THE STREET — Nov 14 — Troublemakers on the online dating scene may have met their match in a group of increasingly brand-conscious Internet giants. Yahoo! Personals and Match.com, two of the largest Internet dating sites, are stepping up their efforts to weed their services of abusive, obnoxious or married people. Earlier this year, Yahoo! instituted a code of conduct for online daters in which they must swear that they are single and won't be abusive toward other members. The company also has made it easier for members to report misbehavior. Match.Com has added additional people to its fraud and abuse unit. The effort comes as the online dating market consolidates and surviving services fight off competition for loyal users from social network sites like Friendster.com and Myspace.com, which also offer free dating, and smaller upstarts such as True.com. "They have got very significant brands that they have to protect," says Mark Brooks, who runs the blog onlinepersonalswatch.com. "They can't have people who are scamming, spamming, being obscene or being obnoxious. It's very bad for their brand." About 11% of all online users have a profile on an online dating site, according to Jupiter Media. "The market is reaching maturity," Jupiter Research analyst Nate Elliot told the blog onlinepersonalswatch.com in a recent interview. "…there are fewer consumers 'just curious' to have a look. It's no longer the 'new thing.'" FULL ARTICLE @ THE STREET
Category: Match.com
Yahoo, Google to Launch Wireless Services
BIZ REPORT — Nov 7 — Yahoo and Google are set to roll out new wireless services to take advantage of advanced networks and cellphones to provide features similar to those available on computers. Yahoo will introduce a cellphone it will sell through a partnership with SBC Communications to take Yahoo a step closer to linking music, photos and email with consumers' existing online accounts and address books.
The full article was originally published at Biz Report, but is no longer available.
Mark Brooks: Webdate, Match and Lavalife all offer mobile phone based dating. Webdate offers a more advanced 'downloadable app' and allows users to search their entire database of over 4 million, rather than a limited set of mobile-only users.
Yahoo, Google to Launch Wireless Services
BIZ REPORT — Nov 7 — Yahoo and Google are set to roll out new wireless services to take advantage of advanced networks and cellphones to provide features similar to those available on computers. Yahoo will introduce a cellphone it will sell through a partnership with SBC Communications to take Yahoo a step closer to linking music, photos and email with consumers' existing online accounts and address books.
The full article was originally published at Biz Report, but is no longer available.
Mark Brooks: Webdate, Match and Lavalife all offer mobile phone based dating. Webdate offers a more advanced 'downloadable app' and allows users to search their entire database of over 4 million, rather than a limited set of mobile-only users.
How Cellphones May Beat Computers as a Dating Service
WALL STREET JOURNAL — Nov 3 — The latest phones can do email, video, music, photo sharing and Web surfing. Though the U.S. was late to the market for sending text messages over in recent years. SMS.ac boasts tens of thousands of communities of users who share interests in topics including sports, music and politics over their cellphone screens. In July, Upoc launched its first dating service. Since then it has attracted about 25,000 subscribers, at $4.99 a week, he says. Match.com has offered such a service on cellphones since February 2003. Zogo expects users to communicate in a novel way: by voice. Users are connected by a phone call. Zogo makes the calls to the two users. No phone numbers are made public, so users can remain anonymous behind their screen names. The Zogo service is free as the company builds up its user community. It eventually will cost $12.99 a month. Setting up a Zogo account and using it on a cellphone was cumbersome.
Mark Brooks: Instant gratification with Zogo's service…once they build a critical mass of users. Webdate offers mobile dating with access to 4 million profiles. Nice.
The Battle for Hearts in Europe: US, French Internet dating Sites Do Battle
AFP — Nov 2 — Out of a crowded field of Internet dating sites, two have emerged as international giants: Match.com of the US and Meetic of France. Each claims the number one spot in Europe. Last month Meetic was floated on the Paris stock exchange raising ~90 million euros ($108 million) which its founder and CEO, Marc Simoncini, plans to use to fund acquisitions. Match.com hit back by launching a Singles Observatory in France as an "independent" body to publish data about singles, their lifestyle and the hunt for the perfect partner. Meetic claims that 18,000 new users fill out their profiles on the site each day, while Match.com says it receives 40,000 registrations. Jupiter Research believes the sector's revenue in Europe will double over the next five years to 375 million euros.
Mark Brooks: I'm still here in Prague after the Euro iDate.
