INTRALOT STRUGGLING IN AUSTRALIAN LOTTERY DEAL
10 April 2009
First year operations could fail to meet
budget by a whopping A$226 million
The Australian media are speculating on the possibility
that Intralot's Aussie subsidiary may have its state
licence pulled after estimates suggesting that its first
year operational figures wll likely be shockingly lower
than budgeted expectations.
The company launched
its state lottery in Victoria last July, and documents
under the microscope in the press suggest that Intralot
is likely to fall $226 million short of its first-year
sales target of $293 million. More than 200 of its 769
Victorian agents lost money between September and
January, while 196 agents collected less than $22 a
week, it is claimed.
The Victorian government has
warned the company it has until the end of June 2009 to
turn around its sales figures before a mid-year review
that has the power to cancel its 10-year licence.
Reports are that Intralot has tried to rev up its
marketing by engaging with former football star and
marketing guru Sam Kekovich to turn its fortunes around
by giving it a "human touch". "Slammin'" Sam Kekovich
(58) is an Australian media personality and former
Australian rules football player famed for his
controversial behaviour, both on and off the field, and
most recently for his series of satirical advertisements
as the spokesman for Meat and Livestock Australia (MLA)
to promote the lamb industry.
The keno, scratchie
and bingo operator has also embarked on a massive
shake-up, according to the Topix blog, with Intralot's
head of Australian operations, John Katakis, sacking
Melbourne public relations doyen Mike Smith and
advertising firm, George Patterson Y & R. Industry
sources claimed that the company had spent up to A$3
million on advertising since launch.
However a
senior industry source remarked that this was about a
quarter of the amount spent by lottery rival Tatts.
"That isn't nearly enough to take on a brand like
Tatts," the source said. "To crack them you need to
spend and invest in the product but they just don't get
it.
"John Brumby [Australian Labor Party
politician and the 45th Premier of Victoria] couldn't
have come up with a better way to curb problem gambling.
Not even the worst of addicts wants to play their
games."
Topix claims that Intralot is also
considering severing ties with former ALP state
treasurer and Intralot director Tony Sheehan. The Herald
Sun last year reported that Sheehan had secured a $1
million deal for helping Intralot win its 10-year
Victorian lottery licence, a claim on which Intralot has
so far declined to comment.
The situation was
sufficiently serious to prompt a visit to Australia by
Intralot's global chief Constantinos Antonopoulos in
late February, holding discussions with the Victorian
Gaming Minister Tony Robinson. He was apparently warned
that the government would revoke Intralot's licence and
impose other punitive measures unless there was a marked
improvement in performance, and this threat has added
momentum for major changes in marketing the ailing
business.
There were high hopes for the initial
deal between Victoria and Intralot, with the Herald Sun
reporting early in 2008 that prizes of up to A$1.5
million would be offered, and that the Victorian
government expected to accrue additional revenues of up
to A$1.5 billion over the ten year licence period from
lottery and scratch card sales.
The projections
were that punters would gamble $292 million on
instant-win scratchies and lottery games in the first
year alone. Second-year sales were anticipated at $395
million, and Intralot was free to expand the sale of
gambling products to all retail outlets, including
service stations, supermarkets, bottle shops,
convenience stores, pharmacies and post offices.
Marketing plans envisaged the use of traditional
advertising tactics as well as more new media approaches
involving text messaging and Internet promotion.
In terms of the agreement between state and lottery
company, for every A$1 spent on a lottery ticket, the
Brumby government would take 36c, 60c was to be returned
in prizemoney and 4c accrued to Intralot as the
operator.
Intralot sales outlets, which were
expected to number over a thousand throughout the state,
were to receive a 9 percent commission on top of the
forecast sales figures, adding an estimated $400 million
to the lottery gambling spend.
The way things are
panning out at present, Intralot has not presented
competitive pressure on the former sole lottery provider
Tatts, which forecast lottery sales of more than $11
billion during its own 10-year licence extension.
The Herald Sun reported last year that the licencing
for the Intralot deal had been delayed for more than 12
months after the emergence of undisclosed probity
matters. A leaked report, compiled by Solicitor-General
Pamela Tate, revealed Intralot was denied natural
justice in probity assessments conducted by the VCGR,
which had allegedly named Tatts as its preferred
tenderer by suggesting it met higher standards of
probity.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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