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Category: Match.com

Attitudes about Dating Changing in This Dour Economy

Posted on July 29, 2011

Dating CONTRA COSTA TIMES – July 27 – With 14.1M workers unemployed in June, men and women are adjusting their ideas on what makes a great date. For many people, unemployment would no longer be a deal-breaker. April Braswell, a dating expert, says that although singles are generally looking for financial stability, they will be more forgiving of someone who has just lost her job — as long as she shows motivation to get a new one. When the economy crashed in 2008, Match.com had its best quarter. New couples are also more willing to accept a date paying with a coupon from a daily deal site than they were in years past. Paul Falzone of eLove, a matchmaking service since 1974, says singles don't have to impress one another by ordering the most expensive cocktail or having the best seats for the stadium concert.

by Laura Casey
See full article at Mercury News

See all posts on eLove
See all posts on Match.com

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IAC Increases Revenue 23% on Web-Search, Dating Sites

Posted on July 28, 2011

Iac logo BLOOMBERG – July 27 – IAC/InterActiveCorp., the operator of Match.com, reported a 23% increase in Q2 revenue from Web search products and growth in online dating subscribers. Sales increased to $485.4M from $394.2M a year earlier. Match.com said in May that it would make a tender offer for the 73% of Meetic SA that it did not already own. The offer valued the French dating service at $493M.

by Brett Pulley
The full article was originally published at Bloomberg, but is no longer available.

See all posts on Match.com

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Match.com Launches New Campaign

Posted on July 25, 2011

CREAM – July 24 – Check out Match.com new TV ad. Two Match.com subscribers were picked to sell themselves live on air to the British public.

The full article was originally published at Cream, but is no longer available.

See all posts on Match.com

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Match.com Strategy to Target Younger Singles

Posted on July 20, 2011

Match logo new MARKETING MAGAZINE – July 20 – Match.com is deploying a fresh strategy to drive up membership among 25- to 34-year-olds. It is rolling out a multimillion-pound campaign with a focus on the 'Match moment', when a couple meets for the first time, as the central theme. The campaign, by Mother, features 10-, 30- and 60-second TV spots, featuring a man trying to impress a woman at a railway station by singing about where she might be travelling, while playing a ukulele.

See full article at Marketing Magazine

See all posts on Match.com

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How Match.com Calculates the Ideal Mate

Posted on July 15, 2011

Love_equation MASHABLE – July 14 – Match.com started in 1995, online dating was an obscure practice. About three years ago, the company decided to delve into that data to help improve its matches. It brought on current VP of strategy analytics Amarnath Thombre to head up the charge. Since then, he and a team of 12 have been hard at work developing an equation for successful match recommendations. These are the four main components of the equation.

1. What You Say
When you sign up for Match.com, you fill out a survey about yourself, your preferences and what you’re looking for in a partner.

2. What You Do
What people say and what they do don’t always match up.

3. What People Like You Do
Match.com tunes into the behavior of people who are like you.

4. A Bit of History
In 16 years of business, Match.com has collected a mass of data. It uses that data to make some guesses about who you like before you even rate your first match.

by Sarah Kessler
See full article at Mashable

See all posts on Match.com

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Online Dating Nightmare

Posted on July 13, 2011

Internet scam ABC NEWS – June 22 – Romano, 53, from Lynbrook joined Match.com. She soon found herself chatting online with a man named "Austin Miller." Miller identified himself as a decorated soldier based in Kabul, Afghanistan. When Miller asked for a new laptop to be shipped to Ghana, she was eager to help a soldier in need. She sent him a total of $25K within a six-month time span before realizing that she had fallen victim to a scammer. Greg Blatt, the CEO of the parent company that owns Match.com, said the site has spent millions of dollars to protect its members. Less than one half of one percent of its subscribers have ever reported a profile that is questionable, he said, but when they do, the profiles are blocked within two hours, removed from the site and investigated.

by Jim DuBreuil, Gerry Wagschal and Rena Lafaille
See full article at ABC News

Match.com Statement:
“One in five new relationships and one in six new marriages are between people who met through an online dating site, with more of these relationships starting on Match.com than any other site. Match.com has transformed millions of people’s lives for the better. While only a small number of our millions of subscribers have been scammed by the sophisticated criminals who prey on individuals in every corner of the web, we take this issue very seriously and we diligently address it on the site, tracking, monitoring and preventing fraud at every step of the way. It is also very important that people exercise common sense and prudence with individuals they have just met, whether through an online dating service or any other means, and we educate our customers and put tools in their hands to protect themselves and report any concerns.”

Mark & Irena Brooks: In addition to background checks, perhaps dating sites should also consider running IQ test on their members.  What's your thoughts and comments?

