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Types of
Dating Services
Dating
Niche Markets
With
so many dating website now operating,
many are finding it essential to
differentiate themselves in some way in
order to compete and survive. One way to
do this is to develop a special focus,
serving a specific group of singles
instead of all of them. Some have become
very successful with this strategy.
Some
examples of how these websites and
singles groups might be classified
include the following areas:
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the
gay and lesbian market (i.e. Glimpse.com,
others)
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college students (collegeluv.com)
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Jewish
singles (Jdate.com)
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Christian singles
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Senior
citizen singles
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Speed
dating
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Silicon Valley
executives
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Millionaires,
high income executives (many independent
matchmakers cater to this group)
There are many more
potential classifications, everything
from singles that like country and
western lifestyles, swingers, skiers, by
your astrological sign, you name it. A
Scripps Howard study found that at least
41 dating services it examined had names
with the words “Christian”, “Jewish” or
“Catholic” in it.
One
could also make the case that the dating
services market can be segmented by
TECHNOLOGY, or the method or model the
dating website uses. Examples of this
would include things such as
psychological matching (a specialty of
eHarmony.com), wireless phone matching
(offered by Match.com).
Value of Industry Segments ($ millions)
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2002 |
2003 |
2004 |
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Dating websites |
$304 |
$428 |
$514 |
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Off-line chains |
180 |
153 |
159 |
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|
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Independent matchmakers |
200 |
222 |
229 |
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Personal ads, radio station datelines |
221 |
188 |
178 |
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Total: |
905 |
991 |
1,080 |
Source: Marketdata Enterprises estimates
Dating
Websites
There
is no question that the dating websites
represent the fastest-growing segment of
this industry, and that they have hurt
many of the other competing introduction
services in the process. However, even
off-line competitors say that they have
actually help increase the size of the
pie for the entire market—bringing
dating services into the mainstream.
Many singles today start out using these
low-priced websites and eventually
migrate to higher-priced services with
more personal service. Many soon realize
just how much work it is to surf the
Internet and how photos and information
about potential mates can be unreliable.
The
online personals business as been
dominated for the last two years by
Match.com, which is owned by
InterActiveCorp, and the Personals
division of Yahoo Inc. Lately, Spark
Networks (formerly MatchNet), claims to
have been quickly gaining ground. Those
three companies as well as a few
second-tier players and numerous smaller
competitors, are expected to have
generated a total of more than $300
million in revenue in 2004, according to
Jupiter Research.
“Still
years behind the United States, in
Europe, online personals are expected to
be the biggest category for paid content
for the foreseeable future” stated Joe
Shapira, MatchNet’s chairman and chief
executive officer. Latin America and
Australia are also seen as future growth
markets.
Analysts say that online dating content is one of the few
types of content that people are
actually willing to pay for, so much so
that companies are actually raising
their prices.
Singles
Advertisements
T he
number of responses received by
advertisers… A weighted average of the
number of responses received across
these studies shows that a typical man
receives 10.5 responses, whereas a
typical woman receives 14.5 replies.
Factors that increase the number
responses include a) being older and
taller, b) mentioning educational and
professional success or a penchant for
expensive cultural activities, c)
conveying an aura of masculinity, and d)
seeking a generally attractive woman but
avoiding sexual references.
For women, factors that
increase the number of responses,
include: a) physical attractiveness
(e.g. being younger and lighter and
mentioning a preference for sports, b)
providing positive or neutral self
descriptions, especially intelligence,
and c) mentioning or alluding to sex.
For both men and women, writing an ad
with originality or flair increased the
number of respondents, as did seemingly
trivial traits like possessing red or
salt and pepper hair.
The
popular press reveals variations on the
singles ad such as catalogue formats
(McFadden 1982), some of which provide
American men with foreign brides (Krichm,
1989, and Money, 1981); print/telephone
hybrids in which readers respond to
print ads by leaving messages on
centralized phone/mail systems; and
singles ads in the form of fliers (Stolper,
1989) or faxes (People Weekly, 1989 and
Dullea, 1989), which avoid using a
commercial intermediary altogether.
This
used to be a profitable business.
According to Bayless (1988), “New York
magazine’s personal classified ads have
been pulling in about $30,000 to $35,000
per issue since 1985.” However, that has
changed. Today, most newspapers are
cutting back their personals sections
and barely cover their costs, offering
them more as a reader service.
