• I Can Survive Anything: Cancer, Career, and Cutting the Bullshit with Line Peteri
    Mar 25 2026

    In this episode of the iGaming Leader Podcast, Leo sits down with Line Peteri, a powerhouse leader who has scaled teams across tech, fashion, and iGaming.

    Line shares her raw, unfiltered journey of building a career since age 17, only to be reduced by others to her appearance, her relationships, and her health.

    She calls out the "fake bullshit" in the industry, discusses the isolation of being a high-achieving woman in her 20s, and explains why she refuses to compromise her values for a title.

    Guest Bio

    Line Peteri is VP - Strategic Partnerships at ATFX, operating at the intersection of performance, regulation, and global expansion in the financial trading industry. With a background in scaling brands, including co founding and growing roccamore, she brings a commercial, data driven approach to leadership and customer acquisition. Alongside her corporate role, she advises start ups on growth strategy and sustainable performance. A HYROX endurance athlete and cancer survivor, Line speaks on resilience, high performance mindset, and leading with clarity under pressure.

    Key Topics Discussed
    00:00
    – Line calls out all the BS on Linkedin
    05:30 – Being known as "the girlfriend" despite a 10-year career.
    10:00 – Being dismissed at business school.
    11:30 – Incurable Cancer diagnosis at age 30
    14:00 – A 7-minute run led to a half-marathon and a shoe company.
    16:00 – Why very little can throw Line off her game now.
    19:00 – Line hires people to eventually replace her.
    21:00 – Resigning when the company wouldn't allow her to protect her team.
    25:30 – The Political Gap: being liked by your team isn't enough.
    28:00 – Fluff and BS
    33:00 – Why Line refuses to accept "Female Leader" awards.
    35:00 – Advice to her 20s: "Don't give a fuck" and stop trying to blend in with the furniture.

    Memorable Quotes

    "I can survive cancer, I can survive anything. Even when I meet an asshole... I just think: you could just fuck off."
    "I am very honest and I'm very direct... I don't really filter things. I think there's a lot of fake things going on."
    "The more you begin to compromise your values, the less they become."
    "If you wanna blend in with the furniture, yes, that’s what you can do. But you know what? Show yourself."
    "Everything you learn, you learn on the way down."


    Follow Line on LinkedIn:
    https://www.linkedin.com/in/linepeteri/

    Follow Leo on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/leo-judkins/

    Subscribe to the iGaming Leader newsletter: https://www.igamingleader.com/signup

    Join the iGaming Leader Mastermind: https://www.igamingleader.com/


    This episode is sponsored by Sumsub, the leading identity verification provider for iGaming operators. Learn more at https://sumsub.com/blog/knowledge-hub/gambling/

