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Category: Courtland Brooks Press

Mixergy Video Interview With Mark Brooks

Posted on September 10, 2010

Mark brooks MIXERGY – Sep 8 – Mark did this interview from Malta, where he’s making a name for himself in the online personals industry through his blog Online Personals Watch and consulting company Courtland Brooks.

Q: How are you managing your company from Malta?
A: 3 years ago I took a trip to Shanghai. There was an Internet dating conference in Shanghai, and I decided to stay there for 2 months. And business grew. I learned that my clients did not care where I was based as long as the work got done. I brought 15 people onto my team.

Q: What exactly do you do when you consult online personal sites?
A: We help Internet dating companies make more money. And also companies that want to talk to them. We do PR, business development, and strategic advisement.

Q: Can you tell people a little more about the blog?
A:  In 2004, when I was working with FriendFinder, I noticed that I was getting great snippets of information from the press. And I consistently didn't have time to read all of the articles. So I thought it would be nice if somebody could summarize and extract the best intelligence out of what the press were writing about. So in June of 2004, I started OnlinePersonalsWatch.com. The idea is that we condense three hours of reading into three minutes of reading a day. In January of 2005, I had three jobs offers on the table, so I decided to take all three. And that is how Courtland Brooks started. At a point from there, I knew a lot of people that I thought could do a better job than me. So, I hired them.

Q: Is there still money in the dating world? It seems to me like most people either go to one of the top sites or they go to Facebook.
A: The reason dating sites have a future is because it's one thing to be single and another to be single and available. And it's even another thing to be single and available and looking. You don't find that on Facebook. Yes, you can find people that say they are single. But are they really single? Are they dating? Are they really available?

Q: But Markus at PlentyofFish has blogged that social networks are taking customers away from dating sites.
A: Yes. It is taking attention.  But people want a more focused experience. There are two surprises that we have had in the dating industry. The first one is that social networking didn't kill the dating industry. And the second one is that Internet dating didn't kill the matchmaking industry.

Q: What about the idea that there are already enough established players out there that it is really hard to come in with a new site?
A: It is. Without a doubt.There are thousands of Internet dating services. I rather think it is like starting a restaurant. It's not that difficult, you would think, to start a restaurant. But there's a lot more moving pieces that go into building a successful restaurant than meets the eye. And the same with Internet dating.

Q: Let's say Casey Allen, who I see here in the audience, decides that he is going to start an online dating site. What's the first thing that you'd recommend that he do?
A: First question is, is he a marketer or a technologist? If Casey is a marketer then he should go down the white labeling route and use a service like White Label Dating, DatingFactory.com or EasyDate.

Q: What if Casey Allen happens to be a technologist and he can code something up? What would you advise him at that point?
A: There are two extra routes that he can take. Number one is to use an off the shelf software like BoonEx and another option is use a programming outfit that has already built dating sites in the past.

Q: How do you bring people into a site today?
A: All of the major dating sites spend a lot of money on PPC. So, Overture and AdWords are an absolute mainstay of the industry. PlentyofFish is a wonderful place to run ads. If you can pay an extra 50 cents to a network, then you can get 10 times more traffic. Commission Junction and ShareASale have a good reputation.

Q: What else brings people in?
A: SEO. Also I'm a big fan of affiliates. The problem with affiliates, by the way, is there are rogue affiliates that will send junk traffic. The only way to deal with them is you've got to understand their position. They want to make money. And affiliates tend to be short-term based. They don't care too much about the brand, because they will just switch out to a different brand. So, the only way to really manage rogue affiliates is by laying down guidelines.

Q: We talked about how to get people in the door. What about getting them to multiply? By multiply, we mean viral marketing, getting them to bring their friends..
A: Let's start with Zoosk. They are one of the great, recent, success stories. On a typical dating site, you sign up. You've got to put in all your information. With a Facebook based social dating site such as Zoosk, some of that information can be sucked over. And so that really improves the initial conversions and efficiency. Plus, you know, the kinds of people that are on Facebook are going to be a little bit more social. When people talk about a good or a bad experience they think of as Internet dating. They don't tend to think of it so much as, it's Zoosk. It's Match.com. It's FriendFinder or Fling or whatever. I think the industry as a whole needs to make sure that they have a good experience. That means not allowing scammers. Scammers are actually very good for short-term conversions, funnily enough.

Q: How is that?
A: Because they are very active about communicating with people and getting them to convert.

Q: Do you have a sense of what percentage of sales these scammers are responsible for?
A: I don't know. I think for some sites, it is quite significant. For sites of integrity, it is very small, because they kick them off.

