Yes. Also, if a man feels the need to pitch 5-15 minute meetings with swipe app prospects, he might as well choose some stranger approach method where he can have 5-15 minute conversations and then propose a date if that 5-15 minute conversation goes well.The same thing you might accomplish by meeting up for 5-15 minutes I can do over the phone/texts and I didn't have to get cleaned up an drive anywhere.
Back in the early 2010s, I started running into phone call problems with women from online dating websites and then later swipe apps. It was very difficult to get a 1980s born Millennial woman to actually use a telephone for voice conversations. There were issues with unreturned calls. I also did not notice phone calls prior to dates having any impact on my failed first date rate. I was having a problem with "one date, no sex, no second date" type interactions. Before stopping swipe apps, I stopped phone calls prior to dates.I actually discovered, and strongly prefer, to have either a phone call or video call prior to the first date. This alone has brought flakiness down to zero.
It's a form of frame, vetting, and building rapport which is much needed these days.
I've never had this said to me. Maybe find more interested women? Guarantee they would never only want to meet for 5 minutesAnyone notice if this gets them to say yes and commit more than the other "lets go for a drink"? Personally, yes imo. What you guys think?
I guess it's just a form of screening. If you are doing a video call with a girl from a dating app, she's already swiped right on you. She thinks you're hot.The video call tactic is better than phone calls. However, it's a extra layer of complexity. By the time you arrange and complete a video call, you might as well have approached a stranger in-person and gotten a date agreement that way.
You're comparing apples and oranges. An initial approach is the same as an initial right swipe. That's the comparison that needs to be made. Most in-person approaches are in vain, just as most right swipes are in vain.I guess it's just a form of screening. If you are doing a video call with a girl from a dating app, she's already swiped right on you. She thinks you're hot. If you just approach a random stranger, unless you are very good looking to the point that nearly all girls are going to think you are hot, then it's very likely that she'll have no interest in you and the approach will be in vain
I still don’t like those. OLD is already so impersonal and this adds to it. It’s so “job interview” like. Takes a lot of the naturalness out.I actually discovered, and strongly prefer, to have either a phone call or video call prior to the first date. This alone has brought flakiness down to zero.
It's a form of frame, vetting, and building rapport which is much needed these days.
And for video you look worse on camera than in person or in pics. It's awkward and lots of opportunity for scrutiny or her part *and* you have to clean up your appearance as you would for a date.I still don’t like those. OLD is already so impersonal and this adds to it. It’s so “job interview” like. Takes a lot of the naturalness out.
In my experience, “best practice” was to just save everything for the in-person date and just double book them. If she flakes, it is because she thinks she found a better option and that is her loss.I actually discovered, and strongly prefer, to have either a phone call or video call prior to the first date. This alone has brought flakiness down to zero.
I can understand why a man would want to arrange a video call. The whole point would be to do it in an effort to reduce the probability of a bad first date. Too many men are sick of failed first date interactions.I've never even imagined how uncomfortable and awkward it would be for the girl to receive a "video call" before the fvcking 1st date, just because the dude wanted to "build rapport" (which, ironically, should be the purpose of the 1st date).
Some of you folks are making this way too over-complicated.
I'm quick but not that quick.Anyone notice if this gets them to say yes and commit more than the other "lets go for a drink"? Personally, yes imo. What you guys think?