First Contact:
Do's and Don'ts for Replying to Personal Ads
By Tracy Brant at Dateable.com
You may have a great personal ad... and a wonderful smiling
photo to go with your ad... but things can still fall apart
if you are sending out an awkward first message in response
to other people's ads. What can you do to make that first
message work for you?
DO:
Write in advance. This lets you think about what you want
to say about yourself and, more importantly, check your spelling
and grammar. Have a friend read and react to your draft message.
Spellcheck. Yes, this counts. It shows that you are serious
about finding dates and willing to pay attention to details.
Some people are just natural bad spellers, but it can make
you look less smart or less educated than you really are.
Most websites do not offer spellchecking of profiles.
Personalize! We recommend writing a general template of a
first message, but you have to personalize it for each person
you contact. Mention something from their profile, ask a question
that refers to something they wrote, or describe how you would
be a good match for them. Mention what attracted your attention
to their ad. No one wants to think they just received a form
letter.
Write more than one line. "Liked your profile... want
to chat?" This may be the most commonly-sent message
on a dating website... and the most ignored. You need to say
something else. Set yourself apart and say something interesting
to get a reply.
Use humor. If someone with a great personal ad is receiving
lots of replies... what will make yours stand out? A funny
line might help. But if you have noticed that people do not
respond well to your brand of humor... save your jokes for
later.
Keep track of whom you've contacted. Don't write a series
of letters to someone who has not responded... you'll look
desperate or like a stalker.
DON'T:
Don't demand personal info immediately. Certainly not if
you have failed to offered any details yourself. Go for a
balance between talking about yourself and asking about them.
Don't open with your last failed relationship. Sure, you
have a dating history. But talking about "game players,
liars, and cheats" makes you sound a little bitter. Don't
sound like you are obsessed with past partners... or that
you think everyone will hurt you.
Don't open with sex. "Hi. You look sexy." Unless
the person's ad specifically says they only want a casual
sexual relationship, it can easily sound vulgar and rude.
Women, in particular, typically delete those messages. When
men get letters like that, they often expect a link to a porn
site to follow. Even on a website that focuses on "adult
activities," you need to do more than describe your body
or fantasies.
Don't write a novel. Sending out your life story as a first
contact is going to look odd. You need to write enough to
sound like you have a life, not a book you'd like to publish.
Don't open with "I hate online dating." It is amazing
how many people open a note with a line that condemns online
dating sites and the people that use them. You are talking
to someone that uses a dating website! Do you really want
to immediately imply that they are desperate, dumb, or dangerous?
Don't ask for a phone number, address, or last name before
you have even gotten a reply from someone. You may be mistaken
for a serial killer or a telemarketer. Go slowly in asking
for that sort of information; you don't want to scare off
prospective dates.
© Dateable.com LLC 2002
___________________
About the author: Tracy Brant is a freelance writer and an
editor at Dateable.com. She can be contacted at tracy@dateable.com.
Dateable.com is an exciting online community for singles,
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