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    38 mins
  • Stop Fighting Alone: The Secret to Startup Survival
    Mar 14 2026
    In this episode of the iGaming Leader Podcast, Leo Judkins sits down with Ebbe Groes, the co-founder and CEO of EveryMatrix. From a garage in 2008 to building the world’s largest casino aggregation platform, Ebbe has navigated the brutal realities of scaling a B2B giant without the "fuel" of massive venture capital.Ebbe shares the high-stakes decisions of EveryMatrix’s "survival" era between 2015 and 2017, where the company nearly ran out of cash and the team took massive salary cuts to keep the dream alive. He pulls back the curtain on why he ringing a literal bell in meetings to keep efficiency high, the "law of large numbers" that makes VCs dangerous for founders, and why his recent decision to bring his brother in as co-CEO is about building a multigenerational legacy.GUEST BIOCo-founder & CEO, EveryMatrixEbbe Groes is a seasoned technology entrepreneur with a PhD in Economics and a proven track record of scaling software startups. Since co-founding EveryMatrix in 2008, he has transformed a bootstrapped venture into a leading global B2B iGaming provider that remains debt-free and founder-controlled. With nearly two decades of experience in the sector, Ebbe is known for his sharp commercial focus on tier-one clients and his commitment to maintaining product agility through modular, independent business units.Key Topics Discussed00:00 – The VC calculation: Why investors push 60% of companies "down the drain"02:00 – From garage to global giant: The EveryMatrix origin story04:00 – Founder-led advantages: Fast decision-making vs. board bureaucracy06:30 – Identifying bottlenecks: your Outlook calendar is your best leadership gauge 09:00 – The 2015–2017 crisis and nearly running out of cash4:30 – Swapping salaries for equity during the lean years20:00 – Why EveryMatrix only raised $4.3M in 18 years25:00 – Watching your business dreams get taken by VCs28:00 – The luxury of "No": Segmenting clients into Gold, Silver, and Bronze32:30 – Co-CEO Strategy: Bringing in family to build a 100-year business37:00 – "Chop, Chop": Removing people who aren't in the fight with youMemorable Quotes"The key thing to understand about VCs is that they do their calculations on large numbers... they're going to push and accelerate to see if you belong to the 60% that go down the drain.""Suddenly the founders... their dreams are shut to pieces and they own 10% of the company. There's nothing fun about it. You feel then cheated from your own dreams.""It's important that you surround yourself with also people that think like you and you don't feel, 'oh, I'm alone in fighting this battle.'""If there's some founder in a similar situation... and he feels that some people are not with him... then, you know, here's your chance to get rid of them... So chop, chop."Key TakeawaysThe "Fuel" Trap: Venture capital often accelerates a company toward a "hit or fail" binary outcome. Founders who take too many rounds often end up as "passengers" in a company they no longer own or recognise.Modular Agility: Splitting a large organisation into independent business units with their own P&Ls prevents management bottlenecks and allows each product to compete as a specialist in the market.Transparency in Crisis: During the 2015 cash crunch, EveryMatrix survived by being radical about cost-cutting and transparent with staff, eventually converting reduced salaries into high-value equity.The Power of "No": Taking the wrong clients creates "opportunity cost" and disrupts your roadmap. Segmenting clients and being willing to cut off distracting revenue streams is essential for long-term scalability.Succession as Legacy: Bringing in a Co-CEO isn't just about bandwidth; it's about shifting from a "trade sale" mindset to a multi-generational, family-owned philosophy that preserves the company’s DNA.Follow Ebbe Groes on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ebbe-groes/Follow Leo Judkins on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/leo-judkins/Subscribe to the iGaming Leader newsletter: https://www.igamingleader.com/signupJoin the iGaming Leader Mastermind: https://www.igamingleader.com/
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    40 mins
  • You Only Learn on the Way Down: Lessons from a $300M Reality Check
    Mar 7 2026

    In this episode of the iGaming Leader Podcast, Leo sits down with Charles Cohen, a serial entrepreneur who has experienced the industry's highest peaks and most isolating moments.

    From building beenz.com, one of the internet’s first digital currencies, to pioneering mobile-first gaming with Probability plc, Charles shares the raw reality of leadership when the "arc of the universe" refuses to bend to your will.

    Charles reflects on the "seasickness" of the .com bubble burst, where a $300 million valuation evaporated almost overnight, and the discipline required to stick to a "mobile-only" strategy when the rest of the industry was laughing at the idea.

    Now leading the Department of Trust, he discusses the evolution of player safety and why the most valuable lessons in a career are almost always learned on the way down.

    GUEST BIO

    Charles Cohen
    Founder & CEO, Department of Trust / NED Veikkaus

    Charles Cohen is a veteran technology entrepreneur who has founded, listed, and exited major businesses in both the UK and US. An Oxford PPE graduate, he rose to prominence as the founder of beenz.com before becoming the CEO of Probability plc, the pioneer of mobile-centric gambling games.

    Following Probability's acquisition by GTECH (now IGT), Charles spent nearly seven years as Vice President, leading global mobile and US sports betting expansion. Currently, he leads the Department of Trust, sits on the board of Veikkaus Oy, and serves on the UK Gambling Commission Industry Forum.

    Key topics discussed

    00:00 – You can’t negotiate with reality: Adapting or walking away.
    03:00 – Realising a $300M valuation no longer applies.
    09:00 – The Founder’s Trap: Being a passenger on your own train.
    11:00 – Closing offices and returning value honorably.
    16:00 – Why Charles resisted the "regular website" for Probability.
    19:00 – Mailing physical checks in the early days of mobile.
    24:00 – Every employee is taking a risk on your company.
    33:00 – Why selling a business is the most stressful period.
    37:00 – The PASPA Repeal: Being in the right place at the right time.
    44:00 – Compliance & Automation: Where manual processes go to die.
    48:00 – Why you should always have more questions than answers.

    Key takeaways

    Learn on the Downward Trend: Success masks inefficiency. True learning and organisational discipline are forged during downturns and failures rather than during rapid growth.

    Don't Finesse the Inevitable: When a paradigm shift occurs—like a market bubble bursting—leaders must accept and adapt immediately. There is no room for denial or finessing a fundamental change in reality.

