The Booklets

Booklet I - After the Win - Practical Considerations for High-Value Prize Winners

This booklet is available free of charge to all DreamDraw newsletter subscribers.
If the newsletter has not yet been subscribed to at the time of a ticket purchase, Booklet I will be provided together with Booklet II upon the participant’s first confirmed entry.

The booklet is not sent automatically. Eligible recipients will receive a download link by email together with the relevant confirmation email.

Content
Foreword
The First Days After a Win
Understanding What You Actually Own
Immediate Costs You Should Expect
Insurance Comes Before Celebration
Running Costs vs. Purchase Value
Privacy, Security and Discretion
When to Seek Professional Advice and When Not
The Risk of Lifestyle Inflation
Do Nothing Is a Valid Option
Talking to Family and Friends
Selling, Keeping or Leasing — Key Considerations
From Ownership to Intentional Use
A Final Reflection
About the Author
About DreamDraw Group Ltd.

Preview

The First Days After a Win

   Winning a major prize is often described as a moment of pure joy. In reality, the first days after a significant win are rarely simple. Excitement is usually accompanied by uncertainty, questions and a subtle pressure to act quickly. Many winners report that the emotional intensity of the moment makes clear thinking more difficult rather than easier.

   In the immediate aftermath of a win, it is important to understand that no decision is urgent by default. With very few exceptions, there is no practical reason to rush. Ownership transfers, registrations, deliveries and legal formalities take time by their very nature. This built-in delay is not an obstacle – it is a safeguard.

   One of the most common early mistakes is allowing the emotional high to dictate the next steps. Enthusiasm can easily turn into impulsive decisions, commitments or announcements that later feel premature. A conscious pause during the first days helps prevent choices that may be difficult or costly to reverse.

   Another factor often underestimated is external attention. Friends, family members, colleagues or even strangers may suddenly express opinions, expectations or advice. While usually well-intentioned, this influx of voices can distort personal priorities. The first days are best used to regain a sense of calm and personal control before engaging in detailed discussions.

   A practical recommendation for this phase is to limit communication. You are not obliged to explain, justify or plan anything immediately. Simply acknowledging the win and stating that you will take time to consider your options is both reasonable and sufficient.

   The most valuable asset in the first days after a win is not the prize itself, but time. Treat it as such.

 

Booklet II - Winning Responsibly - Understanding the Realities of Major Prizes

This booklet is available free of charge to all participants who have successfully entered a DreamDraw, including both paid and free postal entries.
Booklet II is provided after the first confirmed entry and, if the newsletter has not yet been subscribed to at that time, it will be made available together with Booklet I.

The booklet is not sent automatically. A download link will be included in the corresponding confirmation email.

Content

Foreword
Why Winning Is Rarely the Finish Line
The Myth of “Financial Freedom”
Cash Flow vs. Asset Value
Hidden Long-Term Commitments
Social Expectations and Silent Pressure
Why Many Winners Struggle Financially
The Danger of Overconfidence
Separating Emotion from Decision-Making
Saying No Without Guilt
Responsible Enjoyment
Long-Term Thinking Without Urgency
A Final Reflection
About the Author
About DreamDraw Group Ltd.

Preview

Why Winning Is Rarely the Finish Line

   How responsibility begins where excitement ends
   Winning is commonly imagined as a conclusion.    
   A peak.    
   A moment after which life finally settles into ease.
   In reality, winning is rarely an ending. It is almost always a transition.
   The misunderstanding begins with language itself. We speak of the win as if it were a destination, a place one arrives at and remains. But a major prize - especially a life-changing one - is not a stable state. It is an event that introduces complexity, responsibility, and irreversible consequences. What follows is not rest, but movement.
   For many winners, the most disorienting realization comes weeks or months later:
Nothing actually stopped.    
Life did not pause.    
Decisions did not become easier.
   They multiplied.
   The moment versus the aftermath
   The moment of winning is emotionally concentrated. It is intense, short, and overwhelming. Dopamine spikes, adrenaline flows, and the brain enters a state closer to shock than clarity. This moment is often filmed, photographed, celebrated, and remembered - but it is also deeply misleading.
   Because the aftermath is not cinematic.

Booklet III - Beyond the Prize - Common Pitfalls and Practical Responsibilities

This booklet is exclusively available to verified DreamDraw winners.
It will be made available after the completion of the relevant prize draw and winner verification process.

The booklet is not sent automatically. Eligible winners will receive a personal download link by email together with their official winner notification.

Content

Foreword
The Illusion of “Free” Assets
Maintenance Is Not Optional
Legal and Regulatory Obligations
Insurance Gaps and Oversights
Operational Costs Add Up
Emotional Attachment vs. Rational Decisions
The Pressure to Use or Display the Prize
Selling Too Early — or Too Late
Learning from Other Winners’ Mistakes
Turning a Prize Into a Benefit, Not a Burden
A Final Reflection
About the Author
About DreamDraw Group Ltd.


Preview

The Illusion of “Free” Assets

   Why high-value prizes are never cost-free

   Winning an asset often feels like receiving something for nothing. No purchase price, no negotiation, no apparent downside. This perception is understandable - and misleading.
   
There is no such thing as a free asset.

   Every asset enters a life as a system, not an object. Ownership immediately activates costs, responsibilities, and decisions that did not exist before. These are not punishments or hidden traps; they are simply the natural consequences of possession.

   The illusion of “free” arises because the entry cost is removed. What remains, however, is the cost of continuation.

   Assets consume attention, resources, and time. The more valuable the asset, the more complex its ecosystem tends to be. Recognizing this early prevents disappointment later.

   Freedom begins when winners stop asking “What did I get?” and start asking “What does this require?”

Information

Images and visuals used on this website are for illustrative purposes only.
Actual prizes, specifications and details are defined in the applicable prize draw descriptions and terms.

Company

DREAMDRAWGROUP LIMITED
Company Number 16965568
Registered at Companies House, Cardiff, on 15th January 2026.

Director: Mario Eduard Giovanelli

Address:
167 -169 Great Portland Street, 5th Floor
LONDON, England W1W 5PF

Email: contact@dreamdraws.eu