Premier Bet Embedded Support
Betting Academy, website operations, and multi-vertical execution.
Supporting a fast-moving iGaming team across shifting priorities
Premier Bet needed senior design and delivery support across multiple moving areas, from campaign assets and product visuals to Betting Academy, poker, website updates, and ongoing operational support. The work was less about one isolated redesign and more about plugging into the team, absorbing pressure, and keeping delivery moving as priorities changed.
- Support overloaded internal teams with senior design input
- Deliver campaign, promo, product, and content assets quickly
- Help turn late or unclear briefs into usable delivery outputs
- Build practical systems for Academy and CMS-based content
- Take ownership of website maintenance and production support
- Keep work moving across stakeholders, markets, and platforms
Project context
This engagement started as freelance design support and grew into a broader embedded role across Premier Bet and GOAT’s wider digital ecosystem. As priorities shifted, the work expanded beyond visual design into campaign delivery, product support, CMS-friendly page systems, website maintenance, DevOps coordination, and ongoing production checks.
The value came from being able to move between different types of work quickly: creating assets when the team needed output, shaping systems when the work needed structure, and stepping into operational gaps when the business needed someone to keep things stable.
Ongoing embedded support
Multi-vertical support and delivery
Operational ownership
Selected delivery areas from the engagement, covering campaign assets, Academy content systems, website support, and ongoing operational delivery.
My role inside ongoing delivery
I worked as an embedded freelance UI lead across Premier Bet and GOAT’s wider digital workflow, supporting casino, sportsbook, poker, Academy, campaign, and website operations as priorities shifted. The role required a mix of hands-on design, fast turnaround delivery, stakeholder alignment, CMS awareness, and practical problem-solving inside existing tools and processes.
- Acted as a lead UI support point across active delivery work
- Worked directly with vertical leads, content, project, and DevOps teams
- Picked up tickets, briefs, updates, and urgent design requests
- Supported campaign, product, Academy, poker, and website tasks
- Prepared assets, layouts, files, and handoff notes for review
- Kept work moving through Slack, Jira, Monday, Dropbox, and calls
Inside the delivery rhythm
The role was built around becoming part of the team’s existing delivery flow. Requests came through tickets, direct messages, review calls, and shared folders, then moved through design, feedback, revisions, upload, and clean handoff. The goal was to keep everyday delivery organised without adding extra process for the team.
Ticket-to-handoff flow
Cross-team visibility
Reliable delivery rhythm
Workflow overview showing how requests moved from brief or ticket through design, review, handoff, and delivery.
Stepping in when delivery pressure increased
A large part of the engagement involved supporting the team when timelines shifted, briefs arrived late, or internal capacity was stretched. The value was being able to pick up work quickly, understand what was needed, and help move delivery forward without slowing the team down.
- Picked up urgent design and production requests
- Supported late briefs with fixed launch deadlines
- Covered delivery gaps when team members were unavailable
- Helped turn unclear requests into usable outputs
- Responded quickly when priorities changed
- Kept delivery moving during busy periods
Where pressure showed up
Support was often needed when the normal delivery rhythm became strained. Some requests arrived with limited context, some needed same-day movement, and others required fast decisions so the team could keep momentum. This section is about reliability under pressure, not the full range of campaign formats.
Urgent request handling
Capacity gap support
Fast decision support
Selected surge-support outputs showing fast-turnaround campaign, product, and market-variant delivery across Premier Bet workflows.
Campaign delivery across digital, print, and market rollouts
Beyond individual requests, the engagement included a wide range of campaign and promotional work across Premier Bet’s casino and sportsbook activity. Assets needed to work across different channels, sizes, markets, and use cases while still feeling aligned to the wider brand.
- Created assets for CRM, homepage, social, casino, and sportsbook promos
- Supported large-format campaign work for billboards, wraps, flags, and booths
- Prepared rollout-ready visuals across digital and offline surfaces
- Adapted campaign directions into multiple usable asset formats
- Maintained brand consistency across varied promotional outputs
- Balanced channel requirements with clear visual hierarchy
Campaign surfaces supported
A single campaign direction often needed to become several different outputs. The work was not only about creating one strong visual, but about making sure the same idea could translate across homepage placements, CRM graphics, social assets, sportsbook promos, casino content, and larger offline campaign materials.
