iGB E-zines iGB e-zine New Jersey | Page 5

Introduction: Off to a flyer Mobile has completely changed the model. Sport is getting consumed in real time. It means there are opportunities for online betting operators. Jason Robins, DraftKings As this report shows, despite the relative recency of the advent of regulated sports betting within the state, there is already enough data to draw conclusions about likely growth rates across both product sets. Indeed, both the politicians and the regulators (both previous and current) have been quick to congratulate themselves on a job well done and no one doing the conference circuit will be unaware of the smiles from those involved whenever the discussion turns to the success of the launch to date. No wonder industry participants say they are, in the words of Max Meltzer, chief commercial officer at Kambi, “very encouraged” by the progress to date. “The market as a whole is probably either meeting or slightly ahead of expectations, depending on who you ask, while some people are already talking about ‘when’ rather than ‘if’ New Jersey overtakes Las Vegas as the highest grossing sports betting market,” he adds. For reference, the Nevada sports betting market was worth circa $300m in 2018 and the forecasts from H2 Gambling Capital featured later in this report suggest new Jersey might be approaching that figure by 2023. The lessons from New Jersey are already being promoted by those looking at further US sports betting state openings in the months and years to come. One is the importance of mobile. Speaking recently at ICE in London, Jason Robins, the founder and chief executive at New Jersey market leader DraftKings, said: “Mobile has completely changed everything, not just sports. “It has completely changed the model. Sport is getting consumed in real time. It means there are opportunities for online betting operators. We view our market as sports fans. And the goal is to create products that will reach as many of those 150 million in the US and 1.5 billion globally.” Richard Schwartz, president at Rush Street Interactive, agrees with this prognosis. “We think mobile first,” he says. “This is why our mobile experience is a fully functional version of what you see on desktop. While both desktop and mobile options are available in New Jersey, we expect mobile to grow and continue to dominate in terms of usage very soon.” New Jersey is just the start of that push. On its own, it is quite small but as a leading indicator it will have immense value, particularly when promoting the vision of online US markets with the full product suite available. As Richard Carter, chief executive at SBTech says, “we can see the benefit of sports betting on New Jersey online casino already, with an acceleration in year-on- year growth, which reached 45% in December and 58% in January.” There are caveats to the hope that New Jersey will come to be viewed as the model to follow. As Williams says: “Most other states are not set up the way New Jersey is and other states are maybe more likely to be land-based.” But, he adds, “people are looking at New Jersey and what it does and seeing if it works”. New Jersey: data and lessons from the first five years of the US’ leading digital market 5