A few thoughts on the subject:
Focusing on numbers:
This is already a losing game. You are a sample size of one looking for an audience of one. Sheer numbers shouldn't deter you. Your focus should be on making your presence and communications here stand out from the crowd. The size of that crowd doesn't matter. You do.
Me not getting replies/Women getting from creeps:
Welcome to online dating. These are the top two complaints across all online dating sites. Human nature. It's a bit like talking about running marathons and complaining that your feet hurt and you're dehydrated. If you didn't anticipate and plan for these things, and/or you have trouble dealing with them, you're not going to do well at a marathon. Stay the course, run your race, and deal with it.
The quality of personal ads:
I'm just going to say it. They're shit. Absolute shit on both sides. There isn't one ad that really catches my eye on the Fsub4MDom, and nothing in MDom4Fsub that I would recommend to any of my female sub friends. They are filled with spelling mistakes, misconceptions and red flags. D/s requires attention to detail and effective communication to work. If you can't showcase your strengths there in a personal ad, why would anyone want to engage with you?
Single-minded focus on finding a Dom/sub:
If you're new here or to BDSM, or even someone experienced, learning and socializing should be the focus. I've heard this site described as a giant online munch several times, and that's a good analogy for this. The focus at a munch isn't on trying to pick up/pull/date. That shouldn't even be in the picture for most.
From your own profile, Drennon: "I joined this site to find a sub BUT (emphasis mine) I am always will to make new friends as well." Do you see the red flag there? I'm guessing not, so let me fill you in. You need to make friends BEFORE you will EVER find a sub. It's part of the process of meeting someone new, and SUPERSEDES the need to find a sub. You state it as a secondary goal; something you might settle for.... I guess... if you had to. Wrong approach. Subs are reading that and thinking, "This guy just wants to get laid and has no interest in getting to know me as a person."
Look at the top of the front page of the site; there are 8 or 9 headings there, and the personals are just one of them. If you aren't or can't engage folks in most of those areas, then you're focusing too much on dating and not enough on exploring the community. Get out there. Read, write, engage with others. You'll meet more potential matches that way, and learn and have fun instead of tapping your fingers waiting bored and alone for someone to respond to an ad.
Honesty/It's not a contest:
This is another big problem. This site was intended to be friendly and open to new users. There is absolutely no upside to exaggerating or misstating your experiences or familiarity with BDSM and the lifestyle. If someone claims to have 5+ years of experience, but can't spell 'dominant' or use it correctly, has something stupid like "Limits: none" in their profile, or mis-uses terms like master, trainer, and mentor that have real and specific meanings in the community, these are red flags that will get them ignored by anyone serious. New is fine, and ever prefered by some, BUT it should be able to demonstrate honesty and a genuine curiosity to learn new things. While we're on the subject:
People need to stop gaming the BSDM.org test. It's an inaccurate POS of a test that should only be used to get a rough idea of where you're at in the moment you last took the test. No one is impressed that you retook it and fudged your answers until you got 100% in all the categories you think you like. It screams insecure and fake. STOP.
Also, if you can't write about what you do or might like, or describe it in any detail in the BDSM section of your profile, then you're not ready to date. Sorry. Learn more and try again later. Same goes for limits. If you sound stupid there (none, haven't found them, my master will tell me, I will tell you) then that's a red flag. You're a liability, not a potential partner. It means someone will have to take time and effort to teach you before you get to the point where you might be a potential partner. Some folks just want to go for a drive, and not have to fix or build the car from the ground up beforehand.
A few helpful links:
Evergrey on new users(sarcastic, but a good read):
https://thecage.co/blog/userblog.php?postid=1716&blog_id=12897
V Dominatus on being new(a must read IMO):
https://thecage.co/blog/userblog.php?postid=1936&blog_id=12297
Have fun, get out there and engage. Write blogs, respond to more forum posts. Pop in chat, say hi. Ask questions. Learn. Have fun. You WILL meet someone genuine who you're interested in that way eventually. Guarantee it.