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Dating Coach

I Want You!

Not in THAT way, silly. I’m just looking for an amazing and passionate intern to work closely with me on this blog. Why go to Craigslist when I have you guys?

Anyway, I will be choosing one loyal reader (and dedicated soul) to be responsible for posting all my blogs on this site and other content aggregators. I know, I know, it ain’t glamorous, but there are some perks:

You get to read ALL the incoming email questions, including the weird sex ones, the ones from sweet but naive fifteen year old girls, and the semi-literate ones from men in Chad looking for American wives.

You get to DECIDE which questions I answer. Seriously. I receive over a hundred and fifty questions each month. You narrow it down to 8, of which I’ll write about 4. This is why finding a regular reader who knows the majority of this material is paramount. Computer skills are a bonus, but someone who really LOVES this relationship stuff is ideal.

You get to delete the comments of people who insult me and other readers. Only one rule to remember. Dissenting opinions are okay. Being rude to the host and other guests is not.

You get a sneak preview of each of my answers one month in advance. I may type fast and spell well, but I’m still prone to bouts of stupidity, redundancy, and cluelessness. It’s your job to make me look good.  

To be super-clear - I’m not making it sound like you’re super lucky to be sifting thru my emails. It is, after all, a non-paid position. However, if you’re passionate about the subject of dating and relationships, and can give me a few hours every month, I would be extremely grateful.

Oh, one final perk: If you ever thought, "I’D like to be a dating coach…" this is how you’d get your start. Seriously.

If you’re responsible, trustworthy, and computer literate, write a brief email to support at e-cyrano. com explaining why you’re right for the job and how much time you have to give. Subject header is Cool Gig. Your name and phone # would also be nice, thanks.

I really appreciate you taking a second to read thru my public service announcement. Our regular programming will resume on Wed, May 14 with Online Dating Addiction! May 21st, we’ve got the Curse of the Attractive Woman.

I do so love this job…

Evan

P.S. Want better results in your love life? Click here to read my FREE eBook "7 Secrets for Dating Success" and receive news about all my new articles, products and seminars.

 

 

 

 

 

 

6 Comments »Uncategorized

The Secret to Love: Mr. Imperfect is Actually Mr. Right

We interrupt our regular programming for this gem of a letter from a reader. Jeanne embodies the spirit of Advice From a Single Dating Expert and I’m thrilled to give her the floor today.

Like many of you, Jeanne’s a self-described "catch" who was really struggling in love. Seems there were no quality guys for her and she felt woefully unappreciated by the emotionally unavailable men she was meeting. She articulately confessed her frustration, and I wrote her a reply with my typical, "look in the mirror", "take responsibility", "see the male side of things" response. I would encourage you to read it before you move forward, because it sets the table for what comes next.

And boy, do I love what comes next:

Dear Evan,

I was reading your response to 3/24/08 Paula and I realize that I have been remiss! Evan, you and I had a special "anniversary" last week.:-)

A year ago, I wrote you in desperation with my dating life. And it seems that I quickly graduated to "Favorite Posts (3/21/07) - Where are all the emotionally available mentally healthy men?" Little did I realize what staying power my issue had :-).

So I would like to give you and your readers an update on my situation - especially since I think it is very, very relevant to Paula.

You were quite harsh with me in your response on 3/21/07 - ouch!!!!:-) 

But desperate times require desperate measures, so I held up the mirror and painstakingly went through your commentary for applicability:

1)  Men think women over 40 are "hard". That was an easy one. You will find no one on the planet more laid back and fun loving than me - and I have a zillion people to verify that :-). 

2)  Do I have an over-inflated sense of self and exaggerate in my online dating profile? My pictures were 4 months old. And while I talked about my work "saving the world" so to speak, I also noted that I rode my bicycle into my neighbor’s car because I am a hopeless spaz. :-)  So I was honest in my profile.

3)  Your conclusion? If I was who I said I was, then some single dad would find me irresistible someday.

You were right.  I met him 2 days later.

It took 5 months to make me realize that there was this extraordinary man who was in love with me and who would wait as long as it took for me to get my $h!t together.

Did I know that I had met him? Like Paula, I had an image of what would be the "right" man for me.  Did the gentleman I meet on that date fit? He soooooooooooooooo didn’t - he was bald, gray and wore glasses! 