See all posts on Match.com

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Online Dating Leaves Middle-aged Women in ‘Single Wilderness’

Posted on July 11, 2011

Findlovenow button THE OBSERVER – July 10 - A survey found 8 out of 10 women over 50 think they have become invisible to men. The average age at which we divorce is rising – 41 now for women and 43 for men – and the number of single parents is projected to rise to 1.9M over the next decade. Love for the single woman in her mid-40s and beyond has its own particular complications and sorrows. On dating sites men have the pick up and down the age range. Katie Sheppard, the director of relationships at Match.com, said online dating was now the second most common way couples met across the UK – behind being introduced by friends or family. Women also report losing friends because of the differences between single and attached lives. There are rewards, however, for remaining single, says Kate Grussing, the founder of the management consultancy firm Sapphire Partners, who believes single, childless women in their 40s and 50s have huge advantages at work.

by Tracy McVeigh
See full article at Guardian.co.uk

See all posts on Match.com

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The Business of Love

Posted on June 30, 2011

Idate2011 HUFFINGTON POST – June 29 - "Worldwide, ~122M people monthly log into dating sites with 14M people using mobile dating services," said Mark Brooks, publisher of Online Personals Watch. The business of love and these statistics from Comscore were discussed in detail at the Internet Dating Conference recently held in Beverly Hills. Location based or not, everyone needs a mobile dating strategy. "We're seeing 2.5 times more activity on mobile than on the web because it's easy to wink and flirt on the go" said Robinne Burrell, Director of Mobile Products at Match.com. Match reports 10-15% of their new subscribers are coming from mobile with 56% of singles aged 25-54 going mobile.

by Julie Spira
See full article at Huffington Post

See all posts on Match.com

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Sex, Love, and Loneliness on the Internet

Posted on June 27, 2011

Online dating keyboard THE NEW YORKER – July 4 – In 1964, on a visit to the World’s Fair, in Queens, Lewis Altfest, came upon an open-air display called the Parker Pen Pavilion, where a giant computer was selecting foreign pen pals for pavilion visitors. You filled out a questionnaire and received a card with the name and address of a like-minded participant. Altfest and his friend Robert Ross heard about a program called Operation Match, which used a computer to find dates for people. A year later, they had a prototype, which they called Project TACT (Technical Automated Compatibility Testing). Each client paid $5 and answered ~100 questions. TACT transferred the answers onto a computer that spit out your matches.

Online dating sites draw on the premise that there has got to be a better way. They rely on algorithms, some add an extra layer of projection and interpretation. There are thousands of dating sites; the big ones, such as Match.com and eHarmony and PlentyOfFish and OK Cupid (among the free ones). Mark Brooks, the editor of Online Personals Watch, said, “Starting a site is like starting a restaurant. It’s a sexy business, looks like fun, yet it’s hard to make money.”

The dating sites are themselves a little like online-dating-site suitors. They want you. They exaggerate their height and salary. Each has a distinct personality and a carefully curated profile. Nothing determines the atmosphere and experience of an Internet dating service more than the people who use it, but sometimes the sites reflect the personalities or predilections of their founders. If the dating sites had a mixer, you might find OK Cupid by the bar, muttering factoids and jokes, and Match.com in the middle of the room, conspicuously dropping everyone’s first names into his sentences. The clean-shaven gentleman on the couch, with the excellent posture would be eHarmony.

Match.com went live in 1995. It is now the biggest dating site in the world. eHarmony is the one most overtly geared toward finding you a spouse. It was launched, in 2000, by Neil Clark Warren, a clinical psychologist who had spent three decades treating and studying married couples and working out theories about what made their marriages succeed or fail. By reputation, OKCupid is where you go if you want to hook up. OK Cupid was also perhaps the most desirable eligible bachelor out there, until February, when it was bought for $50M by Match.

by Nick Paumgarten
See full article at The New Yorker

See all posts on Match.com         See all posts on Plentyoffish
See all posts on eHarmony           See all posts on OkCupid

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Yet Another Federal Deceptive Trade Practices Suit Filed Against Match.com

Posted on June 23, 2011

Lawsuit picture DALLAS OBSERVER – June 22 - On Tuesday, another federal suit was filed in Dallas naming Match.com as a defendant. Two Texas men claim, among other things, that Match.com is bilking subscribers by lying about how emails are sent to and read by (or not read by, as the case may be) non-subscribers to the service. They also allege that Match.com creates "bogus online profiles as evidenced by the number of profiles of allegedly different Members containing identical photographs and identical phrases."

by Robert Wilonsky
See full article at Dallas Observer

See all posts on Match.com

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