Q: What else do people do to multiply?
A: I am a big fan of success stories. ChristianCafe.com is very good with success stories. So is Match.com and PlentyOfFish.com. Now, there is a bit more to be said for social media these days and mobile.

Q: Can you give me an example of one company that's doing social well and how they are doing it, and then one company in mobile and how they are doing mobile well?
A: PlentyofFish does well as a social dating site in and of itself. In terms of social media, well, actually, Zoosk is a good example. They have had some music videos that have been featured, and so has PlentyofFish. PlentyofFish has been in a video on Lady Gaga. So, that's quite a new thing for the industry. I think OKCupid has the best blog in the industry. Again, they have got material that is extremely compelling, extremely interesting. And so they are getting the press talking about it.
FULL ARTICLE @ MIXERGY

See all posts on FriendFinder               See all posts on Match.com
See all posts on PlentyofFish                See all posts on Zoosk
See all posts on WhiteLabelDating        See all posts on Fling
See all posts on DatingFactory             See all posts on ChristianCafe
See all posts on Cupid plc                    See all posts on OkCupid
See all posts on BoonEx

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How Match.com Changed The World Of Dating

Posted on August 31, 2010

Gary_kremen NEWSWEEK – Aug 31 – In 1993 Gary Kremen founded Electric Classifieds, to bring classifieds to the net, raised $200k and launched Match.com in April '95. Today Match has 1.7 million paid subscribers, with sites in 30 countries and 8 languages. 1 in 5 relationships and 1 in 6 marriages are between people who met through a dating site. According to the Pew Internet and American Life Project, 74% of the 10 million Web users who are single and looking for a partner have turned to the Internet to find someone. 850 services make up the multi-billion-dollar dating industry. Match consistently comes in among the top five based on traffic.

Kremen received $1.5 million in venture capital. In '97 Match’s investors sold the startup for $8 million to Cendant who sold the company to IAC/InterActiveCorp the next year for $50 million. Kremen got $50k from company stock. A combination of joint ventures and innovation helped Match to flourish. In 2001, the service partnered with AOL and MSN. Today, smart phones are Match’s fastest-growing channel, according to Match CEO Greg Blatt. “We’re trying to be wherever our users are,” whether in the waiting room at a doctor’s office or in line at the grocery store, he says. The company now lives up to its name, using complex formulas to recommend users to each other.

“People have become more willing to open their wallets to find love,” says Mark Brooks, editor of OnlinePersonalsWatch.com, a consulting firm for the online dating industry. That’s partially because Match’s fees ($35/mo) are relatively modest, and it also helps, Brooks says, that the site has really “stocked its shelves” and continues to do so, with more than 20,000 singles registering on Match every day. In 2001, a judge awarded Kremen $65 million in a dispute over the domain name sex.com. Kremen also married the woman of his dreams. FULL ARTICLE @ NEWSWEEK

See all posts on Match.com

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Andrew Conru, The Engineer Of Love

Posted on August 24, 2010

Andrew conru2 IEEE SPECTRUM – Aug 24 - Andrew Conru is the reclusive founder of FriendFinder, the largest network of dating sites, with more than $300M in annual revenues. He wants to build the virtual-reality restaurant inside an empty retail space in a trendy part of Seattle. Diners would eat in a real train car, with changing scenes from exotic locales projected on the windows—videos of Kyoto with your sushi, for example—as the train shakes and shimmies to simulate forward motion. "When Conru sees inspiration, he’s very quick to react,” says Mark Brooks, a social networks analyst for Online Personals Watch. In 1994 Conru built Dining.com, one of the first Web sites based on collaborative filtering. User reviews and preferences were used to recommend restaurants to other users. Later in 1994, Conru decided to apply collaborative filtering to a problem in his own life—getting a date. The result was Web Personals, the first dating site, which he sold in 1995. This became the basis for the FriendFinder network, which he launched in 1996. Penthouse Media Group bought FriendFinder in 2007 for $500M and renamed itself FriendFinder Networks. In 2008, FriendFinder filed for an IPO, hoping to raise $460M. By 2010, that amount was down to $220M. Finally, earlier this year, FriendFinder ”indefinitely shelved” the IPO. FULL ARTICLE @ IEEE SPECTRUM

See all posts on FriendFinder

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Chelsea Clinton And Marc Mezvinsky Are Bad Match, Says Dating Site

