1000 web dates an in-the-trenches view of dating and relationships today

20Mar/072

On Why I Used to Love Lavalife [Lavalife Review]

About five years ago, I met a guy through CasualKiss (a free dating site geared towards the under 35 set) who advised me "Lavalife is a lot better". At the time I wasn't partial to the paid dating sites, as few were heavily populated in Canada at the time. But recommendations go a long way in my world, so I decided to sign up and see what happened.

I was, in a word, overwhelmed.

Where CasualKiss offered me a couple of responses and hello's a week, Lavalife gave me hundreds upon hundreds in mere hours. Chat requests, messages and winks came at me from all three of their sections (dating, relationships and my personal favorite, intimate), and mostly from people within a 100 mile radius. I remember spending more than a day just sending out, "Thanks but no thanks" copy and pastes to everyone who had taken the time to say hello, but quickly gave up when I realized that replying meant somehow I was interested, even if the communication stated something different.

Instead, I slowly worked my way through every message, wink and chat, looking for something unusual to grab my attention. No picture? Erased. Bad grammar or spelling that was beyond my basic tolerance levels? Gone. Not within driving distance? Sorry dude. Over 20 years my senior? Not going to happen. I even changed my profile to explicitly state, "I'm not looking for a Daddy, thanks."

Still, the responses flowed faster than I could keep up and within a week I had to take a break. In the five years since I still haven't received anything quite as intense as what I received my first week on Lavalife (affectionately referred to as Lava).

Eventually the surge lifted, and I was able to thinkabout the entire process, and realized: I haven't paid a penny to Lavalife yet, and it's not a free dating site. Meet revelation #2: Lavalife is free for those in demand, as only the pursuers need to pay for credits to contact others.

With this newfound information, I was even more impressed with the site, although I did feel a tad dirty knowing men were paying merely to say hello to a picture and profile. I finally came to the conclusion it was no different than some guy sending a drink my way at the bar to get an introduction, so I left it at that.

Several months later and a couple dozen dates under my belt, I was hooked on Lavalife. I later learned it was the top online dating site in Canada (according to ComScore Media Matrix), with more than five million views a month. It had an adequate number of people, lots of fun features, and the ability to openly state exactly what I was looking for. Score!

That's when Revelation #3 hit me on the head: the intimate section was where it was at. In my personal experience the Relationship folks were looking to get married, fast (going so far as to propose on the first, second or third date more times than I can remember). The Dating dudes were usually looking for intimate encounters but knew few women would openly say so themselves at the time, so they hunkered down in the next best space. A select few were more Relationship oriented, but again, they went where the women were. Less than 1% of the men I met with or spoke to on Lavalife actually wanted to just date.

The intimate section was also where people seemed to loose their inhibitions, and not just the sexual ones. Anything and everything was fair game over there, including politics, religion, alternative lifestyles and odd social news. My favorite people (and now close friends) were all found over in intimate.

But this is all old news.

Perhaps I'm not in love with Lavalife as much as I used to be because the market share has decreased, or maybe I don't have the same social currency as I did in my mid-twenties. Either way, Lavalife doesn't seem anywhere near as exciting anymore. I rarely get messages (even living in a city of more than a million people), and the few I do border on downright creepy. One recent contact asked to meet me in a secluded area, devoid of any contact information or pictures "just for the hell of it".

The intimate section has lost its luster as well. All I seem to find over there now are lusty men looking to get their members wet with little interest in the person on the other side of the interaction. Now, there's nothing wrong with lusty in my world, but I'd much rather some sort of intellectual attachment even if there isn't an emotional one.

I still don't regret my Lavalife days; I met thousands of people through the site. (Now there's a feature I'd like - one that chronicles all the people I met!) I've even had several friends ask, "How many people do you know that you didn't meet on Lavalife?" and I'm usually hard pressed to find someone, anyone, that doesn't have even a cursory attachment to the site.

Still, Lavalife hasn't changed much in the past few years, so I'm looking to fill it's social gap in my life.

6Mar/070

Web Dating Market Shows Increased Growth in Europe to 2011

JupiterResearch released their newest report today entitled, Online Dating in 2007: US Market Searches for New Users as European Market Challenges US Dominance, which states that the U.S. market for web dating services is still growing, but the European markets have more room to move upwards.

