The 1% Commission
Betting Exchange
Punting Ace
have have been fortunate to have Ian Davies author an article.
Ian Davies is the Founder, Chairman
& Chief Executive of the betting exchange, www.backandlay.com
In the article below Ian looks at the challenges he has
faced starting a betting exchange and the opportunities
that lie ahead along with the benefits of using a betting
exchange.
My name is Ian Davies. I am a betting exchange
operator.
Betting Exchanges have taken the United Kingdom (and parts
of the rest of the world) by storm since the originals,
Flutter and Betfair, launched in 1999.
Formerly a racing and sports betting journalist here in
the UK, I joined Flutter in the autumn of 2000, was instrumental
in their move to a betting exchange platform and their attaining
of the 30% market share which facilitated the brokering
of their merger with Betfair at the end of 2001.
Since then I've set up my own company, BackAndlay.com Limited,
and our betting exchange, www.backandlay.com, launched on
5th November 2003.
It's been a long, tough, haul.
Developing the software and bringing it from my requirements
document in march 2002 to launch was an often painful, 89-week,
ordeal.
But I was lucky to have teamed up with Glyn Wintle, a brilliant
IT expert who masterminded the whole technical operation.
Betfair was the overwhelmingly dominant market leader, with
first-mover advantage and all the other edges a large staff
and budget brings to the table.
All we had was Glyn's technical nous, my nous about the
betting industry and my primal strategywhich is this
Either you're are going to take on Betfair with a massive
budget production, spend tens, maybe hundreds, of millions
of pounds in trying to unseat them, or you are not.
And if you are not, you must do everything on the ultra-cheap,
getting the lowest operating costs of any player in the
market, costs you can meet indefinitely without seeing a
single penny in revenue and then dig in for what might be
a lifelong struggle to reach profitability.
There is no middle-ground - throwing some money at it will
simply result in losing that money.
So, what to do - spend a fortune or spend nothing?
Well, I was spared a prolonged ordeal there by the fact
I had nothing to spend.
But, in any case, with betting exchanges being essentially
low-margin businesses, the minimalist strategy appealed
to me anyway, so we went for it, and, two years alter we're
still going for it.
A handful (literally) of us run www.backandlay.com, we've
amassed a userbase of around a thousand (despite spending
literally nothing on marketing) and we've got the makings
of a nice little business, though right now it's still at
the infant stage.
Revenue isn't yet covering the operating costs (the three
shareholders make up the shortfall personally out of their
own pockets as part of our ongoing investment in, and commitment
to, the company) - though we're seeing 400% growth year
on year - but that's not important because, the instant
we do cover them, we'll only up the operating costs by expanding
the operation anyway, adding servers as required, and adding
ops staff to deal with the growing number of users.
But that's enoughh of me talking about me, what do you all
think about me?
Well, not 'me' per se, but betting with exchanges generally.
Why would you want to bet with one?
Well, the key words are 'value' and 'empowerment.'
Can you take a price on the TAB?
No.
Can you request a price there?
No.
Can you lay a bet?
No.
Is the take-out 1% (the commission rate at my exchange)?
No.
Are the returned odds generally better than those available
on the exchanges?
Generally not.
But can I trust an exchange - I hear an exchange called
SportingOptions went bust, with debts of £5.4 million
and with £3 million in client funds missing?
Well, what can I tell you - evidently, and sadly, not every
gaming operator is high on integrity, but it's a problem
more commonly associated with bookmakers (Luvbet and NetBetSports
spring to mind).
All money at www.backandlay.com is held in a clients account
with HSBC Bank plc and is only administered by us for the
purposes of processing deposits and withdrawals and withdrawing
our accrued commissions and any accrued interest to our
Business Account.
But I'm not going to bull-shit you all with jargon about
'ring- fencing' which has no real legal substance.
The bottom line is you have to trust us the same as you
have to trust Betfair and anyone else you deposit money
with.
Obviously, Betfair are a far bigger company than us, but
big companies have gone bust before now, leaving smaller
ones still trading in their wake.
Now I don't blame anyone for making Betfair their first
port of call if they elect to try out exchange betting.
They're the biggest, they have the most liquidity.
But it's relflected in their commission charges, which are
as high as 5%.
www.backandlay.com charges everyone 1% - and that's our
key point of difference and competitive advantage (though
we do also offer live streaming, a device of Glyn's that
he is as proud of, as we are of Glyn for delivering it).
There are people paying £1,000 a year in commission
to Betfair who would only be paying £200 at www.backandlay.com
and, for a lot of people, that's the difference between
net profit and net loss in the course of a year.
www.backandlay.com doesn't yet cover Australian racing,
nor does it cover many other markets which might be of interest
to Australian punters.
But that's simply because we haven't yet had demand for
such markets and the key to our commercial longevity is
we don't devote our finite resources to things we've had
no demand for.
Say a number of you opened accounts and started asking for
local markets, we'd provide them.
That's the way we do things.
Ian Davies,
Founder, Chairman & Chief Executive,
BackAndlay.com Limited.
www.backandlay.com,
The 1% Commission Betting Exchange.
To go to the BackAndLay website, click
here