Video
Dating
Video
dating firms usually operate by having a
client first read the written
descriptions of others members
and view
photographs. At many video dating
services these written descriptions
contain a photograph of the single,
which is often placed on the back of the
information sheet. Woll (1986) notes
that clients tend to read the forms from
the back to the front, doing an initial
screening based on the photo. If the
client finds someone who piques his or
her interest, then he or she is shown
that person’s video. Usually the video
lasts 2 to 10 minutes and shows the
clients responding to a series of
questions. If the suitor is still
interested after seeing the video, the
prospective date is contacted and then
views the suitor’s video. If the
parties agree to meet, they are given
each other’s phone numbers and the rest
is up to them.
Singles
Events
As the
number of singles has grown, so has the
number of singles religious groups,
dinner clubs, social groups, public
service groups and even single
conventions. In many ways, most of these
events represent a midpoint between
formal and informal “marriage market
intermediaries” (MMI’s). Like formal
MMI’s, these events promise easy access
to eligible others, and often some
screening based on interest, religion,
or perhaps the subjective judgment of
the sponsor (Norman 1984). But like
informal MMI’s, singles events usually
follow traditional social forms such as
parties. This allows them to be
perceived as less deviant than more
formal MMI’s and hence escape some of
the “desperate losers” stereotype.
The
first strategy is to avoid the use of
the word “singles” and instead use
euphemisms like “young adults’ or “young
professional”. The second strategy is
to provide a “cover story”, such as a
lecture, that the singles can use to
create a veneer of casual ambiguity.
Electronic/Phone Communication Networks
One
innovation in MMI’s was the development
of electronic communication networks,
such as computer based networks and
telephone party lines.
The
first are bulletin board systems, which
are nothing more than computer accessed
singles ads in which singles leave
messages on computer bulletin boards and
often wait days for a response.
Phone-based singles ads, that are the
aural equivalent of computerized
bulletin boards, also exist. These
systems allow singles to leave short
taped messages or hear the messages left
by others. While the amount of
information one can transmit in a 30
second message is quite limited, the
cost of using the system is
correspondingly small. One Washington,
DC service for example, charges only
$2.50 per call, which is 1/1000 of the
price of the deluxe membership in the
now defunct Successful Singles
International.
Matchmakers
In the
1970s, computer dating and then video
dating were the best known MMI’s. While
they are still popular, a general move
from high-tech to high-touch has brought
the matchmaker into vogue.
Matchmakers have relentlessly targeted
an upscale clientele. This marketing
strategy also allows them to charge
lofty prices, usually starting at around
$1,000 for a basic membership and rising
to $5,000.
Some services are known to charge
upwards of $100,000 for special personal
search memberships.
A
review of the popular press provides the
following composite picture of
matchmaking… The matchmakers tend to be
independent female entrepreneurs who
entered the business because they enjoy
the work and the profession requires no
formal training and little start-up
capital. As a result, many matchmaking
operations are short-lived ventures,
although a few have branched out to
become national chains. Most
matchmakers rely on intuition based on
their personal experience in making
matches, and only a few boast of even
vague academic qualifications.
These
businesses usually have between 100 and
2,000 clients in any one location, but
matchmakers often qualify those numbers
by saying that not all members will be
active at any given time. While the
high prices charges by the best known
matchmakers were noted above, the market
has become sufficiently crowded that
some agencies are trying to compete on
price, in some cases charging under $100
for a year’s membership. Many
matchmakers are now offering a variety
of membership plans; the most expensive
often come with money back guarantees.
The
clientele of these services tend to be
urban professionals; a demographic group
believed to be early adopters of new
social and commercial trends.
Small
matchmakers have two things going for
them, though. First, they’re generally
more highly targeted, focusing on
professionals, for instance, or Jewish
singles. “If you get specialized
service which only has people like
yourself in it, then how many people it
has matters less.”
Social
support and the quality of your
relationship with the matchmaker is the
best predictor of how satisfied with the
service customers will be. The more
mainstream you are, the more one will
benefit from a larger service. The more
idiosyncratic you are, the more you’ll
benefit from a niche service.
Neophyte matchmakers often end up
inviting their friends and acquaintances
in for free and slashing prices for
their first paying customers, just to
build up a client base. Says one
matchmaker: “I rarely advertise. You
have to hear about me through a referral
or through me finding you”.
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