studyfinds.org /dating-profiles-more-original/

Want your online dating profile to get more attention? Study reveals keys to finding love on apps

Study Finds 3-3 minutes 10/19/2022

TILBURG, Netherlands — Dating profiles that contain metaphors and concrete personal information, rather than vague statements spark more attention, according to a new study.

Researchers in the Netherlands say apps such as Tinder, Hinge, and Bumble have made dating quicker and easier for singles across the globe. However, they tend to make people pickier, as the pool of potential dates has become endless.

The numerous options mean it is important to have a profile that stands out. According to the new research, the profiles that have more original text have the most success. That text could be anything from a small fact or a joke, to future life goals, or your favorite food.

What should a successful online dating profile contain?

The team asked 1,234 dating app users to evaluate the originality of the text in several dating profiles and rate the profile owner’s personality and attractiveness. The sites included in the study mostly serve users over the age of 50, and all 308 profiles used for the study were altered to preserve each person’s anonymity.

Those with more original profiles scored higher on intelligence, sense of humor, attractiveness, and most importantly, the likelihood of participants wanting to date them. The research delved further still by analyzing what kind of text people perceive to be more original than others.

They found that text with original stylistic features, such as metaphors, helped a profile’s success. The most appealing profiles also included more concrete personal information, rather than just vague statements. In general, participants showed high agreement on which profile texts they perceived as original and which they perceived as “odd.”

Participants generally considered those odd profiles to be unoriginal.

“An online dating profile text considered original boosts personality and attractiveness evaluations,” the researchers conclude in a media release.

To find out more about the art of online dating, the team says more research is necessary involving younger participants and exploring the originality of texts in other areas such as job cover letters or advertisements.

The findings appear in the journal PLoS ONE.

South West News Service writer Alice Clifford contributed to this report.