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	<title>Comments on: Online Dating Insider Links for Friday, December 5, 2008</title>
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	<link>http://onlinedatingpost.com/archives/2008/12/online-dating-insider-links-for-friday-december-5-2008/</link>
	<description>Online Dating Industry Consulting &#38; Commentary</description>
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		<title>By: David Evans</title>
		<link>http://onlinedatingpost.com/archives/2008/12/online-dating-insider-links-for-friday-december-5-2008/comment-page-1/#comment-234772</link>
		<dc:creator>David Evans</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Dec 2008 14:58:48 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Sharon, I couldn&#039;t agree more. Online dating is a tool, not a be all, end all solution. I like to use the analogy of looking for a job. It&#039;s not enough to post a resume to a job board and sit back waiting for the dream job to come calling. You email your friends and contacts, keep your eyes open, maybe work with a recruiter, visit job fairs and so on.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Sharon, I couldn&#8217;t agree more. Online dating is a tool, not a be all, end all solution. I like to use the analogy of looking for a job. It&#8217;s not enough to post a resume to a job board and sit back waiting for the dream job to come calling. You email your friends and contacts, keep your eyes open, maybe work with a recruiter, visit job fairs and so on.</p>
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		<title>By: Sharon</title>
		<link>http://onlinedatingpost.com/archives/2008/12/online-dating-insider-links-for-friday-december-5-2008/comment-page-1/#comment-234768</link>
		<dc:creator>Sharon</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 07 Dec 2008 23:15:24 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>I joined eharmony and Match in April of this year.  This has been a bewildering experience that is becoming increasingly more baffling.  (I will tell you I&#039;m a reasonable, well-educated pretty woman, a grandmother with a good heart and a sophisticated, well-traveled background -- somewht naive now but open-minded with what I like to think of is good will for all).  I joined eharmony for one year and have had two dialogues with two men, though I willingly sent out the first set of questions to most of the men with whom eharmony thought I&#039;d be a match -- ( I had put down that I was a christian and at first I was sent men who were, I thought, rigid and fundamentalist, right-wing in their politics, (I am a liberal) and unacceptable but I went along.  I have come to believe that the highly touted screening and matching process of eharmony is the fiction of a hyper-thyroid ad executive, and in reality and practice nonexistant.

Match is a different ballgame with much more information upfront and easy access to each member without the formal, sterile process of eharmony (which in truth obfuscates more than helps).  

I&#039;ve had no success.  After numerous unanswered and polite queries to prospective Match suitors, I re-wrote my profile (was I too formal?  too reticent?  not &#039;fun&#039; sounding enough?)  I got turn-downs from men forty miles away (&quot;physical distance too great&quot;), a date with a man whom I didn&#039;t find suitable, a rich player, a Vegas-type who turned out to be NOT INTERESTED in me....sigh.  It would be easy to dismiss it all as men being from Detroit and women from Paris, but I don&#039;t think it&#039;s that simple:  Online dating services play into a core loneliness with people, by advertising that shows prince charming or the girl-of-my-dreams and the most longed-for and &#039;found&#039; true loves.  I think we all truly forget they are capitalist ventures, designed to make money and to that end they&#039;ve been a spectacular success.  I haven&#039;t lost faith in love or men or possibilities, but I&#039;m convinced that the chance of meeting Mr. Right within the parameters of online dating are slim to none, despite the ads.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I joined eharmony and Match in April of this year.  This has been a bewildering experience that is becoming increasingly more baffling.  (I will tell you I&#8217;m a reasonable, well-educated pretty woman, a grandmother with a good heart and a sophisticated, well-traveled background &#8212; somewht naive now but open-minded with what I like to think of is good will for all).  I joined eharmony for one year and have had two dialogues with two men, though I willingly sent out the first set of questions to most of the men with whom eharmony thought I&#8217;d be a match &#8212; ( I had put down that I was a christian and at first I was sent men who were, I thought, rigid and fundamentalist, right-wing in their politics, (I am a liberal) and unacceptable but I went along.  I have come to believe that the highly touted screening and matching process of eharmony is the fiction of a hyper-thyroid ad executive, and in reality and practice nonexistant.</p>
<p>Match is a different ballgame with much more information upfront and easy access to each member without the formal, sterile process of eharmony (which in truth obfuscates more than helps).  </p>
<p>I&#8217;ve had no success.  After numerous unanswered and polite queries to prospective Match suitors, I re-wrote my profile (was I too formal?  too reticent?  not &#8216;fun&#8217; sounding enough?)  I got turn-downs from men forty miles away (&#8220;physical distance too great&#8221;), a date with a man whom I didn&#8217;t find suitable, a rich player, a Vegas-type who turned out to be NOT INTERESTED in me&#8230;.sigh.  It would be easy to dismiss it all as men being from Detroit and women from Paris, but I don&#8217;t think it&#8217;s that simple:  Online dating services play into a core loneliness with people, by advertising that shows prince charming or the girl-of-my-dreams and the most longed-for and &#8216;found&#8217; true loves.  I think we all truly forget they are capitalist ventures, designed to make money and to that end they&#8217;ve been a spectacular success.  I haven&#8217;t lost faith in love or men or possibilities, but I&#8217;m convinced that the chance of meeting Mr. Right within the parameters of online dating are slim to none, despite the ads.</p>
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