Special discounted rate: January 1 -January 31st - $1195 - After January 31st - $1395. VENDOR Registration includes entrance to all meeting rooms, exhibits, continental breakfasts, luncheons and cocktail receptions. The Room Block is open -room rate is $220 - to reserve your room call 212-371-4000 or 800-221-4982. Our Group Block number is 602246 - use the name Public Gaming.

SMART-TECH 2012 VENDOR REGISTRATION
Item# SMART-TECH 2012 VENDOR REGISTRATION
$1,395.00

Public Gaming Research Institute
SMART-Tech 2012
*Updated Feb. 17th

Helmsley Park Lane Hotel, Central Park South between 5th and 6th Avenues, New York City; Opens with a Reception at 5:00 pm March 19, Business sessions March 20 and March 21, Receptions to be 5:00 to 7:00 pm all three nights (March 19, 20, & 21) Room Block is nearly sold out - if you get a SOLD OUT or quoted a higher rate - call us and we will try to get you in. The room rate is $220. Call 212-371-4000 or 800-221-4982 to reserve your room. Our Group Block number is 602246. Refer also to the Group Name which is Public Gaming.

Please register ASAP. Unlike ever before, conference room space is actually filling up to a point where we may need to stop accepting registrations.

Lottery and Government personnel: There is no charge to attend. Click here or please e-mail your name, title, e-mail address, and any other EA or contact info you would like to provide. Easy as that!

Non-lottery/government registrants: There is a charge to attend. Click here or please go to www.PublicGaming.org to register or e-mail me a request to e-mail back to you a registration form. I promise you will be pleased with the SMART-Tech conference experience. Thank you for your support and consideration!

SPONSORS

PLATINUM


Silver Sponsors/Exhibitors

Call Paul Jason at U.S. + 425-449-3000 if you have any questions or concerns.

Or e-mail me at Pjason@PublicGaming.com

"It's kinda fun to do the impossible"

Walt Disney

It will in fact be a 'fun' and interesting challenge to get all lottery stakeholders to work together, to get everyone to appreciate that our goals are the same and that success depends on alignment of purpose, strategies, and implementation of action-plans. It's not impossible, but it won't be easy to harness the efforts of retailers and all our channel partners, all our commercial partners, our legislators, all our stakeholders and all our resources to work so harmoniously that it would appear that we all have the exact same mission, and serve the exact same constituents. Because we do. We all strive to optimize performance for the benefit of consumers, Good Causes, and the citizens of our jurisdiction.

SMART-Tech 2012 is convening a very special group of industry leaders to capture the magic of this special time in the lottery industry and set us on a course to be the preeminent leaders that the consumer and Good Cause beneficiaries expect us to be. Lottery is now entering a business climate in which the opportunities are going to come and go more quickly than ever. The need to act decisively is critical for Lottery just as it is for all businesses everywhere. New channels of distribution represent tremendous opportunity for lotteries to bring in new consumer groups as well as excite our loyal customers. But it does also introduce new levels of complexity and new kinds of business and public communication challenges. We want to thank the SMART-Tech speaker team for helping us to wrestle down the obstacles that stand in the way of progress and forge the action-plans that keep Government Gaming on the leading edge of this industry.

Major Peter J. O'Connell Lottery Industry Lifetime Achievement Award Ceremony
March 21, 1:30 pm 2012 Recipients

Gary Grief, Executive Director, Texas Lottery
Tom Shaheen, Executive Vice President, Linq3

The SMART-Tech Team of Speakers, Moderators, and Panelists:

The SMART-Tech program and final Team of Speakers, Moderators, and Panelists is still being updated. Presently, among the confirmed speakers/moderators/panelists are:
Torbjørn Almlid
, President & CEO, Norsk Tipping AS, the Norwegian lottery and gaming operator

Jeff Anderson
, Director, Idaho Lottery
Gerry Aubin
, Director, Rhode Island Lottery
Scott Bowen
, Commissioner, Michigan Lottery
Jenny Canfield
, Acting Executive Director, Minnesota Lottery
Margaret DeFrancisco
, President & CEO, Georgia Lottery Corporation
Don Feeney
, Research & Planning Director, Minnesota Lottery
Kevin Gass
, Vice President of Lottery Gaming, BCLC in Bri Officer, New York Lottery
Kurt Feedlund
, Senior Vice President & General Counsel, Georgia Lottery Corp.
Gardner Gurney, Deputy Director, Director of Operations, New York Lottery
Rebecca Hargrove, President & CEO, Tennessee Education Lottery Corp.
Mark Hichar
, Legal Counsel and Advocate for U.S. Lotteries
Jean Moreau Jorgensen
, Executive Director, World Lottery Association

