LVRJ GETS INTO ONLINE POKER
17 April 2009
A new business concept built around the
Internet's most popular game
The respected publication Las Vegas Review-Journal has
branched out into the world of online poker, launching a
free-to-play site in collaboration with Zen Gaming which
combines social networking and free poker to create
advertising and player-base building advantages.
Stephens Media Group, which owns the Review-Journal, is
one of Zen Gaming's first partners, the company
disclosed this week. Readers of the Journal can link to
its free poker site from the LVRJ website.
Former
marketing consultant, Mark Brown, is the founder and
chief executive of Zen Gaming, and hopes to develop the
online poker site, using the social networking and poker
trend to enable clients to advertise online.
After buying the National League of Poker site at
nlop.com Brown set about developing the marketing
potential of his idea through his company Zen Gaming,
using a a two-pronged business model.
The first
is a table game model of proprietary games that can be
played in poker rooms in Nevada. The company has a pair
of patented and proprietary poker games, which are
variations of Texas hold 'em, that can be found in poker
rooms at Treasure Island, Hard Rock Hotel and O'Sheas.
The second prong, and Brown's primary focus now, is
called "advergaming," a free online poker platform and
software that will be used to sell online advertising.
"Advergaming is a new approach to online
advertising," Zen Gaming President Vincent Zaldivar
said. "It utilizes gaming as the means to generate
additional online traffic, which increases impressions,
the length of our user sessions and, most importantly,
increases revenues."
Partners will be able to
sell ad space in the poker room, such as on the poker
tables, in the background, or across the bottom of the
users' screens.
Zen Gaming will partner with
businesses to develop site-specific content that will
link to nlop.com's online poker site.
Al Gibes,
executive director of Stephens Media Interactive, said
the LVRJ will use the poker room to develop a database
of customers. "We'll be able to grow this customer,"
Gibes said. "Their track record [shows that] people
spend a lot of time playing this application. So we'll
have the opportunity to get our content in front of them
during breaks in the game, or if they're waiting for a
new game to start."
Nearly 275 players registered
through the newspaper's Web site in early April, Brown
revealed.
Brown said players stay in the online
poker rooms for just over an hour, on average.
One idea that Stephens Media is considering is placing a
news ticker in the Internet poker room. Players will be
able to link to news stories from the ticker. He added
that poker players using the site also could choose to
participate in surveys or contests that will earn them
more playing points when they're not playing poker.
Zen Gaming has reached out to other media and gaming
companies to build online partnerships that will link to
the National League of Poker Web site.
Some of
Zen Gaming's other partners include Treasure Island,
Hard Rock Hotel and tavern owner Golden Gaming. It also
has partnership deals with Lotus Broadcasting, a radio
company that owns the local affiliates for ESPN Radio
and Fox Sports Radio, and a pair of local rock and
Spanish-language stations.
Brown said his
company is close to announcing national partnerships,
one with a national media company and the other with an
international sports league.
Christopher Abraham,
vice president of marketing for Golden Gaming, said his
company is using the poker room to market to its
customers. The company hosts poker tournaments on the
site and gives away three $25 gift certificates each
week. Nearly 250 players have registered through Golden
Gaming's tavern group Web site since the room launched
in February.
"It's just another way we can offer
(customers) entertainment tied in with our brand,"
Abraham told Las Vegas Review Journal.
Brown said
competing free online poker Web sites, such as PurePlay
and SpadeClub, don't use the advergaming model adopted
by his Zen Gaming.
Competing Web sites either
make money by selling VIP packages or they use no-cash
poker games to try to lure players to their
out-of-country, money-to-play poker sites, he claimed.
"That's not our model at all," Brown said. "At our
site you cannot bet a dime."
Zen Gaming's
National League of Poker Web site has two levels.
Players can register on a basic player site that is
free, or they can register on a VIP poker subscription
model that charges $19.99 per month and allows players
to compete for larger prizes.
With a Boston-based
staff of 16, Zen Gaming has more than 80 proprietary
games as part of its intellectual-property vault, Brown
said. The company is exploring relationships with a
number of major casino-game developers to bring these
games to market.
"There's no doubt in my mind, in
the next year we'll be the dominate player in the free
online poker space," Brown said.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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