Men’s Turn to Offer Dating Complaints
SEATTLE TIMES — Oct 30 — If many women over 40 find the dating scene a dark continent, older single men have their own news to share: It's not all that great for them, either. 42% of single men in their 50s named bitter baggage as their #1 complaint, according to a 2003 AARP survey of 3,500 baby boomers. 35% of women had a problem with this, as well. "I'll meet a woman and the first thing she'll do is ask 'What do you do?' They'll weigh your wallet," says Scott Abraham, a 53-year-old Seattle counselor who says he's given up on dating. "I have a friend who's a doctor, but he never wants to tell women that because he'll be treated differently. We went out one time and he said, 'OK, tonight, you be the doctor.' That night, I got all the attention. I had my choice of three or four women. He said he sold cars and he got no attention." "Dating is a numbers game," he says. "The more people you meet, the better chance you have of meeting quality people and to me, dancing is a good way to meet them. It's not like you're being set up, it's not like a Match.com type of thing. You've got a girl in your arms for two and a half minutes. You can talk. They're right there." Match.com lists 9,000 local members in their 40s, nearly 60% of them men. There are another 5,000 in their 50s. Seattle's own PerfectMatch.com currently has more than 100,000 "over-39" members in the Seattle/Tacoma area. The over-39 category is one of their fastest growing age groups. Some local options: PlayDate Seattle, Space City Mixer, Elements of Soul and Spartay.com, which recently added events for the 35 to 55 set.
The full article was originally published at Seattle Times, but is no longer available.
Mark Brooks: Social events are a pain to organise and not that profitable. But, they are the last vestitude for online personals to make a real world connection and offer instant gratification for those who venture out from behind their computers. Check out my little club http://www.ace-club.com.  I started it in 1998 by sticking a poster up in a bagel shop in Silicon Valley. People talked and it grew to an email list of 3600. Now, my legion of hosts run a few hundred events a year for an exclusive base of paying members; $20 a month.
Online Dating has its Ups, Downs
U-WIRE — Oct 13 — The online dating craze has become a popular alternative for singles around the world; matchdoctor.com, plentyoffish.com and cupidjunction.com. However, uncertainty can still linger for some. "Many of them (the sites) concentrate on 'compatibility,' but there's so much more to dating that 'compatibility' can't solve," Travis said. "Plus, people lie and the absence of body language and facial expression can make it easier to do that." Match.com promises to teach singles "how to find the right person in 90 days." Others, like Yahoo! Personals, allow seven-day trials for visitors who sign up beforehand.
The full article was originally published at Daily Colonial, but is no longer available.
Mark Brooks: Webdate.com is betting on webcam based 'webdating' to allow users to go on their first internet date online.
Dream Guy
UNION LEADER — Oct 24 — Christine, 36, is hoping to meet her match in cyberspace and has been dabbling with online dating for the past year-and-a-half. After trying Yahoo Personals and Match, Christine recently decided to narrow her search to a specialized site: christiansingles.com.
Online Dating Led Her to Mr. Right
UNION LEADER — Oct 26 — Sue had been meeting men the old-fashioned way when, while surfing the Web one day, she accidentally clicked on an ad for Match.com. Sue and Mark Butler, who met on the Internet, married in August 2004. She went on about 25 dates during her first year on the site. "Now I can't even imagine my life without him."
Mark Brooks: We need more success stories like this in the press. Great PR for the industry, heartwarming, and…it's kinda nice knowing that we're working for an industry that can impact people's lives so incredibly. We really are getting it right, aren't we?
Online Personals Watch Exclusive Interview – Match.com’s CEO, Jim Safka
OPW INTERVIEW – Oct. 14, 2005 – Jim Safka just celebrated his first year as CEO of Match.com. Jim came to Match.com from AT&T Wireless, where he served as VP and GM of E-commerce. Prior to that he spent five years at E*TRADE, most recently as VP Marketing, growing the customer base from 200,000 accounts to over four million. He held brand and product management positions at Intuit (Quicken), Warner Bros, and Paramount Pictures, and he has an MBA from Northwestern University and a B.S. Accounting from U.S.C.
Nielsen and Hitwise show Yahoo as being the top online personals site? Is there anything you'd like to say about this?
I believe Yahoo does a terrific job in the category of traffic. However, I think of the online dating category as a subscription business measured in terms of subscribers. If measurement is based on traffic and unique users alone, I don't think that is a clear indicator of who has the most market share. Yahoo! has the #1 site for direct traffic in the U.S (Match.com is #1 globally). However, Match.com has unparalleled distribution through partner sites that also bring people to Match.com; such as AOL and MSN. Here at Match.com we consider such things as: How many paid subscriptions do we have? How many new subscriptions are coming in? How much is each subscriber paying? How many people are visiting and subscribing? Measuring traffic is a great metric if you're running an advertising business. If you look at the number of subscriptions, we have twice as many subscriptions as our competitiors and to me that's the true mark of leadership.
Jupiter Research ran a survey this January and found 35% of online daters were somewhat dissatisfied or very dissatisfied with personals sites.
