible for a rise in the divorce rates,” from the white paper. 

Watch out for Dan's new book out January 24th. He spent 2 years embedded and focused on the iDating industry to write 'Love In The Time Of Algorithms.'   

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Has Internet Dating Made People More Disposable?

Posted on January 3, 2013

First datesTHE ATLANTIC – Jan 3 – Most of the online dating CEO's agree that the rise of online dating will mean an overall decrease in commitment. “The future will see better relationships but more divorce,” predicts Dan Winchester, the founder of a free UK dating site. “Historically,” says Greg Blatt, the CEO of Match.com’s parent company, “relationships have been billed as ‘hard’ because, commitment has been the goal. You could say online dating is simply changing people’s ideas about whether commitment itself is a life value.” “I think divorce rates will increase as life in general becomes more real-time,” says Niccolò Formai, the head of social-media marketing at Badoo. “Societal values always lose out,” says Noel Biderman, the founder of AshleyMadison. “Premarital sex used to be taboo,” explains Biderman. “So women would become miserable in marriages, because they wouldn’t know any better. But today, more people have had failed relationships, recovered, moved on, and found happiness. Even at eHarmony, Gian Gonzaga, the site’s relationship psychologist, acknowledges that commitment is at odds with technology. “You could say online dating allows people to get into relationships, learn things, and ultimately make a better selection,” says Gonzaga. “But you could also easily see a world in which online dating leads to people leaving relationships the moment they’re not working—an overall weakening of commitment.

In 2011, Mark Brooks, a consultant to online-dating companies, published the results of an industry survey titled “How Has Internet Dating Changed Society?” The survey responses, from 39 executives, produced the following conclusions: “Internet dating has made people more disposable, and may be partly responsible for a rise in the divorce rates.” “Low quality, unhappy and unsatisfying marriages are being destroyed as people drift to Internet dating sites.” “Internet dating has helped people of all ages realize that there’s no need to settle for a mediocre relationship.”

Alex Mehr, a co-founder of Zoosk, disagrees. “Online dating only removes a barrier to meeting,” says Mehr. Surely personality will play a role in the way anyone behaves in the realm of online dating, particularly when it comes to commitment and promiscuity.

by Dan Slater
See full article at The Atlantic

See all posts on Match.com          See all posts on eHarmony
See all posts on Badoo                 See all posts on Zoosk
See all posts on Ashley Madison

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Online Dating Traffic Surges Between Boxing Day And New Year’s Eve

Posted on December 26, 2012

Onlinedating key on keyboardHUFFINGTON POST – Dec 26 – Mark Brooks, a dating analyst and consultant to the Internet dating industry, said it was the endless stream of awkward questions from family members that prompted many to search for love online this time of year. “The effect becomes more pronounced over the Xmas vacations and party season," he said. “Questions such as 'have you been dating anyone recently' and 'do you think you’ll ever marry’ become 'On your own, are you?'." Kate Taylor, a relationship expert at Match.com, said people look back at their achievements over the past twelve months, and think about their New Year's resolutions. On Match.com ~4M unique connections are expected to be made; with 3M email messages written; 2.5M 'winks' sent; and 500K IM conversations taking place. Brett Harding, managing director for Lovestruck, said registrations increase by 48% during this period. For eHarmony, the number of registrations was 3.5 times higher than the week immediately before Christmas. Cupid.com's Sean Wood also suggested that the pressure on couples in the Christmas period could also lead to more break ups – resulting in more singles on the scene by Boxing Day. AshleyMadison.com biggest spike came immediately after New Year's Eve. The first working day after New Year's there was a 413% increase in member sign-ups with a total of 9,857 new members. What's really interesting is that for many sites, the traffic then falls again drastically in the spring. “Internet daters tend to stick around for about three months," said analyst Brooks. "Then they bail, then they come back, or go to another site, or multiple internet dating sites."

by Charlie Thomas
See full article at Huffington Post

See all posts on Match.com       See all posts on Lovestruck
See all posts on eHarmony        See all posts on Cupid
See all posts on Ashley Madison

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