Dating agency
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A dating agency is a business which acts as a service for matchmaking between potential couples, with a view toward romance and/or marriage between them.
[edit] Types
A face-to-face business with an actual location - where men and women come in person and ask a matchmaker to help them find a potential partner. Usually these do best when there are a large number of members from a particular, close-knit local community group.
An online internet dating agency - a website where people register, post their profiles and then contact other members who have signed up with the agency. Many sites will leave member profiles online long after lapsed members have left.
An agency that teaches confidence to men and women - these agencies take members out and teach them how easy it is to meet somebody in public such as a bar, club, restaurant or shopping location.
A dating agency that arranges speed dating sessions - often on a monthly basis. This is a new trend, partly based on recent research that shows that many people "make up their minds" about a potential partner very quickly, based on superficial traits.
An international dating agency (more accurately called a marriage agency) - which introduces men from developed countries to a potential mail-order bride. With a well-established agency an average man can find himself a wife from an economically depressed country. Most popular brides are from Philippines, China, Russia and Ukraine. However, scams and swindles are common, and it can be increasingly difficult to get the man's host country government to accept that his marriage is a valid one.
[edit] History & trends
Though most people meet their dates at social organizations, in their daily life and work, or are introduced through friends or relatives, commercial dating agencies emerged strongly, but discreetly, in the Western world after World War II, mostly catering for the 25–44 age group. Newspaper and magazine personal ads also became common.
In the last five years, mate-finding and courtship have seen changes due to online dating services. Telecommunications and computer technologies have developed rapidly since around 1995, allowing daters the use of home telephones with answering machines – mobile phones – and web-based systems to find prospective partners. "Pre-dates" can take place by telephone or online via instant messaging, e-mail, or even video communication. A disadvantage is that, with no initial personal interview by a traditional dating agency head, Internet daters are free to exaggerate or lie about their characteristics.
While the growing popularity of the Internet took some time, now one in five singles is said to look for love on the Web, which has led to a dramatic shift in dating patterns. Research in the United Kingdom suggests that as of 2004 there were around 150 agencies there, and the market was growing at around 20 percent a year due to, first, the very low entry barriers to setting up a dating site, and secondly, the rising number of single people. However, even academic researchers find it impossible to find precise figures about crucial statistics, such as the ratio of active daters to the large number of inactive members (whom an agency will often wrongly claim as potential partners, leaving them 'on the books' long after they have left) and the overall ratio of men to women in an agency's membership. Academic research on traditional pre-Internet agencies suggests that most such agencies had far more men than women in their membership.
Traditionally, in many societies (including Western societies), men were expected to fill the role of the pursuer. However, the anonymity of the Internet (as well as other factors) has allowed women to take on that role online. A recent study indicated that "women pay to contact men as often as the reverse, which is quite different from behavior in telephone-based dating system[s]" (from Wired magazine).
The trend of singles making a Web connection continues to increase, as the percentage of North American singles who have tried Internet dating has grown from two percent in 1999 to over ten percent today (from Canadian Business, February 2002). More than half of online consumers (53%) know someone who has started a friendship or relationship online, and three-quarters of 18-to-24-year-old online consumers (74%) say they do. There is also some academic evidence that the 18–25 age group has significantly taken up online dating. This growing trend is reflected in the surging popularity of online communities such as Friendster, Facebook, and MySpace, sites which are not directly geared toward dating, but many users nonetheless use to find potential dates or research a new acquaintance to check for availability and compatibility.
There is still plenty of room for traditional matchmakers to thrive, however, and only time will tell which industry wins out in the end.