    The Discipline of Specialism: Real value is built by doing something different, not by being a "different version" of what everyone else is doing. Sticking to a "mobile-first" bet when desktop was king created long-term enterprise value.

    Identity vs. Momentum: High-growth startups can turn founders into "passengers on their own train." It is essential to maintain a rational perspective when behavior starts to be influenced by metrics like "fundraising" rather than core business health.

    Systems Over People in Compliance: Regulatory failure is often a system failure, not a people failure. Overburdened and under-equipped departments require better data and systems (like Open Banking) to make risk-based judgments effectively.

    Memorable quotes

    "There's no room for denial, you can't negotiate with it... You've either got to accept it and adapt to it, or get out and walk away."

    "The lesson that I took out of it ultimately is: you don't learn anything on the way up. Everything you learn, you learn on the way down."

    "All this Silicon Valley horse shit about defining the future... You can not bend the arc of the universe."

    "What's a couple hundred million between friends?"

    Follow Charles Cohen on Linkedin:

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/cohencharles/

    Follow Leo Judkins & iGaming Leader

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/leo-judkins/
    Newsletter: https://www.igamingleader.com/subscribe
    Join the Mastermind: https://www.igamingleader.com/apply


    This episode is sponsored by Sumsub, the leading identity verification provider for iGaming operators. Learn more at https://sumsub.com/blog/knowledge-hub/gambling/

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    51 mins
  • The Secrets to Running 4 Companies in iGaming
    Feb 25 2026
    In this episode of the iGaming Leader Podcast, Leo Judkins sits down with Andy Rogers, the quiet force behind some of the industry's most significant behind-the-scenes developments. Andy shares his journey from industrial design to launching and exiting multiple agencies and technology firms, including his strategic tenure at Media Tech and the eventual founding of Rocker.The conversation explores strategic decision-making under intense constraints, the intricacies of business design, and the reality of navigating a "mad" 10-year plan. Andy offers deep insights into the value of patience, the importance of running your own race, and why being undercapitalised is the most expensive mistake an executive can make.GUEST BIOAndy RogersFounder of Rocker & MD of Pretty TechnicalAndy has been an MD, CEO, Investor, and Board member in the digital and gaming industries for 28 years. After studying Industrial Design at Brunel University, he launched his own design agency in 1998, working through the dotcom boom and bust, developing the UK's first online trading platform, and even running a military database business. He later joined Lightmaker as Managing Director, scaling it into a global leader with clients like Manchester United, Sony, and Nintendo.After moving to London to lead the digital arm of ETV Media Group, Andy entered the iGaming sector, eventually building the world’s first B2B social gaming platform. Following the sale of that business to Mediatech, he served as their Managing Director in Spain, overseeing nearly a third of the country's online GGR. In 2015, Andy founded Rokker, acting as an incubator for ventures including Random Colour Animal, Skull Mountain, and Pretty Technical, where he continues to lead today.Key Topics Discussed00:00 - Patient strategy and the "fuck it, I'll figure it out" mindset03:00 - Launching a first agency and the transition to "proper" jobs05:00 - Walking away from an acquisition payday at Media Tech09:00 - Why Andy chose to bootstrap Rocker instead of raising VC12:00 - Running your own race: Refusing to judge success by others' achievements18:00 - Reverse engineering a 10-year life and financial plan21:00 - The "Mad Plan": Incubating four businesses by waiting for the right people27:00 - Capital deployment: Deciding which fire to put out first34:00 - Listening to accountants without letting spreadsheets kill growth41:00 - Undercapitalisation: The canary in the coal mine for business failure43:00 - Why it is expensive to be poor: Blood in the water and bad deals50:00 - Advice to 25-year-old Andy: Get into gaming earlier and back yourselfMemorable Quotes"Our success is directly proportional to the number of times you've said: fuck it, I'll figure it out.""Investing is easy if you have an infinite amount of time.""It's expensive to be poor. You get worse deals, you get worse rates, someone can see the blood in the water.""Run your own race... I'm comfortable in my own skin to run my own race.""When you know, you know. There is no amount of swinging for the boundaries... you just know it's done."Key TakeawaysPatience is a Competitive Advantage: By giving himself a 10-to-15-year horizon rather than a standard 3-year VC cycle, Andy was able to build value without the pressure of external shareholders.The "Expensive to be Poor" Trap: Running a business undercapitalised forces you to take bad projects and accept suboptimal deals because investors can "see the blood in the water".Don't Cut Costs to Growth: While accountants are essential for structure, cost-cutting your way to a growth target is often a "convenient memory loss" that ignores the initial investment required to hit those numbers.Success is Contextual: Most industry success is based on context and timing rather than purely personal ability; leaders must be honest enough to admit when luck played a role.Back Yourself to Run Again: The highest leverage a young leader has is the conviction to run their own race rather than helping someone else achieve their goals at the expense of their own conviction.Follow Andy Rogers:https://www.linkedin.com/in/andyrogersprofile/www.rokker.co.ukwww.rokkerx.teamwww.prettytechnical.ioFollow Leo Judkins & iGaming LeaderLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/leo-judkins/Newsletter: https://www.igamingleader.com/subscribeJoin the Mastermind: https://www.igamingleader.com/applyThis episode is sponsored by Sumsub, the leading identity verification provider for iGaming operators. Learn more at https://sumsub.com/blog/knowledge-hub/gambling/
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    53 mins
  • Your Company is Not a Family: Bootstrapping Lessons with the Founder of TESTA
    Feb 13 2026

