Archive for November 2nd, 2012

Winner or Loser

Without knowing the exact facts, it is simple to categorize gamblers into three categories:

  • Big Winner
  • Small Loser/Winner
  • Big Loser

The huge mass of the gamblers is, of course, in the last class, "Big Loser". I would say that about 90-95 % of the gamblers fits into this category. When reading "Big" you should read it as percent of the money won or lost. Even if someone just plays for $10 for his or hers entire life, wins and doubles it, is a "Big Winner". You see, the individual bets $10 and comes out with twenty dollars, so his or hers internet revenue is 100 percent. That being said, the difference between a "Big Winner" and a "Big Loser" may be quite small.

Let’s say you might be a little stake Hold’em gambler, your web revenue per 30 days is about five per cent of your bankroll. So in the event you started with a deposit of 100 dollars, initial four week period you’d probably go $5 which would rise your bank roll to 105 dollars, next month $110.5 and so on. To go from one hundred dollars to two hundred dollars takes in between thirteen to fourteen months if your internet revenue is five percent every month. What about in the event you began with two hundred dollars? In thirteen to fourteen months, beginning with $200 and a net earnings of five per-cent per month, you’d have involving three hundred and eighty dollars – 400 dollars in bank roll.

This is another example, except here your net earnings is -5 per cent each month and your deposit was $100. Soon after a yr, your bank roll would have gone down to fifty to fifty-five, which is practically fifty per-cent of your starting bank roll. Lets now say that you got a bonus of $100, so your starting bank roll would be 200 dollars with the exact same internet profit per month. Immediately after a year now, you’d probably still have $108.

This is why bonuses are so critical when you begin building your bankroll. Bonuses can turn a "Big Loser" into a "Small Winner", or a "Small Loser" into a "Big Winner".