Anyone else working in the regulated US market?

Olha

New Member
Joined
Mar 17, 2021
Messages
1
Reaction score
1
Any other licensed US affiliates here? The market is really heating up, especially with Indiana opening up to affiliates recently.

I'm looking to connect with other affiliates that work in the US market, especially those that are not associated with Catena/BetterCollective sized companies.

Ask me anything you want about the market in this thread, I"ll do my best to reply with a helpful answer.

We operate a fairly well known national brand in BettingUSA.com and various state related minisites (IndianaBetting.com for example - new/under dev) - and building a much larger network to go along with it.

After years of being a US based affiliate focused on UK/Europe markets - it's an exciting time to be a part of this developing market in the USA. I'll be the first to admit it comes with some challenges (PA licensing process for example) and there is some archaic systems in place (most aff backends are not what we are used to), but it's going to be a gold rush in the next three years.

As a quick overview, as US based affiliates who promote only licensed/regulated operators - we are able to promote the following:

Horse Racing = most states.
DFS/Daily Fantasy as an alternative to sports betting = most states.
Poker = NJ, NV, PA as soon as next week.
Casino = NJ, PA, WV coming soon.
Sports = NJ, PA, IN, WV. Iowa will open to affiliates in about 16 months.
Lottery = MI, PA.

Personally, we build for the future vs the present - 2021 looks to be the year where the US market for affiliates becomes the largest in the world. Anyone else here planning for the future? Drop me a pm if you'd like to connect (not sure I can send any yet, I'm new here as of last week).
Hi there! Do you know if there are any sub-licenses where you can have an agreement with a licensed affiliate and conduct activities under the sublicense on your own website?
 

Joonas

Certification Member
Staff member
Joined
Nov 28, 2017
Messages
280
Reaction score
120
Protection to players is a task of (well-paid) gambling authorities. The goal of each and every affiliate is to make money. No matter if we're talking about a guy working solely from his sleeping room or about a stock-listed company.
Sounds like short money. Some (offshore) remote gambling license authorities are a joke. No player protection, and it's a big risk for a company to work with these operators, not to mention the banking hassle when getting paid from offshore.

To MJM's question, we just launched Bojoko.com in the US too. Just New Jersey for now but other states coming soon.
 
Top