# How to Start a Conversation on a Dating App

> Stop wasting matches with dead-end openers. Here's how to start a conversation on a dating app — and why Lamp gives you shared ground from the first word.

Published: 13 May 2026 · Updated: 13 May 2026 · By The Lamp Team
Canonical: https://lampdating.com/blog/how-to-start-a-conversation-on-a-dating-app

The match is there. You stare at the screen. You type "hey" — then delete it, because
you know exactly where "hey" leads. You type "how's your week?" — same problem. You
close the app. The match expires. Nothing happens.

That sequence plays out thousands of times a day across every swipe app, and it is
entirely avoidable. Starting a conversation on a dating app is not a mystery; it is
a skill. And unlike most skills, once you understand the one rule that governs it,
everything else falls into place. That rule: **give the other person something real
to react to**. The apps that make it hardest to do that are the ones that hand you
a stranger's face and a blank text box. Lamp is built the other way around.

## Why "hey" kills matches

A one-word opener is not charming or mysteriously minimalist — it is a burden. It
asks the other person to do all the work: invent a topic, carry the energy, and
decide whether the effort is worth it when you have already demonstrated you won't
put any in. The same is true of "how's your week?", "what are you up to?", and every
other placeholder that could be copy-pasted to anyone.

On the swipe apps, this is structurally baked in. The whole design pushes you to
judge quickly on photos, match fast, and then figure out the human part later —
except nobody tells you how to do the human part later. You end up with a hundred
matches and no idea what any of them care about. [Swipe fatigue](/glossary/swipe-fatigue)
is real, and dead-end conversations are one of its primary symptoms.

## The one rule: give them something to react to

Every opener that works does the same thing: it hands the other person an obvious
next move. It removes the friction of "what do I even say?" and replaces it with
a foothold — a question they actually want to answer, or a comment that makes them
smile and want to continue.

The foothold comes from specificity. You need something real to be specific *about* —
which is why the cold-open problem is fundamentally a **profile problem on most apps**.
When a profile is four generic sentences and a set of photos, there is nothing to
grab. When a profile shows you what someone actually cares about, specificity becomes
easy.

## Step 1: Read the profile properly

Not a skim — a proper read. Most people open the photos and that's it. The ones who
read the words are the ones who win the conversation, because words are the only
place specificity lives.

Look for one thing that is uniquely theirs: a particular hobby, an opinion, an
ambition, a piece of humour, a niche interest, an honest contradiction. That one
thing is your opener. Not "you seem cool" — the actual thing. "The detail about
making your own pasta is either very impressive or a cry for help — which is it?"
That's a specific, fun, easy question to answer. It shows you read. It shows you're
a real person. It opens a real conversation.

Lamp's AI matching gives you a structural advantage here. Because Lamp [matches on
personality and values](/how-it-works), your introduction comes with the reasons you
fit — genuine shared ground you can open with instead of a cold guess. Read our
[how AI matchmaking works](/blog/how-ai-matchmaking-works) piece if you want to
understand why that changes the conversation dynamics from the start.

## Step 2: Ask one open question

One. Not three — three questions reads like an interrogation and gives them too many
things to answer or ignore. One good, open question invites a real answer and keeps
the energy on the conversation rather than the Q&A.

An open question is one that cannot be answered with yes or no, and is better
answered with a story or an opinion. "Do you like jazz?" is closed. "What are you
actually listening to obsessively right now?" is open. "Do you travel much?" is
closed. "What was the trip that changed how you think about something?" is open.

The question should follow naturally from the specific thing you noticed in step 1.
That way the whole message feels coherent — you read their profile, something caught
your attention, and you want to know more. That is the most flattering possible
framing, because it is also true.

## Step 3: Keep it short

Three sentences is the ceiling. You are not pitching yourself; you are starting a
conversation. A long opening message feels like homework. It also puts enormous
pressure on the reply — the other person feels obliged to match your length, which
raises the effort threshold for responding and lowers the chance they do.

Short, warm, specific, one question. That is the structure. Once the conversation is
running, length takes care of itself.

