Most white label casino providers offering products below 25k setup fee are scammers. There are only a few serious providers which are easy to identify by having a serious conversation. Be critical. Don't belive all promises. Let facts speaking. Make sure you get a clear picture of the identity of the people behind the white label casino business. Make sure they have Linkedin accounts etc. and are well known in the industry. Scammers try to be anonymous.
Read this informative article:
"Faked White Label Casinos" on turnkeycasinos dot com:
One introduction followed by three posts that are almost identical, and look like a bit of cloaked marketing for your own company.
You say "Most white label casino providers offering products below 25k setup fee are scammers", yet YOUR lowest tier offering is FREE!!!!!!!! How does this make you NOT a scammer, when you say that everyone else with a tier below 25K probably IS a scammer.
One certainly does need to have a serious conversation with a prospective turnkey supplier, however it is no good relying on one turnkey supplier to produce an unbiased article on how to spot one, or which supplier is best.
After all, as players know, EVERY casino has been "voted No 1 best casino", or has won awards for "best" at something.
Total E Soft is simply one of your competitors, and they may take exception to the fact that your other two posts are on the ends of the two recently active Total E Soft threads. Total E Soft will probably say THEY are the best turnkey provider, and may also "advise" that any competitor that offers a "free" entry level product can't be very good.
Ideally, you should get a stall at the next ICEi show in London so that many people looking to open an online casino can have that "serious conversation" with your company, along with others, and all in the one place. You can also go around and see what the competition is up to, perhaps posing as a potential customer. They would probably do the same at your stall to see "what the newcomer is up to", and whether they need to adapt before they lose business to you.