If you have taken an AncestryDNA test please upload a tree!

With all the sale prices offered in the last month by Ancestry DNA, Chris Paton on his British Genes Blog [now discontinued] posted this very helpful information:

A wee tip if you have been given an AncestryDNA test for Christmas is to remember that there are two sides to the test that need to work in conjunction for this to be a powerful tool for your family history research. The first is quite obviously to take the test, and to send the sample off! The second though is to upload a family tree, no matter how basic, to your Ancestry account. Once uploaded, Ancestry flags up potential cousin matches, based on shared sections of DNA that you and your cousins will have inherited. If you don’t upload a tree, prospective cousins will see the following if a DNA match is flagged up:

There are two parts to the AncestryDNA test results. The first is the so-called ethnicity profile. If you want my advice, forget this – not only is it vague, but the bottom line is we’re all human and have ancestors who come from across different parts of the world. And we all eventually make our way back to Africa – so tell me something I didn’t know! The second part, the cousin connect, is where the real power of the test lies – but only if you play ball by supplementing the DNA evidence with your documentary evidence in a tree.

In the last two months I have made many connections with folk who have shared their trees. In the last week alone I have fleshed out an entire ancestral story from Donegal in Ireland, thanks to a tip found via a cousin connection, and have spent the last two days researching my first ancestor confirmed to have fought in the Peninsula Wars.

So please – do add your tree. You can privatize it to protect the living before you upload, or even make it private, so that potential cousins have to contact you for more info. But without a tree to accompany your DNA result, all that you effectively have is a boffin’s result from some spit inside of your mouth that tells you next to nothing on its own.”

Good luck with your DNA results!