New
Trends Help Seekers Find Love Online
Amid
social networking phenomenon, dating Web sites create opportunities for genuine
interaction
By Michael Jones, President, Userplane
Love may be all around, but right now, online dating is
booming like never before.
-
Some 44 percent of Americans believe that
individuals have a better chance of meeting a partner online than in a
singles bar, according to Ipsos-Reid, an
international market and social research company.
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The Personals/Dating category surpassed Business/Investing and
Entertainment/Lifestyles content to become the leading paid content category
in Q3 2002 with $87 million in revenues, a 387
percent gain over the same quarter the previous year, according
to the Online Publishers Association.
But, just like with dating itself, the numbers don’t tell
the whole story. The question is,
“Is there anything interesting behind the pretty face?”
Thanks to new trends involving technological advancements along with
genuine creativity, there is. In
fact, so-called “social networking” Websites – dating sites in particular
– are on the rise not only in the area of consumer usage.
Of late, the segment has witnessed a significant infusion of capital, as
the industry progresses toward providing both real interaction online and the
business models to support ongoing online communities.
Nowhere is this more evident than in the online dating scene.
The evolution of Internet dating is not unlike that of its offline
counterpart. From arranged
marriages, to chaperoned courtship, to slightly more freedom to almost anything
goes –- traditional offline dating progressed from a system that involved
knowing hardly more than name and rank on the wedding day, to the point at which
parties now ask for complete financial and medical disclosure and can purchase
full-scale background checks over the Internet.
Online dating is following a similar evolutionary process.
Many matchmaking sites compile lists of potential mates using photos and
only the most basic information – age, gender and location.
With this bare-bones “profile,” people are directed to a list of
potential mates – almost like looking for love in the phone book.
In the end, decisions are made almost exclusively based on a photo.
But over the past few years new trends have emerged, spurring the
evolution of online dating and shifting the matchmaking process from the
“arranged marriage” end of the spectrum toward informed choices based on
relevant information. Recent
technological advancements have created an online dating scene in which
participants can meet people from the comforts of their own homes, talk
face-to-face in real time using audio and video, and access online journals that
reveal thoughts and opinions.
Friendster,
MySpace, Say Hello to Blogs
One of the more recent evolutionary steps came
with Web sites like Friendster.com and MySpace.com, services that connect people
through online networks of mutual friends.
Members join, then invite their friends to
join, creating a coast-to-coast online social network.
This new social-networking trend connects
friends-of-friends, helping people find possible mates or simply new friends.
It goes beyond the age, gender, location formula to match individuals
based on mutual friends and similar interests.
This approach offers a more personal experience than the
list-cruising of the past, and allows for more custom searching based on
relevant information. The industry
is gaining attention of late through a series of announcements about new venture
capital funding for Friendster and some of its
rivals – LinkedIn, ZeroDegrees,
Tribe.Net and others. Even standbys
like eVite.com are rethinking their strategies in favor of joining the broader
social networking bandwagon.
At the same time, the burgeoning practice of blogging
is pushing online dating even further toward “informed choice.”
Blogs, short for weblogs,
are a kind of online diary. Through
a blogging service, anyone can maintain a running
commentary online – accessible to anyone with Internet access.
While dating sites typically restrict the creation of individual personal
home pages, blogs offer a forum for sharing anything
from deeply held convictions to random musings.
Bloggers can create and post content
immediately, and often update their blogs daily –
even multiple times per day.
Blogs provide a formula of creating online
identities – or at least sharing one’s offline identity with anyone who
cares to notice – giving potential suitors a much deeper, more relevant
personal profile.
Expanding Instant
Messaging
Much like the offline dating world’s phone call, instant messaging (IM)
capabilities transform static data on a page into actual online, real-time
conversations.
But while providing a handy form of communication, text-based
messaging systems are limited to the keyboard.
There’s no visual or audio, making it difficult to create a true
personal connection. Emotions are
expressed through a common language of key strokes :), rather than through more
meaningful nuances of voice fluctuation and other verbal clues.
