Rivalry isn’t like other sports betting companies.
The Toronto-based sportsbook was only founded about seven years ago, making it a relative newcomer compared to more established sports betting companies like FanDuel and DraftKings. Its aim is to fill a couple of gaps in that market, targeting esports aficionados and explicitly catering to Gen Z and millennials, according to Global Head of Marketing Grant Flannery.
“Not all of them want to use their dad’s betting platform,” Flannery told Marketing Brew.
Since its inception, Rivalry has expanded its offerings beyond esports, but the company is still focused on tapping into internet and influencer culture, partnering with creators and platforms over big-name celebrities and traditional mass-media channels to connect with its audience in regions around the world.
“We’re a brand that’s a little bit degenerate, but not too degenerate,” Flannery said. “We want to have fun in what we’re doing.”
Under the influence: In recent years, sports betting companies like ESPN Bet, DraftKings, and FanDuel have tapped celebrity spokespeople to lead their marketing campaigns. Rivalry doesn’t have the budget for a star-studded cast, Flannery acknowledged, but even if it did, Flannery said his team wouldn’t want to position the brand similarly to others in the space.
“Our mantra is pretty much, ’When everybody else zigs, we zag,’” he said. “We want people to be able to resonate with [the brand] and look at it and feel like, ’That’s exactly who I would want to bet with. They get me.’”
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