Jim Kennedy
, Senior Vice President & Chief Marketing Officer, Scientific Games

Vernon Kirk, Director, Delaware Lottery
Stephen Martino
, Executive Director, Maryland Lottery
Charles McIntyre
, Executive Director, New Hampshire Lottery Commission
Gordon Medenica
, Director, New York Lottery
Bill Murray
, Deputy Director & General Counsel, New York Lottery
Risto Nieminen
, President & CEO, Veikkaus Oy, the Finland lottery and gaming operator; and President of the World Lottery Association (WLA)
Nikki Orcutt
, Deputy Director Marketing, West Virginia Lottery
Anne Noble
, President & CEO, Connecticut Lottery Corporation
Lorien Pilling
, Partner, Global Betting & Gambling Consultants (GBGC)
May Scheve Reardon
, Executive Director, Missouri Lottery
Terry Rich
, President & CEO, Iowa Lottery Authority
Lynn Roiter
, Vice President Legal Affairs, Loto-Quebec
Paul Sternburg
, Executive Director, Massachusetts State Lottery
Abel Tapia
, Director, Colorado Lottery
Philippe Vlaemminck
, Legal Counsel representing Team Lottery at the European Union level

Rick Weil
, CEO, Sciplay

Alan Yandow
, Executive Director, Vermont Lottery

Last Year, our theme was “The only ones crazy enough to think they can change the world are - the ones that do. What would happen if we were all just crazy enough to think we could make a real difference?" (an old Apple Computer commercial) Not to imply that anyone is "crazy", but 2011 did turn out to be the year in which the actions of Team Lottery truly did make a difference. The tremendous progress made in 2011 has opened doors for an even more exciting 2012. Thanks and congratulations to Team Lottery for its irrepressible dedication to optimizing the business for the benefit of consumers and Good Causes! The mission of SMART-Tech 2012 is to build on the current momentum, to grab hold of the opportunities; to acquire the foresight to avoid pitfalls and the tools to make this be a breakout year for Team Lottery.

Everyone Wins with Internet distribution of lottery products

Everyone wins when the player-base is expanded, when more consumers are playing lottery. And by everyone, we mean:

-- Advocates for responsible gaming: The Internet lends itself particularly to new forms of extended-play and entertainment-focused games. This takes the focus off of outcome and puts it more onto entertainment; appealing more to the impulse for healthy fun and recreation. It also creates the foundation for the kind of dynamic and interactive dialogue between operator and player that supports effective communication and implementation of Responsible Gaming tools. And lastly, it focuses the business model on increasing the number of consumers who play smaller dollar amounts for recreational purposes as opposed to a focus on selling more and more to the core player.

-- Retailers: Expanding the player-base translates directly into increased store traffic and sales. The internet does not take sales away from the retail channel. The two consumer touch-points work together to serve the consumer and to mutually reinforce and support each other. This is not theory. This is demonstrable fact as evidenced in markets where retailer sales growth has been occurring right alongside of internet sales initiatives, and has been for many years (like Canada, Finland, Sweden, Norway, Austria, U.K., Australia, and many other jurisdictions). Internet distribution of traditional products brings in new consumers who become new retail store customers, and cross-sell promo's drive more store activity from current lottery customers and from new consumer groups. The land-based retailers will always be the life-blood of lottery's relationship to its players and channels like internet will augment and support that special relationship.

-- Operators:

Expanding the player-base is vital to the long-term viability of the business. Appealing to new consumer groups with new kinds of gaming options and making them available through the channels where the consumers live and breathe is a key part of any success plan. Giving the consumer options, making your product available through a multiplicity of channels, opening up a variety of communication links and building a truly interactive relationship with the consumer is all part of an effective Sustainable Growth plan.

-- Consumers and Players: The consumer wants options. Successful consumer product companies do not try to limit the distribution of their products, to make it available only through a limited number of channels. Successful business leaders do not view the market as a zero-sum game and we should not take guidance from businesses that do look at it that way. The focus of sustainable business models is on innovating and collaborating to expand the market and consumer base. Making the product available through more channels, innovating the product to appeal to new game styles and preferences, these are just some of the things the consumer expects. So let us be the ones who give it to them.

The late Steve Jobs described the mission of Apple as owning the intersection of technology and liberal arts; marrying technology and humanity. Others excel at one or the other but not the mission of bringing the two together. Team Lottery can do the same for our industry. Others may excel in one area or another; but nobody, not Big Casino, not remote offshore i-gaming operators - nobody is in a position to integrate as many consumer touch-points with as wide a variety of gaming options and as broad a customer-base, as Team Lottery. And all of that is combined with a massive land-based retail network that nobody else has even the most remote possibility of replicating. We have the resources to do for the gaming industry what Google did for search, what Facebook did for social, what Apple Computer did for the consumer by turning technological function into an delightful user experience. That is an ambitious goal, but then again, It's kinda fun to do the impossible!