    In this episode of the iGaming Leader Podcast, Leo sits down with Kyle Wiltshire, the founder and CEO of TESTA. Kyle takes us on a journey from the high-octane "Wild West" days of Bodog in Manila to building a global, bootstrapped testing powerhouse from his base in Taipei.

    Kyle shares the "brutal" reality of scaling an operation from 50 to 1,200 people in a flash, the hard-learned lessons of dealing with technical partners who try to "hold products hostage," and why he believes the common corporate trope of "we are a family" is actually toxic for performance. He opens up about his philosophy of "making yourself non-essential" and why the most successful leaders are generalists who know exactly when to hand off the ball.

    GUEST BIO

    Kyle Wiltshire
    Founder & CEO, TESTA

    Kyle Wiltshire is a technical-leader-turned-entrepreneur who specialised in DevOps and backend innovation long before they were buzzwords. After years of driving massive scalability for Asia-facing operators, he founded TESTA in 2023 to solve a persistent industry pain point: real-world, crowdsourced QA for the global iGaming sector. Based in Taipei, Kyle is a self-proclaimed "generalist" with an MBA who believes in building lean, profitable businesses in uncontested markets.

    Key topics discussed

    00:00 – Why a company is a sports team, not a family.
    02:00 – Moving to Manila: The "brutal" 12-hour time difference and the project that never ended.
    04:00 – The Bodog Days: Scaling from 50 to 1,200 people and the chaos of "two of everything."
    09:00 – The Partner Betrayal: How a startup partner tried to hold code hostage for equity.
    14:00 – The Ethics of Equity: Why Kyle is now "freewheeling" no more with cap tables.
    16:00 – The Bootstrap Constraint: Why saying "no" to VC money made TESTA a more scientific business.
    23:00 – Finding the "Blue Ocean": Why Kyle chose crowdsourced testing over the "Red Ocean" of slot studios.
    26:00 – The Squeaky Wheel: Why coaching low performers is a drain on the high performers.
    31:00 – Parroting vs. Execution: The challenge of "yes-men" in diverse global cultures.
    36:00 – The Art of the Handoff: How to get over yourself and let the team run the booth.
    43:00 – The Vince McMahon Lesson: Railroaded ambition and disrupting regional territories.

    Key takeaways

    The Sports Team vs. Family Model: A family is unconditional; a company is mission-based. Viewing your team as a high-performance sports unit allows for the "ruthless" but necessary decisions required to protect the organisation's goals.

    Make Yourself Non-Essential: The ultimate goal of a founder is to be "off the critical path." If a business requires you to be the subject matter expert in every room, you haven't built a company—you've built a job.

    The "Mom Test" for Software: You can have all the data in the world, but you will always learn more by watching a real person use your product in their own environment. Data tells you what is happening; stories tell you why.

    Bootstrap for Clarity: Outside capital often forces a "race to the top" that ignores product-market fit. Spending "money that would have been in your pocket" forces a more disciplined, scientific approach to growth.

    Stop Fixing People: In leadership, you cannot solve people like a technical challenge. Spending excessive time coaching a low performer isn't just a waste of your time—it’s an insult to your high performers who are actually carrying the weight.

    Memorable quotes

    "A company is not a family. Let's be honest, we're trying to accomplish this thing... It’s not, we're all just here to hug each other and sing Kumbaya."

