|
ehormony
Review

Cost
Structure
1 Month = $59.95
3 Months = $110.85 ($36.95 a month)
6 Months = $173.70 ($28.95 a month)
1 Year = $251.40 ($20.95 a month)
Best
Feature:
Matching based on detailed relationship algorithms
Most
Annoying Feature:
Once you are paid you can only communicate with other
people who have paid. So while you may have 70 highly
compatible matches, only those matches that are paid
members can communicate back to you!
Review
eHarmony is, without a doubt, one of the most unique
dating sites online. You can tell from the get-go that
they are serious about their task.
eHarmony
is based on the theory that there are hundreds of dimensions
that every person has and by cross analyzing dimensions,
the service creates highly compatible matches for you.
eHarmony
isn't a visual pick-em-as-you-see-them buffet like most
other dating sites. When you sign up on eHarmony, you
must complete an in-depth personality survey that literally
takes about an hour or so to finish. The survey delves
into hundreds of these "dimensions" then uses
your responses to cross match you with other eHarmony
members. You are then presented only with profiles of
other members who are highly compatible to you.
The
interesting thing about forcing members to do a detailed
analysis of themselves up front is that it weeds out
a lot of people. For example, men only looking for a
quick one-night stand are highly unlikely to sign up
on eHarmony since the focus is more relationship-oriented
versus a visual free-for-all. And some men just don't
like analyzing their inner self. Thus, eHarmony accomplishes
something that virtually no other dating site has: there
are twice as many women on eHarmony than there are men.
On
most dating sites, the ratio of men to women is 70-30.
Yet on eHarmony, the ladies outnumber the gentlemen.
So men who are serious about finding a meaningful relationship
may only need to visit eHarmony. And the good thing
for women is that they know that the men on eHarmony
know how to use their right brain since they went through
the process of analyzing themselves in detail by taking
the same personality profile required of all members.
The
way eHarmony works is that after you sign up and fill
out the in-depth personality profile, you are presented
with new matches on a regular basis. These are people
that are supposed to be "highly compatible"
with you based on scientific relationship research.
It cross matches based on dozens of dimensions including
29 "vital" dimensions that deal in the area
of emotional health, family values, personality, and
character.
As
a paying member, you can request communication with
any of your matches. If a match agrees then you are
taken through a three step process before you can openly
email them:
Step
1: Multiple Choice Questions. You select five personality/character/relationship
oriented multiple choice questions from a predetermined
list that is presented to the other person to answer.
They do the same in return.
Step
2: You submit your Must Have and Must Have Nots list
that shows your match the things that you "must
have" in a partner (i.e. chemistry, loyalty)
and things you "can't stand" in a partner
(i.e. rude, racist, couch potato).
Step
3: You submit three "open-ended" questions
that the other person answers. You can select from
a list of predetermined questions or write your own.
Step
4: You are now in open communication and can freely
communicate with the other person.
Anytime
during this process you or the other person can "close"
the match for any reason. Here's a sample of the "status"
of matches:

Here
are three of my 70 matches on eHarmony. I've whited
out the names of the matches in this example. The green
explanation point means the person is a new match for
me. The yellow"H" means the person has put
me on "hold" (meaning they may be interested,
but are pursuing another match). The red X means the
person has "closed" me, meaning they aren't
interested (for whatever reason) and I can't communicate
further with them.
eHarmony
is, without a doubt, one of the best dating sites online
for people looking for a serious relationship. But that
doesn't mean that eHarmony doesn't have a few "quirks".
I do have two big qualms with eHarmony about their service:
1.
eHarmony forces you to be a member to communicate
with another member trying to contact you. At $59.95
a month, you'd think eHarmony would have the decency
to allow you to communicate with any of your matches
without your match having to worry about dishing out
$59.95 also!
2.
eHarmony sometimes promotes a "7-day Free Trial".
This, too, is highly deceptive because you have to
give your credit card information so that you can
immediately be billed for your first month when your
7-day "free trial" is over.
I
would think that eHarmony would be beyond these type
of deceptive practices, because they present themselves
as a very honorable and "different" experience
for online daters.
In
regards to their service, I have no recommendations
because their execution is nearly flawless. eHarmony's
slogan is "fall in love for all the right reasons"
and they seem to provide the proper service that allows
that to happen.
Conclusion
Deceptions aside, I give eHarmony high marks for really
setting itself apart from the rest of the online dating
services. eHarmony has taken online dating to levels
that present a much better experience for those involved.
The quality of people I've communicated with is exceptional
and the experience has been extremely rewarding.
Pros
in-depth matching engine
proven techniques
quality matches |
Cons
very
expensive
both must subscribe
free trial deception
|
|