<b>"Verified" badges on the pre-lander</b>
Myth: "Slap a 'Photos verified ✓' badge on the lander to build trust and lift signups."
Everyone copies the trust-badge playbook from e-commerce without noticing the audience is the opposite. A dating prospect isn't worried the site is a scam to him — he half-suspects the profiles are fake and is fine proceeding anyway, because the fantasy is the product. A loud "verified" badge doesn't reassure; it raises the exact question you don't want raised: "wait, are these real?"
The badge also drags compliance into frame. If your verification claim is decorative and the advertiser's platform is animator/moderator-driven, you've now made an explicit promise the back-end can't keep — a real liability when the network audits landers, not a conversion lever.
What lifts signups here is friction removal and momentum: a face, a location match, one obvious button. Not a trust theater borrowed from checkout pages.
Reality: Dating users buy a fantasy they're already skeptical of, and a 'verified' badge wakes up the skepticism instead of soothing it.
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<b>"Verified" badges on the pre-lander</b>
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