    "How would you ever get promoted if they absolutely need you to do the thing that you do? The goal is to make yourself not essential."

    "If you are clever enough to build another slot company in 2026, good on you... I like the uncontested space."

    "You have to learn to fire people when it’s not working because it’s actually this weird superpower that brings the whole group together."

    Connect with Kyle Wiltshire:

    https://www.testa.io
    https://www.linkedin.com/in/kwiltshire/
    https://next.io/podcasts/next-io-podcast/kyle-wiltshire-the-truth-about-doing-business-in-southeast-asia/

    Follow Leo Judkins & iGaming Leader
    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/leo-judkins/
    Newsletter: https://www.igamingleader.com/subscribe
    Join the Mastermind: https://www.igamingleader.com/apply

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    46 mins
  • The "Bait and Switch" of the C-Suite: Dealing with the gap between the job description and the reality of a company in trouble.
    Feb 6 2026

    In this episode of the iGaming Leader Podcast, Leo sits down with Ian Freeman, a commercial powerhouse who has navigated the high-stakes world of Kambi, IGT, and Inspired Entertainment.

    Ian pulls back the curtain on the "Bait and Switch" of executive leadership, the moments when the glossy job description meets the grim reality of a business in crisis.

    Ian reflects on the formative trauma of losing his father at 20 and how carrying a family legacy forged a "survive and thrive" mentality that defined his career.

    He shares the brutal honesty of walking into his first board meeting at a new firm only to realise the company was on the verge of insolvency, and how he learned, through painful trial and error, that coming in "too hot" can sometimes fuel the fire rather than put it out.

    Key topics discussed

    00:00 – The First Board Meeting: Realising there wasn't "another page" to the numbers.
    03:00 – Formative Crisis: Losing a father at 45 and taking over the family legacy at 20.
    07:00 – Breaking Down: The moment Ian realised he was living his father's life, not his own.
    08:00 – Fishing with Ted Baker: Lessons in entrepreneurship from the riverbank.
    10:00 – The "Moxie" Days: Learning the John McMahon sales toolkit.
    13:00 – The Scandinavian Consensus: What iGaming can learn from Kambi’s leadership culture.
    19:00 – Walking into Insolvency: How to lead when everyone's "hair is on fire."
    24:00 – The Danger of "Coming in Hot": Why speed isn't always the answer in a turnaround.
    28:00 – The Fear of Failure: Admitting when you need help in the C-Suite.
    33:00 – The B2B Sin: Why failing to deliver technology is "killing" your customers' businesses.
    40:00 – Living for Two: How Ian carries his father's legacy into the next 20 years of iGaming.

    GUEST BIO

    Ian Freeman, former CCO & CRO (Kambi, IGT, Inspired Entertainment), is a veteran commercial leader with over 20 years of experience across Europe, North America, and LatAm. From driving Kambi’s landmark IPO to navigating the complex regulatory waters of Brazil for Inspired, Ian has seen the industry from every angle. Beyond the boardroom, Ian is a devoted father in a blended family and a passionate fly fisherman who finds his clarity in the silence of nature.

    Follow Ian Freeman on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/free-man

    Follow Leo Judkins & iGaming Leader

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/leo-judkins/
    Newsletter: https://www.igamingleader.com/subscribe
    Join the Mastermind: https://www.igamingleader.com/apply

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    43 mins
  • From Affiliate Manager to CMO — Leading Through Crisis, Regulation & Restructure
    Jan 17 2026

    In this episode of the iGaming Leader Podcast, Leo sits down with Elen Barber, who went from affiliate manager to CMO at Kindred in just nine years, to explore what it really takes to lead through the industry's toughest challenges.

    Elen shares the brutal reality of her first weeks as CMO: facing a £100 million fine, Swedish re-regulation, plummeting share price, and multiple rounds of restructuring that forced her to make impossible decisions about people she'd worked alongside for years. She reveals how she kept 550 people motivated while simultaneously having to cut headcount, and why the loneliness at the top hit harder than she expected.

    About Elen Barber

    Elen Barber has been working in the gaming industry for over 20 years and has witnessed its evolution from the wild west days to today's highly regulated landscape. She's held CMO roles at Super Group and Kindred Group, managing teams across multiple countries and dealing with everything from new market launches to regulatory curveballs. Based in London, she's passionate about how this industry continues to reinvent itself.

