SOCIAL MEDIA

So the cat’s out of the bag. Facebook is hosting real-money gambling games on their platform, starting with Bingo Friendzy by Gamesys. Now what?

One thing is certain: this won’t become a free-for-all like the Wild West early days of social gaming on Facebook. The official statement from Facebook is that “real money gaming is a popular and well-regulated activity in the UK and we are allowing a partner to offer their games to adult users on the Facebook platform in a safe and controlled manner.” This means Facebook will want to work with companies that have gambling expertise and, most importantly, operating licenses.

For social game companies, this means you still need gambling licenses. Getting a gambling license costs millions and takes years to acquire. For smaller game companies, this is prohibitively expensive, and even larger game companies face significant organizational & compliance hurdles that make acquiring a gambling license even more time-consuming and expensive. And while social game companies are forced to sit on the sidelines, you can be sure that gambling companies will do their best to capture as much of the market as possible.

This strategy isn’t just unfair to social game companies that have staked their livelihoods on Facebook’s platform: it’s counter to Facebook’s ethos.

Of course, there’s a logical reason why Facebook hasn’t gone down this path: gambling is a highly regulated and scrutinized industry. Simply opening the platform to all gambling companies exposes Facebook to significant compliance and legal challenges. From the looks of it, Facebook is practically partnering with the company to ensure that the game is compliant and gated only to 18+ players in the UK. Due to the legal ramifications, this course of action makes sense for the first game or even the first few games. But in the future, the opportunity cost of maintaining this closed platform strategy far outweighs the potential benefits.

Furthermore, by closing the platform and only allowing a small trickle of companies to release real-money games on Facebook, the platform is picking winners and limiting competition. This strategy completely contradicts what Facebook did to foster social gaming, which was one of the fastest growing entertainment categories of all time and contributed significantly to Facebook’s growth, engagement and revenue. To capture the full market potential of real-money social games, Facebook needs to let competition and creativity pick the winners on its platform. To do otherwise shortchanges loyal developers that have stuck with the platform and decreases the likelihood that truly innovative real-money experiences will be created for players.

Given the inherit value of an open platform, we can only assume that this is Facebook's eventual goal. Facebook can accelerate this transition by partnering with a gambling company that can manage the compliance and legal issues for them. Betable handles the finance, operational and compliance aspects of each game, making it possible for social game companies to legally add real-money gambling to their games without needing their own gambling licenses and taking a large chunk of work off of Facebook’s plate in the process. With Betable, Facebook’s strategy can be in-line with its ethos and again become home to a booming segment of the game industry.

Meanwhile, while Facebook dips its toes in the water, real-money online gambling on mobile and the open web is taking off. Developers that get access to these new markets early will have three important advantages in this massive new market:

  1. These companies will be the first to capture valuable learning about this new market being created by the intersection of social gaming and real-money play.
  2. They will build real-money gaming audiences earlier and cheaper than their competitors, who will enter later into a frothier market.
  3. With the increased revenue provided by real-money gaming, they can outspend their competitors that are still using virtual currency on player acquisition and game development.

Developers that move now have a huge leg-up on the competition and will be able to bring their players back into the Facebook experience once they open their platform to real-money play. Within 18 months, the social game market on Facebook was won by Zynga. The real-money gaming market will be no different, and with Zynga leaking that they will launch real-money games in 2013, speed has never been more important. Real-money gambling is restarting the race for social game developers on Facebook and mobile, meaning the market leaders of tomorrow could be completely different from the leaders of today. If you want to be one of them, Betable wants to help.

http://www.gamasutra.com/blogs/TylerYork/20120808/175571/What_Facebooks_gambling_strategy_means_for_developers.php

 





LOTTERY EXPO 2013
Co-Hosted by PGRI and the Florida Lottery
November 4 to 7, Miami, Florida, Trump Miami Beach Hotel
18001 Collins Ave., Sunny Isles Beach, Florida
Phone: Domestic: 855.244.2964      International: 786.522.3523 **Use Group Code 10W820 to get our special rate

Schedule:
Monday, November 4: 5:00: Opening Night Reception
Tuesday, Nov. 5: U.S. focused conference sessions; Reception 5:00 to 6:30 pm.
Wednesday,Nov. 6: Joint U.S. and Latin America Sessions; Reception 5:00 to 6:30 pm.
Thursday, Nov. 7
: Focus on Latin America
Three Receptions and luncheons provide lots of time to visit with colleagues

For complete Lottery Expo info, including registration materials and conference updates: PublicGaming.org

  Conference Venue: Trump Miami Hotel - Limited special rate of $175 Reserve your room click here online booking
call us at 425-449-3000 if you get a "sold out" or encounter any difficulties at all

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SMART-TECH 2013

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Thank you to all of you who presented, served on a panel discussion, and participated at Smart-Tech. This was PGRI’s fourth annual event in NYC and has become a great venue for lotteries to delve into the most relevant issues of the hour, and we so appreciate the privilege of hosting it and visiting with you.  The next issue of PGRI Magazine will include an in-depth analysis of the issues we explored.  Too, the conference was video-recorded and will be made freely available to everyone on www.PGRItalks.com.  We’ve received much positive feedback and hope that everyone accomplished their objectives.  Our next event will be held at the Trump Miami Beach Hotel on November 4, 5, 6, and 7th.  Lottery Expo Miami is especially exciting for the participation from our colleagues in Latin America.  The North America track is on Tuesday, the LatAm track on Thursday, and we all come together on Wednesday. Thanks to the support of our commercial partners and sponsors, the hosted receptions held every night of the conference have become a wonderful venue to talk with industry leaders from  all around the world. Please check in at www.PublicGaming.org for PGRI conference updates.  Thank you again - We look forward to seeing you again.  Please e-mail me (pjason@publicgaming.com) with any questions, feedback, guidance, or comments of any kind.   Smart-Tech 2013 was held April 8, 9, 10, 2013 at the Helmsley Park Lane, New York.

Public Gaming /Paul Jason - pjason@publicgaming.com   / Susan Jason - sjason@publicgaming.com  /Office Phone - + 425-449-3000