How Imimatch is Making Marriage Fashionable Again
There was a time when society, men and women, were in a consensus, man works, and woman manages the home. Times changed and women starting wanting more (deservedly so), the society was no longer as simple anymore, it too demanded more as unemployment rates increased, job cuts became more frequent, the formal sector was becoming too crowded, women were having no rights, freedoms, or voice. Fast forward to now, and the world is still not perfect but it is much better, women have dreams, ambitions and make six figures, men are leading Fortune 500 companies, Forbes lists, or trying to, and while marriage is still a special moment whenever it happens, it is no longer the priority it once was. That too is slowly changing.
Everything in the world of today seems to be operating at break neck speed, chasing dreams, realizing goals, meeting objectives, and then moving unto the next challenge, especially as immigrants. The marriage rate in the US was 9.8 per 1000 people, in the 90s, per Statistica, but today, that number stands at 6.8 per 1,000 people. However, people are still finding greater satisfaction when they do marry, per the statistics, when they meet on online platforms like iMiMatch. The internet and online dating are changing how we date. People have more control over their interactions over the internet and do not feel the pressure that comes with traditional methods.
Per the Pew research, 88% of people in America cited love as the reason for staying single, which also has the median age of first marriage (how long people stay before getting married) on the rise. How do we find love when everyone is so busy chasing his/her dreams? We have the answer — everybody uses the internet and 49 million people use online dating. Finding love online on sites like iMiMatch is much easier and the rate of marriages that began from online meets is rising (currently 17%). iMiMatch specifically targets immigrants, allowing them to meet with compatriots, or opeople from other countries, which brings an added sense of familiarity.