Post-holiday breakups (or the single blues). Mid-cuffing season. Pre-Valentine’s Day. This time of year is Stocking Girl’s Wet Pink Petalsa perfect storm in terms of dating.
And the dating apps have taken notice. So much so that they have created an entire holiday day to mark it: Dating Sunday.
What is Dating Sunday? To start, it’s celebrated on the first Sunday in January, meaning this year it falls on Jan. 5. Much like its older, more famous cousin Valentine’s Day, it is pretty much a made-up holiday focused on love, or more so the desire for love. But where Valentine’s Day has centuries of history and an actual saint behind it, Dating Sunday has much different origins: data.
Because of this “perfect dating storm,” apps have figured out that the first Sunday of January is the “best” time to use apps. In this society of quantity over quality, “best” means that the highest volume of people are on dating apps at this time. The term first cropped up back in 2016.
SEE ALSO: My friend made a PowerPoint to pitch me to a room full of potential dates — and I actually liked itDating Sunday is apparently the “Super Bowl of dating apps,” according to Rachel DeAlto, Match's “Chief Dating Expert.” And pretty much all of the big apps have doubled down on marketing it as such this year. Match has created a one-on-one coaching service called AskMatch so users can “start fresh” in 2020 and receive dating advice. Tinder has gone so far as to declare the entire season (New Year’s Day to February 13) “Swipe Season.” Bumble seems to be taking it a step further, creating a campaign with Tiffany Haddish and Montrezl Harrell.
While a big marketing push and the creation of a new holiday appears on the surface to be some construction of the “National __ Day” nightmare we live in practically every day, there may be something to this; the numbers that these apps are projecting are staggering.
“At Match we’re predicting that Dating Sunday 2020 will be the largest in our 25-year history,” said DeAlto.
SEE ALSO: Video chatting before first dates is actually not a terrible ideaBumble predicted the same in a mid-December that claimed they expect 3 million new users in what they call “Online Dating Season” — the time between Thanksgiving and Dating Sunday.
As Bumble’s Vice President of Strategy, Priti Joshi, told me, “We're projecting to see a 30 percent increase in new users that join the platform on that day [Dating Sunday] and expecting to see a 15 percent increase in users who are active on the app that day.”
CoffeeMeetsBagel wrote on their blog that there was a 75 percent spike in new user signupson Dating Sunday 2018. Tinder released a “Dos and Don’ts” videothat same year. This year, Match expects to see an 80 percent increase in singles using their app that day — a spike that has doubled over the past few years. They even created cutesy graphics to go along with it:
These apps were excited, almost breathlessly so, to tell me statistics surrounding Dating Sunday. According to Match, the peak time to connect is 9:15 PM ET! The top five cities to match in include D.C. and Miami! Tinder users will swipe an average of 100 more times per person during “Swipe Season”! OKCupid estimates Dating Sunday will be its busiest day in history, and even noted that they hired more engineers to handle it! Millions upon millions of people will be creating profiles and swiping, waiting to match with you!
By now it’s clear that dating apps have capitalized on our loneliness and, in this case, created a holiday out of it. But there is truth behind their numbers. Given societal pressure surrounding the major holidays of New Years and Valentine’s Day, it makes sense that singles who want to try their hand at love would do so in early January. But then, isn’t Dating Sunday a sort of ouroboros, driven by our collective desire for love that has been fostered by arbitrary holidays and now is perpetuated by an even more arbitrary day?
SEE ALSO: This viral Twitter account wants you to stop chasing men who aren't worthyMaybe! Existentialism aside, if you’re single and wondering how to use Dating Sunday to your advantage, I asked the experts for their best tips.
DeAlto advises to start the new year with a fresh perspective — so, existentialism is not going to cut it (probably). “The biggest factor I see in whether someone is a successful dater or not is their approach. I get it, it can be frustrating out there, but just because you were frustrated before, doesn’t mean you will always be,” she said. “Try to shake off what happened in 2019 and start 2020 with a new sense of hope.”
Joshi stressed how important it is to actually fill out your profile. “We want to make sure they have the best profile that they possibly can over this time period,” she said. Bumble has analyzed what makes “successful” connections, and she shared some of those insights with me. One is to have three or more photos because that increases your chances of matching someone by 31 percent. Completing your bio/“about me” section ups your odds of matching by 13 percent. Adding “badges,” which on Bumble are little personality markers like your Zodiac sign or whether you have pets, raises the chance of a match by 55 percent.