Digital campaign surfaces
Large-format assets
Rollout-ready variations
Selected campaign outputs showing digital, large-format, and rollout-ready assets created across Premier Bet’s casino and sportsbook activity.
Designing and coding a guide system inside strict CMS limits
Betting Academy was created as a content-rich guide hub to help users understand betting, odds, platform features, and common betting terms. The visual design needed to stay simple, but the complexity sat behind the scenes: testing what the CMS allowed, designing around those restrictions, and building a responsive HTML/CSS structure the content team could maintain.
- Designed the Betting Academy UI in Figma for desktop and mobile
- Tested CMS behaviour to understand what code was allowed or stripped out
- Designed around strict inline CSS and HTML limitations
- Built one responsive HTML structure for both desktop and mobile
- Created guide and glossary layouts that were easy to duplicate
- Coded the pages for implementation without JavaScript
What made the build complex
The challenge was not making the pages visually loud. It was creating a clean, readable, CMS-safe learning system that worked inside real technical restrictions. Before finalising the design, I tested the CMS to understand which tags, layout rules, and inline styles would survive publishing, then shaped the Figma design and code structure around what was realistically possible.
CMS testing first
One responsive codebase
Maintainable guide structure
Selected Betting Academy layouts showing CMS-safe guide pages, responsive content structure, and maintainable page patterns built around strict HTML and inline CSS limitations.
Website support beyond maintenance
When GOAT’s previous website maintenance support stepped away, I took over ongoing WordPress support across a wider Premier Bet and GOAT website ecosystem. This included the Premier Bet News multisite across 16 country websites, Premier Bet Partners, Premier Bet Projects, and the GOAT & Partners website. The setup was not a typical managed WordPress or cPanel workflow. Backups, updates, staging checks, production rollouts, feature additions, issue fixes, and site validation had to be handled through Google CLI, with staging and production managed separately.
- Took over website support after the previous maintenance resource stepped away
- Learned the Google CLI workflow in a short handover window
- Managed monthly maintenance across Premier Bet News, Partners, Projects, and GOAT & Partners sites
- Investigated website issues and implemented fixes when problems came up
- Researched and added new WordPress features when needed
- Redesigned and maintained the GOAT & Partners website
What the role expanded into
The role went beyond monthly updates. I supported the wider website ecosystem by assessing new feature requests, testing plugin and implementation options, fixing issues, rolling changes from staging to production, and keeping multiple sites stable after updates. This included monthly maintenance across Premier Bet News country sites, Partners, Projects, and GOAT & Partners, while also redesigning and maintaining the GOAT & Partners website to give the business a cleaner public-facing presence.
Google CLI workflow
Multisite maintenance
Feature implementation
Issue resolution
Staging to production
GOAT & Partners redesign
Selected website support work showing GOAT & Partners redesign, WordPress feature implementation, issue fixes, staging checks, production rollout, and ongoing maintenance.
Results built on trust, speed, and long-term reliability
The engagement continued because the support solved real delivery problems across design, content, campaign, product, and website operations. The value was not only in the individual assets produced, but in becoming a trusted support layer the team could rely on when priorities shifted, timelines tightened, or operational gaps needed ownership.
- Retained as ongoing support for over two years
- Helped keep campaign and product delivery moving
- Reduced pressure on overloaded internal teams
- Supported design, CMS, website, and operational workflows
- Provided reliable turnaround across shifting priorities
- Became a trusted point of support across multiple stakeholders
Success signals from the engagement
The strongest signal was the length and range of the relationship. What started as freelance design support expanded into a wider embedded role because the team could rely on fast response, practical thinking, clean delivery, and support across areas that did not always fit neatly into one job title.
Long-term retention
Faster delivery rhythm
Broader support coverage
Reduced internal pressure
Cleaner handoff and closure
Trusted operational support
Embedded support that stayed useful as the work evolved
The engagement grew because the support stayed practical across different types of work. Some needs were creative, some were technical, some were operational, and others simply needed fast, reliable execution. The value was being able to move between those areas without losing context, consistency, or momentum.
Engagement summary

