Media Money
- LinkedIn Earnings Bode Well for Hiring and Social Media
- News Corp. Beats Estimates on Studio, Cable Strength
- Disney’s Earnings Beat; CEO Bob Iger Talks Piracy, Parks
- Ahead of Disney’s Earnings: Ads and Cable Revenue at the Magic Kingdom
- Coinstar Beats Earnings Forecast on Redbox Growth
- After The Super Bowl: Who’s Buying?
- Super Bowl XLVI: It's All About the Second Screen
- The Super Bowl's Big Advertising Winners: Super Sunday Ad Tracker
- A Sneak Peek at Facebook's New Headquarters
- Twitter’s CEO Weighs in on Google, Censorship Ahead of Facebook IPO
RSS FEED
MOST SHARED
- Greek Debt Saga Back on Center Stage for Markets
- Obama Likely to Call for Cutting Top Corporate Tax Rate
- Special Feature: Wall Street History - How Wall Street Got Its Name
- Obama to Project $901 Billion Budget Deficit in 2013
- Private Homebuilders: Dead Men Walking
- When Love and the Fed Collide
- How to Trade the Turmoil in Greece
- Steelers' Antonio Brown Spends Super Bowl Week with Twitter Fan Turned BFF
- We're Not Greece: Italian Prime Minister Monti
- LinkedIn CEO Calms Post-Lockup Concerns
- In Search of America's ‘Hottest Forecasters’
- Dow vs. S&P 500: Which is a Better Investment?
- Mick Fleetwood on the MP3 ‘Dumbing Down’ of Music
- Avis on the Road to Strong Growth: Analyst
- Private Homebuilders: Dead Men Walking
- LinkedIn’s Growth Is Already Priced In: Analyst
- The Real Reason Behind Bank of America’s Rally
- 5 Hedge Funds’ Top Stocks Soar After 2011 Rout
- This Valentine’s Day Love Is Served on a Silver Platter
- Greek Cabinet Approves EU, IMF Bailout Bill
- We're Not Greece: Italian Prime Minister Monti
- Private Homebuilders in the US: Dead Men Walking
- Dividend Payout Could Hit Record Amount This Year
- With Investors So Bullish, Stock Pullback Must Be Ahead
- Obama Likely to Call for Cutting Top Corporate Tax Rate
- New York Fashion Week Fall 2012
- NetNet: Why Saving Greece Could Destroy the World
- My Funny Valentine: When Love and the Fed Collide
The Big Business of Online Dating
CNBC Correspondent
Online dating isn't just about making love connections, it's about making lots and lots of money.
And as the stigma of meeting a match online falls by the wayside, the industry's growth is accelerating. Online dating revenues are growing 10 percent to 15 percent per year, on track to hit one point nine billion dollars within three years, according to Piper Jaffray. The pullback in consumer spending hasn't slowed down the industry at all: if anything it seems to have made Americans more eager to settle down.
The two major players are Match.com, which is owned by Barry Diller's IAC/Interactive Corp [IACI
Loading...
()
] and eHarmony, which is privately held. IAC's Match sites, which includes Match.com and Chemistry.com generated $343 million in revenue this year, reporting 1.4 million active subscribers, about 15 percent of the market. eHarmony doesn't disclose its user numbers, but Piper Jaffray's Gene Munster estimates that its revenues were about $250 million with about 13 percent market share.
eHarmony costs about twice as much as Match.com per month, but eHarmony's CEO Greg Waldorf explained to me why he believes it's worth it. eHarmony is responsible for 2 percent of all U.S. marriages. That's right, 236 eHarmony members get married every day. Waldorf says that the lengthy questionnaire and the price tag weeds out people who aren't serious, and the algorithm they use to crunch the answers matches customers with compatible life partners.
Match and eHarmony aren't the only players.
There are the niche sites like JDate.com and Christianmingle.com, which are both owned by Spark Networks [LOV
Loading...
()
] .
In addition to Match.com and Chemistry.com IAC owns niche sites Blackpeoplemeet.com, singleparentmeet.com and seniorpeoplemeet.com.
All these premium services face competition from free sites like Plentyoffish.com, which is ad supported sites. And then of course there are social networks. Forty one percent of online daters say they also use sites like Facebook to find dates. But so far the explosion of social networking hasn't proven a threat to paid sites.
Piper Jaffray's Munster says eHarmony is a natural acquisition target for a company like AOL [AOL
Loading...
()
] or Yahoo [YHOO
Loading...
()
], or even IAC if Diller wants to make a big push for this market. He says we can also expect some of the larger players to snap up niche sites, as the whole market grows.
Questions? Comments?









