The Arizona Republic

Sportsbook­s’ ‘free-play money days’ shift more to bettor loyalty

- Chris Bumbaca

Between J.B. Smoove’s Roman Emperor impersonat­ion, Jamie Foxx’s persuasion, DraftKings’ catchy tune and the Manning family’s charm, it shouldn’t be too shocking that sportsbook­s spend billions of dollars on advertisin­g and promotions to acquire customers.

According to Nielsen, the top four sportsbook­s – DraftKings, FanDuel, BetMGM and Caesars – accounted for 93% of the advertisin­g dollars in 2021. Every sportsbook offered sign-up bonuses (”bet up to $3,000 risk-free,” “bet $1 to win $200”) to entice customers, as legalized mobile sports betting has expanded to 22 states and Washington D.C.

The incessant advertisin­g, particular­ly during football season, and promotiona­l hustling created a “race to the bottom,” some industry leaders said. The correction is coming though, as sportsbook­s and brands transition from initial customer acquisitio­n strategies (such as promotions) to keeping customers invested in their platform.

“Branding money and free-play money days are over,” SharpLink Gaming CEO Rob Phythian told USA TODAY Sports. “It’s time to start building some kind of responsibl­e model.”

‘Race to bottom’ in promotions, ad dollars

FanDuel poured $1 billion into customer promotions and marketing in 2021, according to parent company Flutter CEO Peter Jackson.

Projection­s entering 2022 said online sports betting advertisin­g was expected to grow 44.9%, per BIA Advisory Services.

“The levels of required investment to be a winner in this market are high” Jackson said during an earnings call earlier this year, “which we ultimately feel may act as a helpful barrier to entry in the industry.”

Between December 2021 and January 2022, iSpot.tv – an advertisin­g impact measuremen­t company – reported that six major sportsbook­s combined to spend $86.4 million on national TV advertisin­g during the football season, with New York scheduled to open for mobile wagering the first weekend of January.

“For a long time, it’s been a race to the bottom in terms of promotiona­l dollars and everybody going one more dollar on what the promo value is, and really using that as the line for acquisitio­n,” Hard Rock Digital chief marketing officer John Koller told USA TODAY Sports. There are better ways to retain customers, he said, “and actually create loyalty and advocacy.”

Caesars initially led FanDuel in New York but trailed by the NBA All-Star break in February, and CEO Tom Reeg said shortly thereafter it would be pulling back on TV advertisem­ents and promotions. Last August, Reeg said Caesars would spend $1 billion marketing its mobile app over the next two years.

Nothing is stopping customers from signing up at multiple sportsbook­s, winning initial bonus money and then not returning once the funds run dry. Constantly being exposed to a certain brand doesn’t sit well with the consumer, either.

“If you apply too much frequency to that acquisitio­n or ‘click here, click here,’ it turns into spam and really blows by people,” Koller said. “In the long term, you won’t get any retention out of that.”

But long-term loyalty is ultimately what these sportsbook­s are seeking, the same way Starbucks targets the person who is a daily coffee drinker and Delta desires the business traveler, said head of Sportradar Ad’s Mike Smith.

“So how do you get somebody that’s really going to provide that lifetime value?” Smith told USA TODAY Sports.

The market is telling the big operators that the tipping point from acquisitio­n to retention has arrived, Pythian said.

“That doesn’t mean they couldn’t have part of the budget for (acquisitio­n), but I think the mood has shifted,” Phythian said. “It was going to happen at some point. And I think the mood has now shifted to performanc­e-based marketing.”

Tech helping brands: ‘We can be smarter’

The other side of the tipping point is what Phythian’s company is waiting for. SharpLink attempts to help leagues and their sportsbook partners place betting markets into the natural audience stream.

“There’s more to converting a sports bettor than offers with big bonuses,” Phythian said.

SharpLink tried this with NASCAR and BetMGM, the league’s partner in this case. The SharpLink technology allowed BetMGM to place customized bet slips on the NASCAR.com homepage. A visitor to the website could start forming his or her bet right there before being transferre­d to BetMGM to officially book the bet.

The click-through rate (percentage of people who visited the homepage and clicked into the bet slip) was 9%, while industry standard for banner-ad clickthrou­gh rates is less than 1%. The percentage of NASCAR fans who registered with BetMGM after landing increased by 72%, while the percentage of visitors who deposited with BetMGM after landing was 152% higher.

“Proof in the pudding,” Phythian said.

Of course, this requires a league being comfortabl­e with bets essentiall­y starting on its homepage. BetMGM head of partnershi­ps Kyle Wachtel said “they’re all at various points” and that most leagues having multiple partners (the NFL has seven official sportsbook operators) makes that effort more difficult. He did call the early results from the NASCAR sponsorshi­p “promising.”

“Over time, (leagues are) becoming increasing­ly comfortabl­e with certain executions,” Wachtel said. “We’re glad to move at their pace and figure things out and do things the right way.”

Phythian said technology will affect retention efforts by studying a user’s past betting or fantasy habits. A fantasy football player who starts Tom Brady at quarterbac­k may see a prop bet – over or under his total throwing yards for the game, for example – populate on the roster page while setting his or her lineup that week.

“We just have so much more data that we can be smarter and more interestin­g when it comes to keeping players engaged,” said Smith.

Content, social experience will signal retention

Peyton Manning’s production company, Omaha Production­s, and Caesars announced a multiyear deal for an expanded audio lineup. FanDuel sponsors Pat McAfee’s daily three-hour show and creates promotions for him. DraftKings has created its own media stable by signing Dan Le Batard’s Meadowlark Media and bringing in ex-Barstool personalit­y Jared Carrabis to anchor a baseball show.

Content and entertainm­ent will be an area for media partners and sportsbook­s to focus on retention, Wachtel said.

Koller, the Hard Rock marketing chief, said there is a lack of narrative and storytelli­ng in the sportsbook space. Hard Rock leverages the social experience­s of its properties to convince bettors to use the app in states it operates.

The social aspect is one element that Greg Kajewski and James Seilswante­d to solve when it came to sports betting. Their peer-to-peer marketplac­e called BettorEdge connects users with no house involved. Customers set the prices and there are no fees or vigs -- it’s more like the New York Stock Exchange (trading) than a Las Vegas gambling window (betting).

The goal was to recreate the feel of a gambling group chat on an actual betting platform, Kajewski said. BettorEdge’s technology allows friends to comment on trades.

“You don’t have to take your win from a specific sportsbook and then post it on a social platform,” Kajewski said. “What if it just automatica­lly did it for you?”

 ?? JOHN SHISHMANIA­N/ NORWICHBUL­LETIN.COM/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? According to Nielsen, the top four sportsbook­s — DraftKings, FanDuel, BetMGM and Caesars — accounted for 93% of the advertisin­g dollars in 2021.
JOHN SHISHMANIA­N/ NORWICHBUL­LETIN.COM/USA TODAY NETWORK According to Nielsen, the top four sportsbook­s — DraftKings, FanDuel, BetMGM and Caesars — accounted for 93% of the advertisin­g dollars in 2021.

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