
In this episode of the iGaming Leader Podcast, Leo Judkins sits down with Nigel Eccles, the co-founder and former CEO of FanDuel. Moving from a small dairy farm in Northern Ireland to scaling one of the most iconic brands in sports betting history, Nigel pulls back the curtain on the psychological distortions required to build a massive tech enterprise.The conversation challenges the foundational myths of entrepreneurship, proving through research that founders aren't actually risk-seeking, they are simply bad at assessing risk. Nigel recounts the early grinding days of FanDuel, the terrifying moment he burned his boats by resigning from his public corporate job, and how he learned to handle the operational numbness of being sued by multiple state attorney generals. Finally, Nigel shares his second act: launching BetHog and Sentient Studios, and why generative AI means non-technical leaders are now "vibe coding" whole software platforms from scratch.Guest BioNigel Eccles is a 25-year veteran of the online gaming and technology sectors. He was product manager at Flutter.com, guiding its structural transition into an exchange prior to its landmark merger with Betfair. He went on to co-found and lead FanDuel as CEO and currently serves as the co-founder and CEO of BetHog and Sentient Studios, pioneering the intersection of iGaming, web3, and advanced AI-driven game environments.Key Topics Discussed00:00 – The Risk Illusion: Why data shows entrepreneurs are just bad at calculating probabilities.03:00 – From an Irish farm to New York04:45 – The Flutter Origin Story06:30 – Burning Your Boats11:45 – Why startups are not "big companies in miniature".13:30 – Product-Market Fit16:00 – Being Right vs. Right Now20:15 – Knowing When a Venture is Dead25:15 – The Pivot to B2B29:15 – Scaling multiple companies with the same core team.35:00 – Vibe Coding: no more technical barrier to entry for new founders.38:00 – The Solo Founder TrapMemorable Quotes"Entrepreneurs aren't more risk-seeking... they are just very bad at assessing risk. They just look at it, over-assess their ability and think, 'I can figure it out.'""Startups aren't like big companies in miniature. Startups are really like a science experiment.""It's very, very hard at that first point to know, am I a visionary or am I just deluded?""By this point you're like, anything that's below like a federal agency suing me is not worth getting out of bed for.""If you have a co-founder, your chance of being successful increases dramatically... You own 100% of zero without one."Important LinksFollow Nigel Eccles on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nigeleccles/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/This episode is sponsored by Sumsub, the leading identity verification provider for iGaming operators. Learn more at https://sumsub.link/8gu
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