Finding your Mr. or Miss Right through Free Online Dating Services
Millions are on the verge of finding someone who could bring companionship to their lives. For them, being alone is not fair. When they see other people living a happy life because they have someone with them, they feel envious. They also crave for someone who could also make them feel important and happy.
Kiss &Tell List! Launches New Online Dating Information Service; A Social Networking Site Where People Report Problems With Online Dating
Kiss & Tell List! is a new online dating information service for reporting problems with Internet dating sites and the people met on them. Online daters can share their experiences and report problems ranging from people who are opportunists to romance fraud.
Free Online Dating Services
Free online dating services are traditional dating companies that have moved and expanded to the online service of providing dating services to the public via the internet. Free online dating service providers allow for a database of potential relationships to blossom. It has been described as the "singles bar of the 1990's" and has doubled in size since 1996. Free online dating services offer real time chat, emailing, profiling, and telephone access dependant on the clients choices. In order to access these free online dating services, the potential client must have access to the Internet via an Internet service provider, over the age of 18 and have registered with their chosen dating service provider.
The Pros and Cons of the Online Dating Service List
Online dating services are everywhere. It's hard not to notice them. They place advertisements on your television screens, neighborhood billboards, radio stations, and on your favorite websites but one question always arises if you are the slightest bit interested in joining one. Are they worth it? As a CEO of a dating website and a user of the service personally, I can tell you that they are worth it, but with some drawbacks. I have put together the reasons below. In essence there are good things and bad things about online dating sites and I will gladly expose the truth.
Free Online Dating Review
The popularity of online dating is unquestionable. It has generated a lot of interest and curiosity among the singles and even those that aren't. A lot of people have toyed with the idea of signing up and begin dating through cyberspace. But people who have not decided if online dating is the way to go has another option available for them. Free online dating is a viable option to take.
Online dating sites bring sunshine to my life
It might be surprising, but I came to know about the online dating sites from my teenage son, Joy. No, Joy is not old enough to try online dating, he is only 12. He got the idea from his best friend whose elder sister is a regular to these online dating sites. You must be wondering why a boy would suggest his mum to try these online dating sites. Well its coz I am a single mother. After a bitter relationship, I was left alone with Joy. Joy brought me the whole world of happiness. I was too busy looking after him to think about anything else. I was happy coz taking his care took most of my time and I could also forget my loneliness in that pretext. But as Joy started growing up, he got busy with his school, friends, dance classes, Karate ...
The Three Biggest Myths About Online Dating Services
It seems as if online dating sites are almost everywhere you turn when you are surfing the Internet these days, so what is all this about? Many people are turning to online dating as a starting point to actually meet someone who shares their interests, no matter what those interests are. Online dating has actually proven to be a major benefit to those looking for a compatible partner with interests similar to their own, and is much better than spending time in a bar, in the library, and other "chance" places to meet someone.
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Social Networking/Media and the Job Search
Suddenly, or maybe not so suddenly, social networking is everywhere. Facebook, LinkedIn, MySpace, Twitterýand more like them are popping up daily. It seems that we are craving the need to speak to one another virtually. Never mind that we have cell phones, e-mail, IM, and text messaging, we seem to need these sites too.
I recently joined the Twitter craze and the Facebook craze. When I became Facebook ýfriendsý with my neighbor down the street, he remarked (on my wall, of course), ýOh goodýnow we can keep in touch.ý Now we can? The fact that we pass each other every day walking our dogs and driving our kids to soccer practice apparently now pales in comparison to being friends on Facebook.
I have to admitýit is a head-scratcher for me as to why this is such a craze, but craze it is, and now it is taking over the job search realm as well.
On the one hand, Iým relieved. Maybe now we can certainly prune off those ineffective job search boards and whittle it down to just the ones that actually post real jobs with real people at the other end of the Submit button. And God knows that for years us career pros have been shouting ýnetworkingý at the top of our lungs to job seekers. Furthermore, who can argue against the logic in building up a network of professional contacts in LinkedIn?
Certainly everyone seems excited by the possibilityýdare I say ýhopeýýthat these sites seem to bring to the job seeker. Now that I am on Twitter, I certainly see enough ýtweetsý going on about it.
So why am I a bit skeptical? Why do I get that uneasy feeling?
1. There are two key rules to conducting effective networking: tact and timing. If you go on Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter, and spend all your time (and it definitely takes time) building up your friends, contacts, fellow tweets, whatever, only to beg them to help you find a job, you probably arenýt going to get far. On Facebook, your high-school and college friends want to talk about what silly things their kids are doing and post old, embarrassing photos of you. On Twitter, you need to be just the right balance of sociable and aggressive to get people to even follow you or respond to you. (You need to find as many witty things as you can to say in 140 characters about what you are doing right now.) On LinkedIn, it is certainly OK to be more open about things, but generally you need to stay professional and make yourself sound as employed as possible (even though you are looking for a job).
2. I touched on this in #1, but it bears more discussion here. These sites are extreme time-suckersýan hour is like a minute and two hours is like a minute and a half. Donýt get me wrong. They can be entertaining and certainly enjoyable, but you need to be careful that all your time isnýt sucked up by them. Resumes still need to get out the door. Phone calls still need to be made. If you donýt watch out, they can give you the illusion that you are doing something toward your job search, when in fact little progress is really being made.
So does that mean I am against them? No, it just means that you need to be careful with them. A little too social, and you will walk away with lots of great tidbits about your friends, but you will have very little to show for it on the job search front. A little too aggressive on the job search side, and you will walk away without any friends.
Of course, all of that has been true for face-to-face networking as well. The difference here is that this type of networking is 24/7 and everywhere, so it makes those issues even more exaggerated in this arena. As a small business owner offering services in this same scene, I am well aware of the causalities in not getting the balance right.
That is why I am so much in favor of group job hunting, both in person (be it local groups, etc.) and online. In these settings, everyone is there for the same person, and the discussion is to the point. Job seekers can put their noddles together, swap leads and resumes, share advice, and so on. And no one is irritated that you are looking for a job.
I am a big believer that job seekers should try all kinds of ways to look for a job and should be aware of and focus the majority of their precious time and resources on those tactics that are the most effective. With that said, give Facebook and Twitter your all, but remember that there are other avenues as well, like group job hunting, that offer you more productive discussions and contacts.
My company is called NoddlePlace.com, a group job hunting networking site, and I am an MBA and certified professional rýsumý writer (CPRW). Feel free to give me a call toll-free at 1-866-755-9800 or sign up to receive my free Job Search Advice eGuide today.
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