Progress has been made: while previous systems only displayed the
conversations, today’s IM users may have access to some personal information
to help provide an initial spark. But
it’s still a one-dimensional conversation.
Growth in online audio and video
capabilities – and the proliferation of higher bandwidth to support them –
is bumping online communication up a notch into the two-dimensional world.
Integrating audio and video into a live online dating
experience gives the entire process more validity and increased security:
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People will not be able to pass themselves off as something they’re not
– at least in the obvious ways
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Video
profiles offer more depth and expression than do lists of likes and dislikes
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Real-time,
online dates that use audio and video provide real interaction while
allowing each participant location anonymity and security – there’s no
immediate need to give out phone numbers, addresses or to meet in person
Users have the opportunity to date online “virtually” – allowing for
a much more personal experience than before – without leaving the comfort and
security of home.
According to Tim Sullivan, president of Match.com:
“Online dating is going to evolve with the convergence of various
technologies. We believe
video and voice are going to be a big part of our business.”
The Future of Online Dating
The future of online dating will include all of these
trends: Friendster’s relevant searching method,
instant messaging capabilities and the use of audio and video – which all
combine to create personal meaningful interactions.
And the integration of blogging tools will
give users the ability to truly create an online identity, and give the website
that houses that profile a lifelong customer.
But beyond the technological advancements that give users better tools for
getting to know each other, online dating will explode as new business models
take shape:
-
Systems
soon will allow profiles to be searched through standard file-sharing
mechanisms. Imagine a video
profile along with an abbreviated data file that can be placed into Kazaa
and searched through a peer-to-peer file-sharing network.
After selecting profiles of interest, users register with the
particular dating Web site to gain access to the complete file – including
contact information. This
enables a dating Web site to circulate its dating inventory externally on
computers around the world.
-
A system to standardize user profiles will take shape, to allow universal
access to “networks” of dating Web sites.
·
And in perhaps the biggest endorsement yet of the online
dating sector, AOL recently unveiled Love.com, a personals site that
incorporates AOL’s popular Instant Messenger (AIM) service – with audio and
video capabilities. Leveraging
AOL’s current user base of paid AOL subscribers and free AOL IM subscribers,
AOL has essentially invited all AOL users to join Love.com.
As consumer magazines weekly attest, there’s no shortage of dating
pitfalls and mishaps – whether online or off.
But as more and more people look for love on the Internet, the evolution
of online dating will continue to make it just a little bit easier than before.
Michael
Jones
Michael
Jones, founder and business partner of Userplane, oversees the company’s
application and business strategy, focusing on the future of live communications
through the development of web apps. Over the past two years, Userplane has
become recognized as a leading web-based application developer, in large part
due to the success of their web-based Audio / Video Instant Communicator.
Jones, one of the primary team members in the design and development of
the Instant Communicator, remains the primary manager of the application and its
deployments.
Prior
to founding Userplane, Jones was CEO of PBJ Digital, a national web development
agency with clients ranging from Disney to Boeing. Among other projects, Jones
has been a keynote speaker at the 2003 OFFF conference in
Barcelona
Spain
, a featured
presenter at Flash Forward 2003, and an advisor to a number of growing web
communities. He earned his Bachelor of Arts in Marketing from the
University
of
Oregon
.
About
Userplane
The company is
Userplane (www.userplane.com), a pioneer
in applying Flash-based instant messaging to support live communications for
Web-based communities. Based in
Los Angeles
, the company is emerging as an innovator in
enterprise community messaging that enables a broad range of Web sites to run
branded messaging applications -- from video messaging for medical professionals
to online dating interaction. (Userplane
Instant Communicator™, the next generation instant messenger, has been
deployed at more online dating sites than any competing technology, including
LoveAccess.com, SurviveDating.com, Love-By-Net.com,
and AfroRomance.com,
among others). Using
Macromedia’s Flash Communication Server MX technology, Userplane’s Instant
Communicator product suite enables those in corporate, community, dating, and
collaborative web environments to see and hear each other, increasing
communication and understanding. Userplane
additionally provides custom Internet software application development services,
aimed at solving client business challenges and meeting business needs with a
proven process and innovative and intelligent software design.