It took 5 months - and a whole lot of dates with other men, and a really bad experience with a man whom I felt explosive ‘chemistry’ with - to make me realize that there was this extraordinary man who was in love with me and who would wait as long as it took for me to get my $h!t together. …

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72 Comments »Uncategorized, Dating Tips & Advice, Sex & Relationship Advice

How Do I Start a Conversation with a Straight Single Man?

I’m a 42 year old woman, newly single. I’m just re-entering the dating fray for the first time in many years, and I discovered very quickly that I have no idea how to identify men my age who are single and looking. They sure seem to be scarce, compared to when I was in my twenties! I’ve chatted up guys who turned out to be gay or attached - they were just extremely friendly/chatty, which I occasionally mistake for an interest in me. And I’m too shy to laugh off any misunderstanding with a comment like, "Well, if you have any single brothers or friends, here’s my card!"

I’m dating online, but I’d also like to meet people in other ways.  Yes, there are the singles events, the frozen food aisle during off-peak hours, etc. But for other situations I may find myself in - elevators, gyms, coffee shops - do you have any suggestions on how I could strike up a breezy, innocuous conversation and still be able to "out" single men?  The "Wow, nice jacket - did your partner pick that out for you?" line doesn’t seem too subtle.

Thanks very much for any insights. 

Enjoy your blog, loved your book.

Linda

Love your attitude, Linda. It’s tough out there, all right, and the healthiest approach is to do exactly what you’re doing. A combination of online dating, singles events, and real-life interactions, all of which create the greatest number of opportunities to meet single men.

That said, it’s not your job to “out” single men.

Because single men have been socialized well enough to know that it’s their job to initiate conversation with you. And if they don’t, they’re going to go home alone AGAIN. I’m not suggesting that this is a biological imperative or that nothing good has every come from women asking men out. Still, I’m a big believer that your primary job is to create the opportunity, not to seal the deal.

Your primary job is to create the opportunity, not to seal the deal.

Check out this short clip from a presentation I made in which I discuss how women can create opportunities with men. It’s at the very end of the five minute montage and it starts with “So if you want to meet a guy at a party…”. To sum up, it’s not your position to ask him out. All you have to do is make eye contact and smile. This gives him  permission to come over without being afraid of being shot down. Because that’s every guy’s concern, especially nice guys. We HATE feeling like fools. We HATE rejection. And we’d just as soon not even approach you, since it’s easier to go home and say, “Man, I wish I said hi” than it is to put our fragile egos on the line. The only way to get an insecure guy to come over is to let him know it’s going to be okay if he does.

Rachel Greenwald discusses her proactive approach for women in her book, and my friend David Wygant’s book “Always Talk to Strangers” is also illuminating, although it’s more written for men. But it sounds like you really have two questions, Linda – you want to “out” single men and you want to find pithy pick up lines as well….

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67 Comments »Dating Tips & Advice

In the Computer Dating Game, Room for a Coach

A nice piece in Sunday’s New York Times about the growing industry for online dating coaches, profile writers and photographers. I was fortunate enough to have been mentioned. A big shout out to my client, Marianne, for agreeing to be interviewed for this article.

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In the Computer Dating Game, Room for a Coach

March 11, 2007

NOT getting any online dates? Maybe it’s time for an online makeover.

Businesses like Dating-Profile.com, ProfileHelper.com and E-Cyrano.com say they will help turn a stale personal profile for dating Web sites into eloquent and catchy advertisements, writing the words for you. They will even help clients sift through prospective dates and start an initial e-mail conversation. Depending on the company and the services used, prices may range from $39 to $2,000.

Other companies, like LookBetterOnline.com and SingleShots.com, sell professional photo shoots and retouching of existing pictures for people to post online.

“As online dating has gotten more popular, the more people have to do to get attention,” said Mindy Stricke, owner of SingleShots.com, a New York business that has produced 1,000 profile portraits, at prices from $130 to $300. “There’s a lot of anxiety around this purchase because there’s no guarantees. But a lot of people, especially in New York, are willing to go the extra mile.”

Dating makeovers are hardly new. High-end offline dating services have long provided hairstyle and clothing renovations, as well as other help. But the latest twist underscores the frustration felt by some of the 40 million people using Internet matchmaking sites, said Mark Brooks, who follows the industry and author of the blog OnlinePersonalsWatch.com.

“The promise of Internet dating is you plug in your profile and you send a few e-mails and you have got a date,” Mr. Brooks said. “It’s not as easy as that.”