In fact, the report provides overall numbers that show,

European online dating sites are attracting new users and will double revenues from 243 million euros in 2006 to 549 million euros in 2011.

One of the authors of the report, Nate Elliot, provided additional insight in a press release:

“Although US dating sites are converting browsers into payers better than ever before, they’ll have to offer additional paid services to existing customers, and tap into new user segments, to reignite significant market growth.”

Compared with the U.S. web dating market, the European web dating market has grown in a predictable way for five years, with users increasing from four to six percent in the last year alone.

28Feb/070

Web Dating Site Review: Luvoo

After receiving an amazing press release in my inbox about Luvoo's "online matchmaking game", I had to visit and sign up to see what the ruckus was about. I was expecting something ... different... than what I found.

First of all, I wanted to learn more about this "online matchmaking game", but I had to sign up to get any information at all. Okay, I thought. It's still a free dating site. I don't mind.

Twenty minutes later I was still signing up, appauled at some of the questions:

Are you free of sexually transmitted diseases? Are you picky about hotels? Do you believe in reincarnation? Do you have good credit?

and confused by others:

A prenuptual agreement is okay before marriage? Do you believe grandchildren are okay? Do you believe childcare is okay? Do you like to travel in a motor home? Will you groom his/her pet?

Then, after all of those strange questions (some of which weren't grammatically correct or even spelled properly), I'm told I have to confirm my membership. Sure, that's standard. But please, tell me about the online matchmaking game!

I confirm, and then get the weirdest of the messages:

Our administrators will personally look through your details to make sure you have entered everything right.

and

We do this because we care about the quality of our profiles by an actual inspection.

Huh?

And still I can't see what the online matchmaking game is all about. I am frustrated by the time wasting, especially from a web dating company with apparently a lot of marketing cash.

So, I searched around online and found out Luvoo's had more scandal associated with them than most online dating sites. There's the telemarketers contacting people on no-call lists, and numerous stars touting this startup company for starters.

My advice? Don't give these people your personal address (even though they ask for it to send you patented "Luvoo Dating Cards", another name for a dating business card).

In fact, don't even bother to sign up.

26Feb/070

Web Site Dating Review: New Age Connections

According to a press release I received earlier today, New Age Connections "provides an exciting new conscious dating and community website created for the new age culture."

Intrigued, I signed up and took a look around.

The most unusual aspect of the site are the options you can look for - Male, Female or Community - which I was pleasantly surprised to see. A quick search found their Community section full of spiritually-guided business listings, community information and lifestyle events (yoga, sustainable living, green architecture, etc.) Although the site is still being populated (no one in my immediate area was listed at the time of posting), the options are numerous and well thought out.

Also well thought out are the Events, which not only list related organizations to-do's, but also events and travelling options put on by New Age Connections themselves.

The site does offer free membership (for which I signed up). Paid memberships allow for greater options, such as listing your new age business in their directory, posting access to the groups module, and the ability to respond to email messages. Everyone receives their free quarterly newsletter, prominently displaying the visibly happy couple in charge of the site, Steven and Sandra.

Fees: One month = $14.99, Three months = 24.99, Six months = $39.99.

24Feb/071

Web Dating Site Review: Club Intimate

I found Club Intimate today after receiving an email with a link to the new site. And it is most definitely new.

A quick search found ONE person in Canada, whose profile consisted of, "You know you want me". How disappointing, considering the plug for the site offered so many, interesting, FREE options:

  • Option to join one, two or all six of the different sections (Activity Partner, Dating, Friendship, Relationship were what I chose when I signed up, but there were also options for Intimate Encounter and ... um... something else I can't seem to find right now)
  • See who has viewed my profile (I love voyeuring options!);
  • Talk to other online daters anonymously using Skype (a feature I haven't seen before on any free web site dating services);
  • Blogging;
  • Forums to discuss anything under the sun; and
  • A matching mechanism (mine shows Mr. You Know You Want Me - surprise!)

Interestingly, even though there are few people signed up (and those that are are a bit suspicious looking), the options for what I was looking for were long, varied and a bit time consuming. Still, it was neat to see my home town and other, very small communities listed in the area drop-down lists.

I love the idea of this site, even if the layout isn't terribly exciting or new. Still, they'll need to attract thousands more users to be of any use - so this is a "WAIT AND SEE" free dating site for me.

I will definitely check back in a couple of months to see what's happened since.