Sex, Love & Marketing
Leeds Skeptics recently invited David Frank to present a talk entitled “sex, love & marketing”. It looked at how people market themselves on online dating and what interesting information we can gather from large scale data releases by major online dating networks.
Here are some of the highlights:
- Online dating is rapidly becoming a mature industry with wide social acceptance – most people think it is a good way to meet people and 11% of Americans have used it
- It is predominantly used by middle-class urban dwellers with some university education
- “Do you like horror movies?” turns out to be a really good predictor of compatibility
And some tips for using online dating:
- Get your friends to pick your photos as you will instinctivly try and pick mirror images of yourself rather than the best photos
- Get your friends to peer-review your profile, just like you would a CV
- Use an interesting username that is neither boring nor contains words with negative connotations
- Use pictures taken on DSLRs – whether it is the skill of the user, the higher quality camera or extra care taken, the produce much more liked photos than camera phones
- If you must use a camera phone, turn the flash off
- People love some depth of field on profile pictures too
- Selfies are good for women, but bad for men
- Smile with teeth is best, followed by no smile, smile without teeth. A smirk is the worst thing you can do.
- T-shirts or casual shirts are the way to go for men – tank tops and topless are the worst ways to go
- Showing cleavage works for women, and this becomes even more successful as they age
- Do not talk about god in your profile
- Basically everyone hates misspellings, grammar, and short replies
Overall a really interesting talk. There was also a section on sex and fetishes. The entire thing was well supported by stats and evidence. You can find the full slides on David’s website.
Leeds Skeptics recently invited David Frank to present a talk entitled “sex, love & marketing”. It looked at how people market themselves on online dating and what interesting information we can gather from large scale data releases by major online dating networks.
Here are some of the highlights:
- Online dating is rapidly becoming a mature industry with wide social acceptance – most people think it is a good way to meet people and 11% of Americans have used it
- It is predominantly used by middle-class urban dwellers with some university education
- “Do you like horror movies?” turns out to be a really good predictor of compatibility
And some tips for using online dating:
- Get your friends to pick your photos as you will instinctivly try and pick mirror images of yourself rather than the best photos
- Get your friends to peer-review your profile, just like you would a CV
- Use an interesting username that is neither boring nor contains words with negative connotations
- Use pictures taken on DSLRs – whether it is the skill of the user, the higher quality camera or extra care taken, the produce much more liked photos than camera phones
- If you must use a camera phone, turn the flash off
- People love some depth of field on profile pictures too
- Selfies are good for women, but bad for men
- Smile with teeth is best, followed by no smile, smile without teeth. A smirk is the worst thing you can do.
- T-shirts or casual shirts are the way to go for men – tank tops and topless are the worst ways to go
- Showing cleavage works for women, and this becomes even more successful as they age
- Do not talk about god in your profile
- Basically everyone hates misspellings, grammar, and short replies
Overall a really interesting talk. There was also a section on sex and fetishes. The entire thing was well supported by stats and evidence. You can find the full slides on David’s website.