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Boomerang Partners’ case study: exploring the new rules of sports marketing

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Sports marketing used to be relatively straightforward. Major sports events – from international tournaments to league finals – meant big audiences, and visibility was often enough to drive results.

By 2026, that model is no longer enough. Competition for sports traffic has intensified, acquisition costs have increased, and audiences have become more selective in how they engage. Being present around major sports events is no longer a differentiator – everyone is there.

What matters now is not just how brands capture attention, but how they choose to work with it.

This shift is especially visible in affiliate-driven environments. As brands rethink how they engage sports audiences – and face tighter regulation and greater competition – affiliate strategies have to adapt just as quickly.

Performance is measured in real time, with teams competing under the same conditions and reacting to the same events.

This is where new formats and mechanics start to matter. Earlier this year, Boomerang Partners, a sports-focused affiliate program, brought together affiliate teams as part of the TIME TO WIN affiliate tournament.

The insights in this article come from real partner activity – from day-to-day campaign work to what teams tested during the TIME TO WIN tournament.

It’s no longer campaign-driven

The way sports marketing works is no longer built around campaigns. It’s built around behavior. What used to be planned weeks in advance now shifts during the event itself. Timing changes. Messaging changes. Sometimes, even the format changes.

The shift is simple: marketing is no longer planned around events – it adapts to them continuously, with messaging, concepts, and storytelling evolving from one moment to the next. These shifts don’t just affect how brands work with players – they also reshape how affiliate partners operate. As a result, partners have to adapt their strategies, formats, and approaches to engagement.

Personalization plays a big role here. Not as a feature, but as a baseline. Generic offers don’t hold attention anymore. If it’s not relevant to what the user is watching or reacting to, it gets ignored.

This is also changing how sponsorships work. Visibility still matters, but it’s no longer enough on its own. Brands are moving into formats that go beyond the match – content, integrations, and ongoing digital touchpoints.

At the same time, the space has expanded. Sports, esports, streaming – they now compete for the same attention, alongside a much broader set of content and digital experiences.

That makes timing harder. Big tournaments still drive peaks, but the build-up and the drop-off matter just as much. Planning around these moments is becoming more data-driven. Earlier this year, Boomerang Partners introduced its Sports Marketing and Betting Calendar 2026, built to map those patterns and help affiliates align campaigns with key moments and make more informed decisions around their strategy. In practice, partners use it to plan ahead for major events, streamline research, and structure content around both high-demand and niche sports.

From watching to reacting

Audience behavior has changed faster than most strategies – and it becomes especially visible in live, competitive environments.

During the TIME TO WIN tournament, this shift was hard to miss. Affiliate teams worked with sports traffic in real time, around live events, where attention moved constantly, and decisions were made on the spot.

Watching sport is no longer passive. During major matches, users follow the game while checking odds, reacting to moments, and switching between platforms. The second screen is no longer secondary – it’s part of the experience.

In practice, this meant that teams competing in the tournament had to adapt quickly – reacting to live moments, adjusting content, and aligning campaigns with audience behavior in real time.

That changes how campaigns are built. Timing matters more. Missing the moment often means losing the user.

Content is changing as well – and fast. Short-form formats capture a growing share of attention, especially among younger audiences. The full match is no longer the only point of engagement.

Behavior is becoming more social. Communities form around events – not just around teams, but around the experience itself.

Olesea Naidion, Brand Manager at Nightrush, TIME TO WIN participant, noted:

“The biggest shift I’ve noticed is that audiences don’t just ‘watch’ sports anymore – they’re actively participating. During major matches, people react to every moment – every corner, every substitution, every momentum shift.

The second-screen behavior is fascinating. Fans have their phones out the entire time – checking odds, chatting, and reacting on social media while the match is happening.

The traditional ‘sit back and watch’ experience is no longer how a large part of the audience engages with sport.”

What actually matters now

Not all traffic is equal anymore. Volume still matters, but it no longer defines success. What matters is what happens after the click – how fast users convert, how long they stay, and whether they come back.

This shift was clearly visible during the TIME TO WIN tournament. When campaigns ran around real-time events, performance was measured differently. There was no long funnel – the decision happened immediately, or not at all.

In practice, traffic and performance closely followed the sports calendar. Early peaks aligned with major tournaments, while quieter periods – such as international breaks – led to visible slowdowns. Consistent spikes on weekends also highlighted how closely user activity tracked live-event density.

Conversion has become time-sensitive. Delays cost results.

Retention matters more now. Acquiring users is more expensive, and users have more options. If they don’t see value quickly, they move on.

As a result, performance is evaluated differently. Impressions and reach are no longer enough to justify spending. What matters is whether activity turns into deposits, bets, and repeat engagement.

Olesea Naidion, Brand Manager at Nightrush, TIME TO WIN participant, commented:

“Engagement rate, conversion velocity, and customer lifetime value have become the most critical metrics. Impressions don’t pay the bills — action does.

We need to understand if content drives real behavior in real time, especially during live events when the conversion window is minutes, not days.”

What defines success

Sustaining results has become harder. Strong performance can still happen in short bursts. But without consistency, it doesn’t hold. The gap between short-term gains and long-term growth is becoming more visible.

What separates teams now is not access to traffic or events. It’s how that traffic is handled – how quickly it converts, how long it stays, and whether it returns.

That shifts the focus from individual campaigns to the full user journey. Acquisition, conversion, and retention are no longer separate – they have to work as a single system.

This is also reflected in how partners performed in the TIME TO WIN tournament. Even beyond the initial launch phase, participation continued to build, showing that sustained performance – not just early momentum – defines success.

When that connection breaks, performance drops just as quickly as it grows.

