May I also contribute to your request for thoughts about the company?
I bot a small position in SING, as I felt its position in PNW and the mere hope that it can get its Draft Fury mobile app going, would lead it to some degree of success in mobile gaming/gambling.
I imaged that PNW centric folk might take to SING. We are rather at the mercy of the separate State governments, as to when and if paid mobile fantasy sports betting gets enacted. Nov elections might result in some from of Federal 'drop-the-hot-potato decision' (so to speak) to each separate state and its voters to decide?
SING and other small Fantasy Sports stocks, are really long-shots as they are 'laters' to the sector gig and short on funding needed to break in. That said, there seems room for everyone that can gain twitter type social media awareness in a locality (example PNW). <---this and word-of-mouth amongst friends, etc. are real only options available to these small stock companies to 'get-in-the-game'.
My thought is that SING might print up some hand-outs and try and get distributed at sports venues, such as games and cafes and sports shops. College and larger businesses might further be direct hand-out advertising means to employ to get street-level customer recognition going. However; most new starting business ventures are too proud to do this old-fashion form of advertising.
Including SING ads with say local pizza and fast-food purchases might be another way to reach out. The 'build-it-they-will-come' idea just does not seem to attract customers.
My notion is just hold SING and see what comes about.
I would hope there is some level of local support for SING in the PNW, and they can slowly build-out social media recognition. SING
should really get going on forming support for state level voting intiatives that support in-state paid gambling and sports betting mobile apps. There is the thought that new means of tax revenue sources are therein for each individual state, as they decide.
It is my feeling mobile betting apps are currently opposed by bricks-and-mortar- casino interests. <---'They' do not want the future and cannot 'get-it' that consumers are not going to be able to afford to come to casino-betting anymore . . . we would rather 'tap' from home or on lunch-break.