Jim West, 43, a divorced engineer from Tatamy, Pa., struggled to get beyond the first “hello” e-mail when he started online dating. Sure, he got some dates, but with the wrong people, he said. So after six months, Mr. West paid $49 for a critique from Eric Resnick, owner of ProfileHelper.com, based in Orlando, Fla. (The price of that service is now $69.)

“I felt like he was my sixth-grade English teacher,” Mr. West said. “He taught me how to write a good essay.” Some of Mr. Resnick’s advice: when sending e-mail messages to women, he should ask them questions about their profiles so they are more inclined to reply. Mr. Resnick also told Mr. West that his profile did not stand out because it used very general terms, with Mr. West describing himself as “very laid back” and “happy.”

Mr. Resnick said: “Why say you are laid back when you can talk about the family barbecue that gives that air of laid back? Why say you’re adventurous when you can talk about your trip to the Great Wall of China?”

In the multiple-choice section of his profile about the woman he was seeking, Mr. West had listed a specific hair color, a specific eye color and requested that his date share his Moravian religious faith.

Mr. Resnick suggested that he be less specific. Three months later, Mr. West met a woman whom he has now been dating for more than six months. And she is also of the Moravian faith, though she responded after he removed that stipulation in his profile.

Marianne Kost, a divorced mother in New York, ran a bigger tab. She paid $2,000 for a profile, photographs and coaching from Evan Marc Katz, owner of two coaching services based in Los Angeles, EvanMarcKatz.com and E-Cyrano.com. Ms. Kost was new to online dating, so Mr. Katz also helped her decide which dating service to use and which men to meet.

When Ms. Kost wrote her personal essay, Mr. Katz pushed her to tell specific stories, such as, “I came face-to-face with a bull moose during rutting season,” and, “I occasionally smear a glob of peanut butter on my dog’s nose, just for fun.” Ms. Kost said she had many responses when her profile went online at Match.com.

Ms. Kost, 49, said Mr. Katz was of much help. “It was wonderful for my ego, and I felt I had a pick of the cream of the crop. I ended up having so much interesting stuff in my profile that I had a lot to talk about and write about in e-mails.”

Ms. Kost said she did not meet many men in person, because Mr. Katz had advised her to go through a long screening process with e-mail and phone conversations before an actual date. After three months, Ms. Kost met Stephen Micallef, who, like her, is an engineer. She immediately liked how he spoke of his daughters. “I liked his values,” Ms. Kost said. “He seemed emotionally mature and very open.”

Mr. Micallef, 47, liked the professional photographs of Ms. Kost. And he liked the way her profile captured her essence with details, like how she raced a storm on a sailboat and collected strawberries to make jam. “This was well written. There was thought in it,” he said. “I found her profile to be authentic, sincere and honest, and it was proven out.”

They have dated for eight months and plan to marry.

Mr. Katz said his company has helped thousands of people since it began five years ago. It offers several packages, starting at $49 for a 20-minute consultation and a line-by-line critique of a profile. For $129 to $199, people fill out a questionnaire and spend a half-hour on the phone with a freelance writer, who writes two essays for them. For $1,500, the company interviews clients, writes their profiles, takes professional photographs and coaches them via phone and e-mail about online dating. For $1,000 a month, he coaches them about dating and relationships in general.

But can writing dating profiles for people mask their real personality, giving, for instance, a positive, exciting and more eloquent flair to someone who may be genuinely negative, boring and inarticulate? No, Mr. Katz said. Rather, he said, he simply presents people in their best light.

He compared the process to the extra effort people make on their wedding day. “You want to present yourself at your best,” he said.

JENNY CARGILE, 37, of Denver, who uses Match.com, does not buy into that theory. She said she would never hire someone to improve her dating profile because a more polished profile would not reflect who she truly is. “I’m not a person who is put together or always knows the right thing to say,” she said. “I would feel like if I went out on a date with someone, I would have to be what they read instead of myself.”

Ms. Cargile also said that many people who use online dating services tended to be fairly careless about how they present themselves. She said many profiles she sees on Match.com use blurry or outdated photographs, contain essays riddled with typographical and grammatical errors and rely on general descriptions, like “athletic” or “adventurous.”

Match.com has begun offering free profile and photo tips via an online video with Jay Manuel, of the television show “America’s Next Top Model.” The company also sells services for $2 to $6 a month that offer advice on dating and ways to make profiles and photographs stand out.

Jim Safka, chief executive of Match.com, based in Dallas, says online dating is like being on stage and being viewed by thousands of people. “Wouldn’t you spend some time backstage getting ready?” he asked.

