The art of online conversation
On a dating site, conversation replaces eye contact, body language, and in-person charm. It's through your words that the other person discovers your personality, humor, and intelligence. Every message is an opportunity to create a connection.
Unlike face-to-face discussion, online communication gives you time to think before responding. Use this advantage to send thoughtful and engaging messages rather than automatic responses.
First messages that capture attention
Forget the 'Hey, how are you?' that disappears into the crowd. A good first message shows you've read the person's profile and something genuinely interested you.
Ask an open question related to a specific element of their profile: 'I saw you love hiking! Do you have a favorite trail in Belgium?' This shows interest and makes responding easy.
Maintaining a captivating conversation
Here are the keys to successful online dialogue:
- Alternate between questions and personal sharing: don't turn the exchange into an interrogation
- Use humor in moderation: a witty remark at the right moment is worth a thousand emojis
- Build on their responses: show you're actually listening, not just waiting for your turn
- Vary topics: passions, travel, projects, childhood memories, favorite food
- Use voice notes occasionally to add a human dimension
- Share anecdotes: personal stories create intimacy
Pitfalls to avoid in your conversations
Don't monopolize the conversation. If you're writing paragraphs and the other person responds with two words, adjust. Conversation needs to be balanced to work.
Avoid heavy topics early on (exes, personal problems, strong political opinions). Also keep some mystery: don't tell your entire life story in the first exchanges, otherwise there'll be nothing left to discover on the first date.
Knowing when to suggest a date
Don't let the conversation drag on forever online. After 5 to 10 days of regular exchanges, if the connection is good, suggest a date. Conversations that stretch over weeks often lose momentum and end up fading away.
Suggest naturally: 'We seem to get along well! How about coffee on Saturday?' If the person hesitates, suggest a video call first as an intermediate step.