    Key Topics Discussed

    00:00 - Elen Barbers iGaming Journey
    03:00 - Creating your own opportunities: you can't wait for your manager
    08:00 - Why the higher you go, the lonelier it gets (and how to handle it)
    14:00 - Wearing different hats: the two-chair technique for managing emotions
    18:00 - Building trust: having your team's back and showing your true nature
    22:00 - The worst crisis in company history hits in week one as CMO
    26:00 - Managing multiple restructures while keeping people motivated
    34:00 - Life after Kindred: why career breaks aren't always roses
    36:00 - The pressure of being a perfect parent, perfect exec, perfect everything
    41:00 - Quick fire Q&A: leadership advice, mistakes, and legacy

    Memorable Quotes

    "It is too easy to make money in our industry comparing to any other industries. The margins are much higher. So we are spoiled for this. It doesn't drive innovation."

    "You also create opportunities, you don't wait for the opportunities to be created for you. You can't rely completely on your manager to get you through your career."

    "And it is scary for the leader to understand and accept that suddenly you know significantly less than people within your team."

    "I've been working all my life, and I didn't know how to relax, I missed that mental stimulation. "

    "You really have to try to take emotions out of the business decisions because these things do not work together."

    Connect with Elen Barber

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/elen-barber/

    Follow Leo Judkins & iGaming Leader

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/leo-judkins/
    Newsletter: https://www.igamingleader.com/subscribe
    Join the Mastermind: https://www.igamingleader.com/apply

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    43 mins
  • The Entrepreneurial Journey: 30 Years of Leadership Lessons from David McDowell
    Dec 17 2025

    In this episode of the iGaming Leader Podcast, Leo sits down with veteran executive David McDowell, co-founder of FSB Technology and an early pioneer in the B2B platform space, to unpack the brutal reality of the 30-year entrepreneurial journey.

    David shares the truth about leadership burnout (it's the weight of the decisions, not the hours), the biggest mistake CEOs make when scaling (waiting too long to remove a talented but toxic employee), and the devastating cost of losing your vision.

    He offers a raw, cathartic reflection on the final chapters of FSB: being named Platform of the Year, only to have the momentum killed by a lack of capital investment demanded by a board focused on short-term liquidity. This is a crucial lesson in battling the "noise to the vision" and the indispensable wisdom only gained by staying in the game long enough to get the wins.

    About David McDowell

    David started his career as an engineer in Michigan and moved to London to do an MBA in 1993. He launched his first business, a two-sided marketplace using college students to teach adults how to use the internet, in 1995. He has since spent 25 years in the gambling industry.

    He co-founded GameAccount (now GAN), an early skill games provider that pivoted to B2B casino games and platform provider before its IPO in 2013.
    He co-founded and was CEO for 15 years of FSB Technology, a B2B sports betting platform that was sold to PE in 2019 and on to EveryMatrix in 2024.

    He currently works as an independent consultant with various gambling-related businesses and serves as an Entrepreneur Mentor in Residence at London Business School.

    Key Topics Discussed

    00:00 - The entrepreneurial philosophy
    04:00 - Building the first venture (SOS) in 1995
    06:15 - Transitioning to CEO: becoming the external face of the organisation
    07:45 - It often feels like everything that you do is a mistake
    10:00 - Managing burnout: the importance of compartmentalising and health
    16:30 - Careful who your investors are
    19:20 - The fundraising Goldilocks problem: minimising dilution while maximising runway
    24:30 - Why customer-led features are often an absolute waste of time
    31:00 - Knowing in your gut someone is wrong for the organisation
    37:00 - Communicating your vision clearly
    39:00 - Isolation in leadership
    47:00 - What would I do differently going back

    Memorable Quotes

    "The entrepreneurial journey is just staying in the game long enough so that you can get the wins."
    "All of those are almost noise to the vision. You still have to kind of make sure that you're building your own vision..."
    "My biggest mistake is waiting too long [to remove a cultural mismatch] because I thought we need... we can't afford the disruption right now."

    Connect with David McDowell

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/david-mcdowell-547209?lipi=urn%3Ali%3Apage%3Ad_flagship3_profile_view_base_contact_details%3BomU134VSR%2B2eskLlRqTFHQ%3D%3D

    Follow Leo Judkins & iGaming Leader

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/leo-judkins/
    Newsletter: https://www.igamingleader.com/subscribe
    Join the Mastermind: https://www.igamingleader.com/apply

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    49 mins