Posted on July 30, 2010

Chelsea clinton marc mezvinsky ABC NEWS – Jul 30 – Chelsea Clinton will tie the knot with investment banker Marc Mezvinsky. But will it be a match made in heaven? No, says the new social networking and niche dating site for singles, CanDoBetter. Chelsea and Marc are the featured couple this week, and so far about 6,000 viewers have rated them as incompatible. Only 16%said they were a perfect match, while 47% thought she could do better and 38% said he should ditch her for a better match. The site is now free, but soon members will be able to pay a "minimal" fee and upload photos of themselves and their partners and get responses from other members. "It's a wonderful idea, I love it," said Mark Brooks, an online dating analyst for Courtland Brooks. "From the business perspective, it's brilliant," he said. "You get people talking which is hard to do [these days] with Internet dating. They looked at Hot or Not and have gone one better? I can guarantee it will be knocked off quickly." But Joe Tracy, publisher of Online Dating Magazine, said CanDoBetter's contest is a distorted measurement of attractiveness." Attractiveness is not just based on physical looks, but also on personality," he said. "In essence, CanDoBetter.com is not a true measure of total attractiveness." FULL ARTICLE @ ABC NEWS

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eHarmony’s Steady Growth

Posted on July 13, 2010

Eharmony-logo WSJ – July 12 –  Founded in 1999, eHarmony started off in a space with sites like Match.com and Yahoo Personals that catered more to men, emphasized free services and enabled users to sign up and begin using the service quickly and easily. But eHarmony emphasized privacy, which made it popular among women. CEO Greg Waldorf would not discuss exact revenue figures but said reports of the company generating $250M in revenue annually are "in the right ballpark." There are no immediate plans for an IPO, Waldorf said. The company has raised ~$110M from Sequoia Capital, Technology Crossover Ventures and Fayez Sarofim & Co. and doesn't need any more venture funding, he said. "eHarmony has an advantage over other dating sites in that its users tend to be more serious about dating since they must fill out a long questionnaire. Therefore those people who are interested are willing to pay up front to subscribe", said Mark Brooks, a consultant and editor of OnlinePersonalsWatch.com. eHarmony is now in the U.S., Australia, the U.K. and Canada and is soon going to announce its move into more countries. However, can eHarmony be a victim of its own success if its users get married and leave the site? That is a challenge to the company, as its U.S. user base is already large and its U.S. user growth is probably flat, said Brooks, the industry consultant. The company is still growing in other countries though, he said. One small way eHarmony addresses this is through an "elongated" communication process, longer than other dating sites, which ensures safety but also makes it take longer for people to get to know each other, and thus stay on the site longer, Brooks said. FULL ARTICLE @ WSJ

See all posts on eHarmony

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The Cyber Cyrano

Posted on July 8, 2010

Virtualdatingassistants logo BBC.CO.UK – July 8 – The modern-day cupids are popping up across the internet. They specialise in ghost writing witty, charming, flirtatious messages on behalf of single men and women unwilling, unable or too busy to do it themselves. "We've noticed a definite trend with more and more of these companies springing up- and there is a huge demand," says Mark Brooks, editor of Online Personals Watch, a site that tracks internet dating trends. "Necessity is the mother of invention," says Evan Marc Katz, who has worked as a dating coach since 2003 and runs e-cyrano.com, one of the first of this new breed of companies. "There are a surprising number of people out there who don't know how to market themselves in an original way." TargetLove offers everything, from basic profile writing for £150 to dating coaches who, for around £90 an hour, will talk the unlucky and inept through every step of the dating game. Some companies will go so far as posing as their client on dating sites and writing messages to potential partners to arrange first dates. Critics claim it is a dishonest way to try to find true love. Not so, insists Scott Valdez, the founder and president of Virtual Dating Assistants (VDA). "We are representing our clients as honestly and accurately as possible online," he says. FULL ARTICLE @ BBC.CO.UK

See all posts on Virtual Dating Assistants

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Hooking Up With The Last Online Dating Trends

Posted on June 24, 2010

Idate2010 logo LA TIMES – June 23 - Last week business owners and industry experts discussed the latest trends and ideas at the iDate 2010 Internet Dating Conference. We asked Mark Brooks, an industry expert and the event's spokesperson, to tell us a bit about what's going on. Upwardly mobile: Over the last few years, mobile dating has skyrocketed. (In February, Whitney Casey, Match.com's relationship expert, said that the mobile members alone grew 250% from 2008 to 2009). More important, Brooks says users are now willing to pay for it, thus helping the industry have "moderate growth over the year and looking up for 2012." Brooks praises GPS-based dating site Skout, which certainly thought bigger. Called the HotMap, Skout's iPad app gives a real-time rundown of nearby singles. Brooks also said that dating sites need to "look at other industries" like movie-theater chain Cinemark, or Starbuck's. "They're there anyway, they might as well form an alliance or bond," he says. FULL ARTICLE @ LA TIMES