## Step 4: Let Lamp's Genie take the pressure off

If you know what you want to say but can't find the right framing, [Genie](/glossary/ai-dating-assistant)
— Lamp's AI dating assistant — can suggest an opener built around your specific match.
Not a generic template: something that draws on who you are and what you have in
common with this particular person.

The critical thing to understand about Genie: **it suggests, it never sends**. It
will not message anyone on your behalf, impersonate you, or fire off openers while
you sleep. It drafts, you decide. You can use the suggestion word for word, tweak
it until it sounds like you, or ignore it entirely. Either way, the message that
goes out is yours.

That distinction matters. Apps that automate your conversations are optimising for
a metric (replies) at the expense of what you actually want (a real person who likes
the real you). Genie is in the conversation to help you think, not to replace you
in it. Compare this to why the big swipe apps have no equivalent — see the breakdown
at [Lamp vs Tinder](/compare/lamp-vs-tinder) and [Lamp vs Hinge](/compare/lamp-vs-hinge).

## Step 5: Have somewhere to go

A great opener starts a conversation; a great conversation needs a direction. After
the first exchange or two, know broadly what you want to find out: shared interests,
what they want from this, what their actual life looks like day to day. You don't
need to run a script — just have a genuine curiosity about the person, and let it
show.

The swipe apps push you to keep the conversation inside the app indefinitely, because
engagement is the metric. Lamp's interest is the opposite: a short, good conversation
that leads to a date you want to go on. That is the point of [compatibility-based matching](/glossary/compatibility-based-matching) —
it means the people you are introduced to are already real fits, so the conversation
has somewhere natural to go.

## What to do when they don't reply

First: most non-replies on swipe apps have nothing to do with you. The other person
may have matched during a different moment, never opened the app again, or lost the
notification in a stack of fifty others. [Swipe fatigue](/glossary/swipe-fatigue) is
structural — the volume is the problem, not your message.

One polite follow-up after a few days is reasonable. After that, move on. Time spent
chasing a silent match is time not spent having an actual conversation with someone
who's engaged. On Lamp, the curated introduction model means you are not competing
with an infinite stack of faces — the people you meet are introduced to you, and
the mutual interest is already established before you type a word.

## The structural difference Lamp makes

Everything above is applicable everywhere — these are conversation principles, not
app-specific tricks. But the *ease* with which you apply them is entirely
context-dependent. On a swipe app, you are cold-opening a stranger with no shared
ground and no context beyond their photos. On Lamp, you are opening a conversation
with someone the AI matched to you on personality and values, with an explicit
explanation of why you fit.

The cold-open problem — the staring at a blank box — is almost entirely a product of
having nothing real to work with. Lamp removes that by making the work happen before
the conversation starts. See the full picture on [how Lamp compares](/compare).

For a deeper look at building an opener that earns a reply, our guide to
[writing a dating profile](/blog/how-to-write-a-dating-profile) covers the profile
side of the same equation — because the best openers are the ones that profiles
invite.

## The bottom line

Starting a conversation on a dating app comes down to three things: read the profile
properly, pick one specific thing to open with, and ask one good open question. Keep
it short. Give them something real to react to.

The reason most conversations die before they start is not a lack of charm — it is a
lack of material. The swipe model hands you a photo and a blank box and calls it
matching. Lamp hands you shared ground and a clear reason you fit, then gives you
Genie to help you open well. That is the structural advantage, and it is the reason
Lamp conversations go further.

Download Lamp free on the App Store. Stop staring at blank boxes.

## Frequently asked questions

**What is the best opening line on a dating app?**

Reference one specific detail from their profile and ask a single open question — specific beats generic every time.

**Why do my dating app conversations go nowhere?**

Generic openers like 'hey' or 'how's your week?' give the other person nothing to react to. Specific, profile-led messages create real footholds for conversation.

**How does Lamp make it easier to start a conversation?**

Lamp matches on personality and values and tells you exactly why you fit someone — so you open with real common ground, not a cold guess. Genie, the AI dating assistant, can also suggest openers tailored to your specific match.

**Does Genie send messages for me?**

No. Genie suggests openers you can use, edit, or ignore — it never sends anything on your behalf or pretends to be you.