Joshi obviously focused on Bumble, but a good tip overall is to actually give a shit when creating your profile. As Hinge founder Justin McLeodtold me recently, vulnerability and authenticity go a long way. Even Tinder is encouraging you to read bios, saying in its Swipe Season press release: “Pumping the brakes on your Tinder routine may give you more time to separate substance from style. In fact, people who spend more time on each profile they pass enjoy nearly double the matches and have nearly 20% more mutual conversations than folks who speed through.”
SEE ALSO: I haven't had a boyfriend for a decade. Here's what I've learned.I know it sucks. You wish you “didn’t have to” use dating apps, you wish your hot friend had other hot friends who could set you up, you wish your coworkers were single and attractive. You don’t want to be vulnerable on a platform that contains trolls and bots and people whose bios include such charming sentences like, “I use this app on the toilet.”
But this is 2020, and dating apps are a perfectly acceptable and reasonable way to meet people — especially outside your small social circle. And whether Dating Sunday is a made-up holiday (it is) that reinforces societal pressures (it does), there is also the likelihood that if you want a date — or a one-night stand, or a lifelong partner — you want one for reasons beyond that. You want genuine connection and you have not been able to find it by living your life.
So even if you’re skeptical about Dating Sunday as I surely am, there is still value in picking up your phone and going on the plethora of dating apps you have on your phone that day. Or during “online dating season” in general. Seeing a vast increase in users could be intimidating, but think of all those people who don’t really care, who are just on the app to troll or for an ego boost. You can break that mold and potentially find someone to love — or, more important, find someone so you don’t have to participate in Dating Sunday 2021.
UPDATE: Jan. 3, 2020, 4:19 p.m. EST This article was updated to correct the percentage that adding badges to your Bumble profile increases your chance of matching. It is 55 percent, not 65.
Beyoncé, Jay Z and Chance the Rapper want their daughters to see a female president30 'Game of Thrones' episodes you need to watch before Season 8M.I.T. cuts ties with Huawei, ZTE over U.S. investigationsSpotify is urging listeners to vote with a message from Barack ObamaAmazon plans to offer satelliteDonald Trump says Bill Belichick wrote him this endorsement letterHelp, I can't be a stealth archer in 'Elder Scrolls: Blades'The Bernie Sanders doppelgänger wants you to know he's not Larry David, either'Game of Thrones' composer looks back on that iconic theme songKylie Jenner is almost certainly the lead singer of pop group Terror JrDropping $500,000 to spend New Year's Eve with Justin Bieber is a good idea'Terminator: Dark Fate': Sarah Connor kicks ass in CinemaCon footage30 'Game of Thrones' episodes you need to watch before Season 8LeBron James helps Hillary Clinton's full court press in ClevelandSamsung Galaxy S10+ can be tricked by a 3DKit Harington should go full thirst trap after ‘Game of Thrones’Watch hilarious 'Game of Thrones' sketches from 'Saturday Night Live'Dog assassins rule in 'John Wick: Chapter 3' CinemaCon footage#AndysComing will make you forget all about the Mannequin ChallengeSpotify is urging listeners to vote with a message from Barack Obama Turns out Donald Trump isn't even the most popular Trump WhatsApp clarifies it cannot see your private messages TikTok introduces stricter privacy rules for its youngest users Melania Trump spoke out against bullying and Twitter can't take the irony The AirPop Active+ Halo is a true 'smart mask' for your lungs LG actually plans to release rollable phone, and soon Trump mispronounced 'Namibia' and it's sad but not surprising Signal hits No. 1 in Apple's App Store after Elon Musk boost J.K. Rowling totally annihilates Fox News interviewer in less than 140 characters Car screens didn't just go big at CES. They went 3D, with game Liam Gallagher getting mad about tea is absolute perfection HBO Max's 'Locked Down' starring Anne Hathaway: Movie review MacBook Pro is getting MagSafe again, report claims Toto's 'Wellness Toilet' sounds great. But it's still just a concept. NASA and NOAA say 2020 was one of the warmest years on record YaDoggie wants to stop you from overfeeding your dog Killing Zero Latency VR's zombies is even more fun with family Terrifying faceless illusion makeup is straight out of a Salvador Dali painting Chrissy Teigen has found her Halloween costume for this year and it's definitely original Drake's 'Degrassi' meme appeared in a NYC Parks Department proposal for some reason
2.9225s , 10157.1953125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Stocking Girl’s Wet Pink Petals】,Wisdom Convergence Information Network