Much Of What's Best in Life Is Free
Contrary to what we are sometimes told, lots of things in life are free. We enjoy healthy walks, stirring music, captivating scenery, the pure country air, companionship, freedom, the thrill of being by the sea. None of this costs us a penny.
We receive gifts, find things, sometimes just happen upon things in such a way that we genuinely forget just how they came to be in our possession in the first place.
More recently we may have encountered the online freebie. Fridge magnets bearing our family name or our company logo, sent to us gratis in the hope that we will be sufficiently impressed that we will order further supplies at a cost. Supermarkets give us points and vouchers in exchange for our custom. Buy one, get one free (BOGOF) offers are everywhere.
Wouldn't it be good if when we are given free merchandise we could sell it on, not just to offset our costs but at an overall profit too? Wouldn't it be handy if we had a guaranteed buyer, so that we could walk back into the shop repeatedly and buy more, until we had hundreds or indeed thousands of pounds in income through having done nothing but accept free goods?
Such a scenario is actually possible in the world of sports betting on the Internet. Just as the supermarket uses the bait of the BOGOF offer to tempt us through its doors rather through those of its rivals, so the online sportsbook offers the new customer, indeed sometimes even the returning customer, a free wager in the hope of encouraging him or her to place a bet and in so doing to feel the thrill that is online gambling.
In this event your helpful buyer, your "receiver" if you like, is the sports betting exchange. Through backing and laying both your qualifying bet and the free bet that you are subsequently awarded, you get to walk away after having made a guaranteed profit. Then you move along to the next sportsbook, just as the purchaser of your BOGOF items allows you to go back into the store and avail yourself of more stock.
When used in the right way the free bet becomes a handy and dependable source of some very easy income. Of course, the sportsbook will be willing you to commit more funds, placing real money bets at loaded prices until you lose all your bonus cash and more. Enough punters do this to enable them to keep offering free bets as bait to entice you in.
But the point is this - you don't actually have to do this. Instead take the special offer, sell it on and do not permit your head to be turned by the frills, the flashing lights and the glamorous packaging.
If this sounds too good to be true please do bear in mind that there are many thousands of people already who regularly make good money by exploiting risk free bets. The sportsbooks know this full well but they make their money back, and more besides, from the mug punters who hang around for more and who almost invariably finish up by getting their fingers burned.
The sportsbook of course cannot tell the smart player from the mug punter at the point of sign-up, and continues on the principle that it will gain more than it loses from its promotional activity.
We receive gifts, find things, sometimes just happen upon things in such a way that we genuinely forget just how they came to be in our possession in the first place.
More recently we may have encountered the online freebie. Fridge magnets bearing our family name or our company logo, sent to us gratis in the hope that we will be sufficiently impressed that we will order further supplies at a cost. Supermarkets give us points and vouchers in exchange for our custom. Buy one, get one free (BOGOF) offers are everywhere.
Wouldn't it be good if when we are given free merchandise we could sell it on, not just to offset our costs but at an overall profit too? Wouldn't it be handy if we had a guaranteed buyer, so that we could walk back into the shop repeatedly and buy more, until we had hundreds or indeed thousands of pounds in income through having done nothing but accept free goods?
Such a scenario is actually possible in the world of sports betting on the Internet. Just as the supermarket uses the bait of the BOGOF offer to tempt us through its doors rather through those of its rivals, so the online sportsbook offers the new customer, indeed sometimes even the returning customer, a free wager in the hope of encouraging him or her to place a bet and in so doing to feel the thrill that is online gambling.
In this event your helpful buyer, your "receiver" if you like, is the sports betting exchange. Through backing and laying both your qualifying bet and the free bet that you are subsequently awarded, you get to walk away after having made a guaranteed profit. Then you move along to the next sportsbook, just as the purchaser of your BOGOF items allows you to go back into the store and avail yourself of more stock.
When used in the right way the free bet becomes a handy and dependable source of some very easy income. Of course, the sportsbook will be willing you to commit more funds, placing real money bets at loaded prices until you lose all your bonus cash and more. Enough punters do this to enable them to keep offering free bets as bait to entice you in.
But the point is this - you don't actually have to do this. Instead take the special offer, sell it on and do not permit your head to be turned by the frills, the flashing lights and the glamorous packaging.
If this sounds too good to be true please do bear in mind that there are many thousands of people already who regularly make good money by exploiting risk free bets. The sportsbooks know this full well but they make their money back, and more besides, from the mug punters who hang around for more and who almost invariably finish up by getting their fingers burned.
The sportsbook of course cannot tell the smart player from the mug punter at the point of sign-up, and continues on the principle that it will gain more than it loses from its promotional activity.