In the Dallas market, Match.com is testing a service called “Match Platinum,” in which professional matchmakers interview clients, coach them on appearance and style and then sift through Match.com’s database of 15 million members to find a compatible date. “We’ve had a tremendous response to it,” said Deborah Robertson, a matchmaker for Match Platinum. Clients pay $500 to $2,000, depending on the level of service.

Such levels of spending and coaching concern at least one dating expert.

“Dating is like a soufflé — it requires a bit of lightness,” said Joy Browne, host of a syndicated radio talk show and author of the recent book “Dating Disasters and How to Avoid Them.” “When you’re forking out thousands of dollars, you’re going to expect a huge return on your investment. That’s not the attitude you should have going into dating.”

But for Ms. Kost, the services were well worth the money. “I felt confident with people,” she said. “It was like I didn’t need to sell myself to these people. They were already sold.”

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No Comments »Evan's Press

Your Personal Trainer For Love

A reader recently pointed out to me that she had no idea what I did for a living. Funny, I never thought about that. But unless you’ve been scouring the side panels of this blog, you might have just thought I was some dude who likes answering dating questions for fun.

And yeah, technically, I am.

But what you may have not realized is that this is all I do for a living.

I’m a dating coach.

Every day, I listen to individuals tell me about their love lives.

I help men understand women. I help women understand men.

I help both sexes uncover their blind spots to gain more power and control over their destinies.

I know it sounds kinda cheesy, but I love my work because because it makes a tangible difference in people’s lives. Sometimes it happens almost instantly.

  • I once had a 31-year-old man sign up with me. He got a girlfriend after only one phone session.
  • I once had a 40-year-old woman sign up with me. She met the father of her child three weeks later. 

It’s exhilarating when it works out this well…but believe me, success isn’t guaranteed. Dating coaching is a process, like changing careers, or working out at the gym. There are ups and downs, but, at the end of the day, you get closer and closer to that relationship that’s been eluding you.

So how does it all work? Well, it all depends upon you. Before we work together, we spend a considerable amount of time on the phone, so I can learn more about you, your previous experiences, and your long-term goals. For example…

You may claim that you’re not meeting enough people. Too old for the bar scene, too few single friends, too much time at work. If that’s the case, I recommend online dating coaching, whereupon I help you get the most out of your experience. I buy you professional photos, write your profile essays using your words, and teach you a new email and dating technique that separates you from the pack. It’s remarkably effective.

You may find that you’re meeting people, but things fall apart soon thereafter. You’re not good on email, you’re awkward at flirting on the phone, you don’t get asked out after a first date. If this describes you, I’d recommend regular dating coaching. Once-a-week phone coaching sessions, which are actually much more powerful and interactive than therapy. Because you’re not just talking for the sake of being heard. I’m listening to your story and providing you some tangible new techniques and philosophies in return. 

Finally, if you feel that you need help both meeting dates and keeping dates, I do live dating coaching weekends, where, in two full days together, we work on all facets of your dating life - your appearance, your people skills, your online presence, your first date abilities, your self-esteem, your awareness of how you’re perceived by others, and so on. You’ll even go on a simulated Saturday night date so I can get instant, no punches-pulled feedback on how you come across in a dating situation. Live coaching is a one-of-a-kind, life enhancing experience for both of us.

To some people this all sounds strange. I’m smart. I’ve gone to therapy. I have friends. Why hire a dating coach?

Well, if you’re single and stymied in your pursuit of a lasting relationship, dating coaching might be just what you need. We think nothing of hiring a plumber to fix a leaky faucet, or of hiring an accountant to do your taxes, but for some reason, we think we should have all the answers when it comes to matters of the heart. Not true.

We all have problems. We all have blind spots. We’re all too close to our own issues to see things clearly. By working with an experienced and unbiased dating coach - whose work you’re already familiar with - you quickly develop a greater awareness of what’s not working in your life. More importantly, you’ll develop the instant tools to change it.

If you want your love life to finally start working for you, click here to learn more. And if you want to hear what others have to say about working with me, click here.

Have an amazing weekend.

Warmest wishes,

Evan 

 

Related links:

Top Online Dating Sites

Evan’s CD 

Evan’s Books 

Evan’s Published Articles

 

 

 
 

No Comments »Uncategorized, Evan's Press, Dating Tips & Advice, Online Dating Sites, Reviews & News, Online Dating Tips & Advice, Sex & Relationship Advice