See all posts on Match.com
See all posts on Skout

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Online Dating For The Wealthy

Posted on June 24, 2010

Gray&farrar logo FINANCIAL TIMES – June 23 - Gray & Farrar is a matchmaking service for wealthy people in London’s affluent Mayfair. According to Julie Ferman, a Los Angeles matchmaker, such specialised agencies are a US phenomenon now spreading across the world. At one end of the spectrum are websites such as SeekingMillionaire.com or DateaMillionaire.com, where men sign up for $25,000 or $50,000 and women pay nothing. A more traditional matchmaking service, Seventy Thirty, established in 2004, requires that both male and female members have assets worth £1m. It charges yearly fees of £10,000. Dating services aimed at the wealthy are not restricted to heterosexual singles. Patrick Perrine runs myPartner.com, a gay matchmaking service that charges clients between $5,000 and $30,000. Mark Brooks, a consultant to internet dating and matchmaking companies, advises potential daters to do some research before they part with their cash. “It’s easy to start a matchmaking company,” he says. “If you are putting out serious coin, you need serious levels of service.” He suggests that prospective clients find out how many people are on the dating agency’s database, and meet their assigned matchmaker before signing up. “It’s easy to get lulled into paying by the sales pitch,” he says. FULL ARTICLE @ FINANCIAL TIMES

See all posts on DateaMillionaire
See all posts on SeekingMillionaire
See all posts on myPartner

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Online Dating Assistants Help The Lonely And Busy

Posted on June 1, 2010

Virtualdatingassistants logo WASHINGTON POST – June 1 - Virtual Dating Assistants (VDA) is one of the first full-scale Internet-dating outsourcing companies. For $600, Virtual Dating Assistants guarantees clients two dates a month; the "executive service" package promises five dates a month for $1,200. VDA do it all: write a client's profile, pick out potential matches, send introductory e-mails and message back and forth until a date is confirmed. Then they turn over the correspondence and tell the lucky fellow where and when he's meeting Madame X. Jared Gordon, editor of A Bad Case of the Dates, a blog that collects dating horror stories, said: "It's awful! You're misrepresenting yourself. You're lying about yourself." Mark Brooks, editor of Online Personals Watch, a site that tracks Internet dating trends, says this type of outsourcing is an ethically questionable form of "misrepresentation." Still, he expects the field to grow. Professional matchmakers often charge $5,000 or more a year and have a limited pool of matches. Online dating sites are populated with countless singles but can require more attention than some users are willing to devote. "It may look like instant gratification, like you dive into the pool and instantly come up with a fish, but it doesn't really work like that," Brooks says. "You've got to tap, tap, tap on the keyboard quite a lot to get anywhere." But for many, it's not just their time that's at stake; it's also their egos. FULL ARTICLE @ WASHINGTON POST

See all posts on Virtual Dating Assistants

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Online Dating Without The Creepy Strangers

Posted on May 21, 2010

Threadcom logo CNN MONEY – May 20 - Thread.com is a new site that lets singles view profiles of their friends' pals on Facebook and request introductions. Facebook already has all the raw ingredients of the largest dating site in the world. More than 400M people worldwide have profiles. And since Thread relies on users' pre-existing profiles, rather than asking them to create new ones, it takes less effort to get started than most online dating outlets. Last year, Thread landed $1M in venture funding from First Round Capital and Sequoia Capital. Angel investors, including RottenTomatoes.com CEO Joe Greenstein and LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman, also put in additional $200,000. Thread's close ties to Facebook bring a few risks. "If Facebook decides to do something, Thread must follow along, and in one fell swoop it could take their bottom line with it," says Mark Brooks, an Internet dating industry consultant. Facebook is already at the center of a firestorm over privacy issues. Thread still has to figure out how to monetize its matchmaking, whether through advertising, subscriptions or virtual gift-giving. Roelof Botha, a partner at Sequoia Capital, had already tried his hand at Facebook matchmaking — cutting and pasting his friends' profiles and sending awkward e-mails back and forth — when the Thread business plan hit his desk. "A lot of people were doing this manually, so I thought, 'What a wonderful idea,'" he says. Brooks, the Internet dating industry consultant, agrees: "They're bottling what we already do in the real world." FULL ARTICLE @ CNN MONEY

See all posts on Thread.com

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