We're constantly doing things to improve our site and to make the member experience more meaningful and successful. In terms of satisfaction, when you take a step back and look at relationships in general and you consider that people have been dating or courting , forever, you'll see that dissatisfaction levels with dating and relationship experiences have always been high throughout history. As the Internet has become part of our daily lives, it expands peoples' possibilities. Now, a lot of people know someone who has met their spouse through Match.com. It's terrific in that respect. At the end of the day, though, people are people, and relationships are relationships. The new medium is a wonderful, fundamentally different way to meet, but it doesn't change the human dynamics.
What kind of paradigm and technology shifts will Match.com and the industry go through in the next 5 to 10 years?
The main thing happening is that online dating is becoming a mainstream way in which people meet people in this generation. It is just the way things work, so there won't be a real adoption curve future generations have to jump over. It will be completely natural for them. Online platforms will be a completely normal experience. It will be much more romantic when integrated voice and video are added. That will make it more natural and exciting. We're looking at location- based services as part of our wireless product, Match.com Mobile. It's interesting when we talk to our customers about these services, but they're not clamoring for it. So we'll see how it goes.
How will Chemistry.com stand distinguished from the likes of eHarmony and TRUE and PerfectMatch?
Chemistry is a breakthrough new product. We have been working at this business and helping people find love for 10 years at Match. It was the original company that started the online dating category, and we've studied single people in great depth. We commissioned what's considered to be the most extensive research identifying the relationship needs, attitudes and behaviors of single people in America, and we've gained important insights from the hundreds of thousands of Match success couples. We worked on Chemistry.com with a world reknowned anthropologist, Helen Fisher, to combine the best of real world interactions with online services. Take the Chemistry Profile. This profile very quickly figures out the types of people we should match you with – people you're most likely to have chemistry with. Users then go through our 1-2-3 Meet process. We do our best to facilitate a face-to-face meeting, because that's the true test of chemistry between two people. After the first meeting, users tell us how it went. We put this feedback back into the matching system, and Chemistry.com takes it into account to help deliver even better matches. We're reinventing this category the way we first did when we started Match.com 10 years ago…
Does a personality profiling system for an online personals site really need to be validated?
I think the personality profiling products need to be evaluated by the market and validated through successful customer experiences. We ask the questions that really matter to consumers. Is it delivering value? Is it facilitating the right kinds of relationships? Are our customers ending up in enduring relationships? For our products, we have a lot of proprietary data and patented technology that our customers tell us is working for them. This information isn't something we would feel comfortable turning over to a third party given the competitive nature of our industry.
What will be Match.com's position on singles events in 2006? You learned a lot from matchlive I'm sure – is there some potential to bring it back to life?
We're very interested in events. We still do events in the UK and as part of broader marketing partnerships. Events have been a terrific learning experience. I know for certain at Match, we're a company that really knows how to get people together, and we are terrific at building software! When it comes to a live events, we need to find the right partner. We would love to pursue singles events in 2006 and beyond! We're all about connecting people, and events are just one more way to do that. Events can also introduce people to online dating that may not otherwise consider it. As the category leader, we have a vested interest in growing the category, because we grow when our category grows.
When a man meets a woman he's interested in for the first time, he has to communicate two things to her, 1. he's interested, 2. he's safe. What is match's position on safety going to be in 2006?
The privacy and security of our members is our #1 priority at Match, and safety has been built into the site from day one. Since 1995, Match.com has used a patented, double-blind email system to help members communicate without revealing their personal contact information until they're ready. We have dating safety tips and advice right on our home page. The online dating category is becoming a part of how America operates — how they meet. People also meet at the office, through family and friends, at restaurants, bars, and so on. No matter how you meet someone or how you were introduced, there are risks. And we believe that a bit of caution and skepticism is appropriate until someone proves themselves trustworthy. The most important thing is common sense and trusting your instincts. The same caution should be used wherever people meet. They should do that online just like any other environment.
Match.com is 10 years old, what would you like to achieve in 2006; or, what does the future hold for match.com?
This is a growth category. Jupiter predicted the online dating category would grow by 9% this year…and yet Match.com grew by 26% in the second quarter (year over year). We're the category leader. We have to continue to innovate. If you stall or trip as the leader of the band, you end up back in the tuba section. We will continue to grow this category by doing 3 things: 1. We will be the #1 player in the online dating category by continuing to innovate; and help build the category to more than $1 billion globally. 2. We believe the customer has all the answers, so we'll keep listening to them. Something that I do and every employee at Match.com does is stay close to the customer. Every person is trained on the customer service system. We're all involved in reviewing profiles, approving photos, and providing customer service. It's a requirement for everyone here at Match, from our receptionist all the way to me, as the CEO. We're all listening to our customers. 3. Continue providing a superior customer experience; we want to open up new possibilities for people and give them the tools they need to connect and build loving, lasting relationships. I get emails from literally hundreds of Match customers every month sharing their success stories; I even get invited to their weddings! We also stay in touch with Match couples that met years ago and are now sharing their baby stories with us. At the end of the day, that's what it's really all about, helping people find someone that they can build a life with.
