Grabfan Looks to Build Fan-Against-Fan Betting ‘Challenge’ Network

Grabfan app screen grab

Don’t call it betting! That’s the legal mantra but in reality what the new sports social media app Grabfan wants to do is make fan-against-fan betting more relevant and fun by rewarding correct predictions. That’s “predictions,” otherwise known as “bets.” But don’t call it betting! At least not for now.

Set to launch (hopefully) with the San Francisco Giants’ home opener later this week, Grabfan is an app developed by two lifelong friends, CEO Steve Smith and COO Cassidy Lavin, who loved fantasy sports leagues but hated how they worked — or didn’t work.

“Fantasy sports have been around a long time, but they’re broken,” said Lavin in a recent phone interview. “If you’re out of it by the ninth week of a season you don’t care about your team any more. What we want is something that lets you feel like how you feel on that first Sunday, the excitement of the first week of the season — we want you to feel like that every day.”

Enter Grabfan, an app that aims to let fans make daily predictions about how their teams will fare, and reward them for correct calls. According to the Grabfan site, app users can create their own predictions on parts of a game small or large (like the final score, or whether a certain player will get a hit) and then “challenge” a friend or anyone who thinks they might want to verbally contest the choice. You can then also set a “confidence” level which corresponds to “Grabbucks,” the virutal currency awarded for correct choices.

According to Grabfan the Grabbucks can be redeemed for prizes like merchandise (think watch bands and sunglasses) or maybe free drinks at nearby bars. The app is available now for iPhone and iPad devices, with an Android version in the works.

While much of the Grabfan enterprise will be created on the fly as the season unfolds (the duo hope to add a lot more bells and whistles, like integrated chat, Vegas betting lines and news for that day’s games), the founding duo will be extremely active online and on the roads surrounding the home of their hometown San Francisco Giants, AT&T Park. Driving around in the yet-to-be-seen “Grabfan vehicle,” a chopped-roof VW bus with orange flames, the Grabfan founders will will conduct random giveaway contests (for orange sunglasses) for folks who do some unspecified social-media trick like text #Grabfan to promote the app. There will also be Twitter giveaways where the company will award its lower-level box seats to each Giants home game. It’s all kind of seat of the pants at the moment but there is no mistaking the Grabfan enthusiasm.

“We’re going to be heavily focused on the Giants at first,” said Smith. “Everyone in the city likes the Giants, and we’re going to drive around so if you see the bus tweet a picture of it and you might win tickets.”

Smith and Lavin also hope to add a Foursquare-like checkin functionality to the app, both so that fans can find others close by to bet with (ahem, to challenge with predictions) and to have localized sponsors like bars who might offer free drinks or meal discounts for Grabbucks. At some point in the distant future there may be a way to involve real money online — in fact some legislators in California just submitted a bill to move online betting into the real world — but that day is not here yet for apps like Grabfan. The key right now, as the founders well understand, is to keep the app’s virtual currency completely virtual and random in its worth, in order to keep the operation in the legal clear zone.

Otherwise it might look too much like betting. And that would be illegal. For now, anyway.

“Don’t call them bets!” Lavin said.

OK, we won’t. But others will. You can bet on that.

Gannett Increasing Digital Sports Focus: Teams with MLB

Gannett is seeking to leverage the digital media explosion by translating it into solid revenue via a diversified approach that will cover everything from customized content to an enhanced position in sports.

The publisher, possibly best known for its flagship paper USA Today, said that it expects to reach between $75 million and 100 million in revenue from digital services division and that it expects to see strong revenue growth going forward, reaching an estimated $275 million to $350 million by 2015.

Company executives speaking at its annual Analyst Day have bullish vision for revenue growth and one of the components of that growth will be its sports USA Today Sports Media Group, which it will try and drive into becoming a top five sports media companies in the country with over $300 million in annual revenue by 2015.

Acquisitions and partnerships part of sports push

It has already taken a solid step in this direction with the announcement of a co-development deal with MLB Advanced Media, the interactive media and Internet branch of Major League Baseball today announced a joint venture to develop and produce new content and products for sports fans across all digital and mobile platforms.

It has already worked to enhance its digital sports position with the purchase of Fantasy Sports Ventures (FSV), an umbrella organization that features a number of on-line sports sites including HoopsHype.com, Baseball-Reference.com and TheHuddle.com and The Big Lead. The deal, which was announced, last month was for an undisclosed sum.

It gives Gannett instant relevance in the on-line advertising space, an area that it has straggled in, according to the Wall Street Journal. USA Today has been battling players such as Yahoo Sports and ESPN.com, which have significantly larger audiences.

FSV is the 5th largest online sports property with an average of 18.4 million unique visitors monthly, USA Today is ninth with 10 million unique visitors. Executives said that they will continue to look at additional acquisitions but has no plans currently for any large purchases.

Additionally it plans to do a major re-launch of its entire desktop, mobile and tablet products across the company within the next two years, starting with USA Today.

RotoWire Readies Fantasy Apps ahead of MLB Season Opener

RotoWire ready for Major League Baseball to start.
With one of the most important days of the New Year to baseball fans already passed earlier this week with pitchers and catchers reporting one of the next important milestones for fans is preparing for their fantasy baseball draft.

To help fans prepare and follow their teams RotoWire has released four apps that can help a fan do everything from prepare for the draft to manage their team post draft during the season. There is also now offerings that support CBS’ fantasy platform.

The company sees itself in the sweet spot in the market as fans have been strongly moving to on-line platforms for their information but also looking to manage their teams and even watch sports on mobile devices and so RotoWire has developed to leverage this trend.

“Consumers are increasingly shifting time away from TVs and PCS to consume more content on tablets and smartphones, and fantasy sports is at the forefront of this trend,” said Peter Schoenke, president of RotoWire in a prepared statement.

Overall the company has a total of 17 mobile sports apps and they are available represented on all of the major platforms so that fans do not have to pick a specific platform to get their sports data.

Fantasy Baseball Draft Kit: this is designed to help a manager organize and rank players in preparation for the draft, with a wealth of data available on each player including past performances and injuries. It also has the ability to have a user eliminate drafted players and get real time recommendations on the remaining field of players.

There is now also a Fantasy Baseball Guide for the iPad. Experienced RotoWire users are familiar with this magazine that features players existing and projected stats, profiles, analysis, as well as listing top rookies and more.

The apps do not stop once the season starts. The third app is the Fantasy Baseball Assistant that is designed to help manage a team in-season. It features the expected in season stats and baseball news but a nice key feature is its ability to enable a manager to create and manage a watch list.

The last of the newly introduced apps is one that is for an all around fantasy enthusiast as it does not just relate to baseball. The Fantasy News Center includes fantasy sports news for not only baseball but also NFL, NBA, NHL, golf, racing, college football, college basketball, and soccer.

RotoWire also now offers Fantasy Player News and Player Outlooks on CBS’ new open fantasy platform CBSSports.com App Central, with information including player news and profiles.

If you are like I am you are, or have friends that also compete in multiple leagues across a range of sports. The amount of information needed to stay competitive is vast and growing, and while it is great to win the bragging rights and more when winning a league, in one I know of the loser has to treat to steak dinners, just to keep fans everybody’s head in the league all season.

The amount of information available as well as the tools to stay organized the RotoWire offers are a great start for fans both experience with the ins and outs of fantasy sports but also to help newbies get a firm foundation when they start out.

There will be plenty more apps released to help scout, draft, and manage teams for the upcoming MLB season. This is one of the first that has come to our attention and I am sure we will be listing few more in the next few weeks prior to the first pitch of the season. If you have a favorite app drop us a line.