Looking for love on the internet
One internet surfer in four visits online dating sites and one in 10 people in Britain will click onto a dating website at some time over the next year!
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In Europe, over 35 million people surf the internet looking for a date, which could well represent one in four singles. But how can the success of internet dating be explained?
First of all, there is definitely a crisis when it comes to meeting someone: we have increasingly less time and less opportunity, which makes it difficult to find a soul mate nowadays.
But who are these people looking for love on the web? What are they looking for? Are the rules of seduction different online? Doctissimo explores this popular way of finding a soul mate.
Loving those internet dating sites
The web presents an undeniable advantage in that it allows you to connect with someone any time of the day, and you can meet 10 or 100 times more people in this way than at a cafe or at a local pub or dance club. But the main advantage is definitely the possibility of getting to know someone before you actually meet them.
The natural order of things is reversed: you decide to meet someone in the flesh once you think you might actually have some chemistry, instead of approaching someone first and then discovering if you have anything in common... And as the sociologist Pascal Lardellier, underlines: “Putting out feelers online means taking less emotional risk.”
The world’s top dating web site Match.com, sought to evaluate the profiles of online singles and the results allowed them to identify a few common trends.
First, 80% were looking for a stable, long-lasting relationship, with very few admitting to looking for a one-night stand. Users were more likely to be urban city-dwellers but this is now doubt also due to the better broadband coverage in these areas.
60% were men and 40% women. 55% were 30 years old and more than 74% had no children. It should also be noted that these figures are for Match.com only, and on the group's Meetic dating site, users are generally on the younger side. In all cases, in the same way as meeting people in the physical world, singles on the web choose a dating site according to what they are looking for...
New approaches in looking for love
In 2005, a large European study, led by a British Institute called “The Future Lab” for Match.com, attempted to evaluate these new patterns of behaviour in love and new trends in dating. According to the results, there are different emerging patterns in the internet dating domain, just like in “real life”:
- Neo-romantics: Yes, there is a return to romanticism! Perhaps as a rejection to the mainstream overkill of quickie sexual encounters with no tomorrow, love and emotion are now coming back into fashion. Valentine’s Day has made a real come-back, and eight out of ten people believe in love at first sight. And if you ask the crowds of singles on the web you’ll see that they pretty well all believe that falling in love virtually over the internet is possible.
- Alter-egos: Contrary to the old saying, opposites attract, most people tend to look for someone who is like them, a reflection in the mirror, an alter-ego. Moreover, on the web, one of the first questions will be “what is the last book you read” or “what was the last film you saw?” This is because, as Pascal Lardellier points out, “In order to love each other, you need to share the same origins... and the same horizons”. The prince marrying the pauper usually only exists in fairy tales!
- Planning and strategy: Some people need everything just right, and fast, including love! They will organise relationships down to the last detail because they don’t have any time to lose. In other words, they use a strategy or plan of action in order to meet a lasting soul mate. It is quite similar to the theory behind speed-dating: plan the meeting, and if the spark is missing, move right on to the next one! These internet dates want to get maximum value for money from the dating sites they are subscribed to. “This serial dating, and relationship hopping is connected to how our times are evolving, and our increasing individualism,” underlines Pascal Lardellier. A sort of consumer attitude to dates and relationships.
- Myriad divorcees: There are many singles in their 50s who are products of a higher rate of divorce, and who’ve to “rebuild” their lives. They want, in some way, to get back the time they think they’ve lost, often after long years of married life. “Off the market” for a long time, they have forgotten how to date or the first moves to make (it’s not like riding a bike, you can actually forget!). Dating sites are an attractive and less confronting way getting back into the water!
- Rise of the singles: Some singles, especially women, do not actually want to get involved in a stable relationship. They may prefer to keep a network of friends and different relationships, rather than tie themselves down to one person long-term. Moreover, this seems to be becoming a trend: 37% of single men and women say they have sexual relations with someone every week, but are not looking to marry or live together.
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Copyright © 2011 Doctissimo
Posted 31.01.2012
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