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People are mixing business with pleasure on the job site. What could possibly go wrong? Three separate men slid into her DMs in early While she had received messages on the workplace-focused social-media site before, these were different.
While each of the men had the plausible deniability of a connection or two in common with her, she said it was immediately clear that their motives were not strictly professional — one of them worked in the oil industry, a field far removed from anything she'd ever done for a living. Someone else might have scoffed at their advances, but John was newly single at the time, and she was intrigued. At the very least, she would know whether the man had a job.
While the other two failed to catch her interest, John sensed chemistry with the oil-industry man and decided to see where things would go.
It was during that phase of the relationship that John posed a question on TikTok : "Why is LinkedIn low-key a good dating app? It's hard to estimate how many of LinkedIn's 1 billion reported members are using the site to find love. The company doesn't collect or release data on the matter, and its community-policies page prohibits using the platform for romantic advances, emphasizing: "LinkedIn is a professional networking platform, not a dating site. And as LinkedIn use has soared in the age of remote work , using the platform to find a date has gotten more popular.
But that leaves the question: Is it a good idea to mix work and love? Dustin Kidd, a professor of sociology at Temple University who researches social media and pop culture, said that dating via LinkedIn belonged to a long tradition of "dating hacks" — using online tools designed for other purposes to snag a date.