Choosing a metric because it’s the only one you have doesn’t make it a good one.
The only person who cares how many responses you get from random people is a data scientist.
Presumably, you’re there to connect with people you’d have a good time with. You want to optimize for suitability, which has nothing to do with that metric.
(And besides, all of the apps now penalize indiscriminate swiping and other spammy behaviors that are cheap to track)
Both can be true. Is spamming the best strategy for Tinder? Yes. Spamming may be penalized but using the app discerningly (for men) is penalized more harshly.
Is using Tinder a waste of time? Yes, unless your value to the opposite sex can be encapsulated in one photograph (i.e. you spend a lot of time in the gym). There are easier ways to get laid.
> Presumably, you’re there to connect with people you’d have a good time with
It’s a casual sex app. Real dating apps have profiles.
The only person who cares how many responses you get from random people is a data scientist.
Presumably, you’re there to connect with people you’d have a good time with. You want to optimize for suitability, which has nothing to do with that metric.
(And besides, all of the apps now penalize indiscriminate swiping and other spammy behaviors that are cheap to track)