Anete Dunina, Head of Sales at Revpanda Group, TIME TO WIN participant, noted:

“Success in sports marketing will be defined by control over the full user journey. It’s about acquiring, converting, and retaining the right users, not just traffic.

Short-term wins don’t build long-term business.”

The shift is already visible across the market. It goes beyond marketing – reflecting broader changes in how sport is consumed, how brands operate, and how affiliate ecosystems evolve. Those who can adapt to it consistently will shape what sports marketing looks like next.

About Boomerang

Boomerang Partners is a rapidly growing global marketing agency offering a wide range of services. Boomerang Partners is an Official Regional Partner of AC Milan. In 2024, it launched the inaugural Golden Boomerang Awards – a global tournament for affiliate teams. More than 400 affiliate teams participated in the second season of the tournament in 2025. Partners of the Agency launched six new products in 2024-2025, contributing to a nearly 1.5-fold increase in product users.

The Agency’s clients’ portfolio contains 10+ brands offering affiliate and entertainment services across 40+ markets in compliance with local regulations. These products provide incentive programs and 24/7 multilingual support.

Affiliate Industry

SiGMA exclusive: Aleksandra Drigo on traffic shifts, transparency, and the future of SEO affiliates

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In an exclusive interview for the SiGMA News, Aleksandra Drigo, Chief of Business Development at SEOBROTHERS, shared her perspective on the future of affiliate marketing in Canada.

She discussed how Alberta’s upcoming market launch could reshape competition, why transparency has become a cornerstone of operator-affiliate partnerships, how compliance is changing the way affiliates choose partners, and why localisation, trusted brands, and data-driven decision-making will define the next generation of SEO affiliates.

Regulation will reshape Alberta’s affiliate landscape

As Alberta prepares to regulate its online gambling market, affiliates are entering a more challenging environment. While regulation brings greater transparency, it also increases compliance demands, acquisition costs, and competition – particularly from larger, well-funded companies.

“Many affiliates, especially independent SEO players, may decide not to enter fully regulated markets and instead focus on regions with more predictable economics and lower regulatory pressure,” Aleksandra said.

Bigger brands gain the advantage

According to Drigo, regulated markets naturally favour established affiliate businesses, whereas smaller publishers face much higher barriers to entry despite niche opportunities still existing.

“Regulated markets tend to favour larger players. Big affiliate companies have the resources for legal support, compliance teams, advanced tracking infrastructure, and long-term investment without expecting fast ROI.”

Compliance is now a deciding factor

Operator selection is no longer based solely on commercial terms. Affiliates increasingly assess partners by their transparency, reporting quality, responsible gaming standards, responsiveness, and ability to meet local regulatory requirements.

“We pay close attention to how consistent an operator is in terms of reporting, responsible gaming policies, speed of communication, and local regulations compliance. Reputation risks affect both sides. If an operator lacks transparency or fails to follow compliance standards, it directly impacts the affiliate business as well.”

Communication matters more than financial disputes

Drigo believes that most partnership conflicts arise not from payment issues, but from poor communication and limited access to performance data.

“Financial disagreements can usually be resolved quickly if there is trust and clear communication between both sides. Whereas, when affiliates do not receive timely information, face unclear reporting, or get no explanation for performance changes, tensions escalate very quickly. In regulated markets, communication and transparency become just as important as the financial terms themselves.”

The future belongs to trusted brands and localisation

Looking ahead, Drigo expects meticulous localisation, brand authority, first-party audiences, and community-driven products to define success in regulated North American markets. As AI reshapes search, affiliates will need stronger technology, diversified traffic sources, and compliance-friendly SEO strategies to remain competitive.

“With AI and online search ecosystem changes already transforming the SEO landscape, affiliates need to become much more flexible and technology-driven than before. And compliance-friendly SEO strategies and diversification beyond traditional search traffic are becoming increasingly important.”

The post SiGMA exclusive: Aleksandra Drigo on traffic shifts, transparency, and the future of SEO affiliates appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.

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Belgium

EveryMatrix to replace Betcenter Belgium sportsbook platform in omnichannel deal

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Merkur Group-owned operator will migrate retail and online sports betting across 50+ shops and hundreds of terminals onto EveryMatrix’s full stack.

EveryMatrix has agreed an omnichannel partnership with Betcenter Belgium to power the operator’s sports betting platform, replacing an in-house legacy setup with EveryMatrix’s full technology stack.

Under the deal, EveryMatrix will migrate Betcenter’s customer activities and operations and deliver sportsbook services across both retail and online channels. Betcenter operates online and in more than 50 retail betting shops, with 600 Self Service Betting Terminals (SSBTs) and 300 SSBT-light units, according to the companies.

The agreement extends EveryMatrix’s relationship with Betcenter owner Merkur Group, following a March announcement that EveryMatrix would power Merkur’s Cashpoint brand in Denmark for online sports and casino and more than 1,000 sports betting terminals in 230 shops.

Ebbe Groes, Group Co-CEO & Co-Founder, EveryMatrix, said: “To be able to extend our partnership with Merkur Group in Belgium so soon after agreeing to work with its Cashpoint brand in Denmark is something you rarely see in our industry.

“There has been, and continues to, be an enormous amount of hard work put into both making and delivering these deals on both sides so I’d like to thank the Merkur Group and my own internal EveryMatrix teams for making this a reality.”

Mathias Dahms, Managing Director of the Sports Betting Division, Merkur Group, said: “We have learned to regard EveryMatrix as a reliable and competent partner and look forward to taking the next step with them on this challenging project in Belgium.

“Through this partnership, we will consolidate our market-leading position in Belgium and further expand it with new products.”

The post EveryMatrix to replace Betcenter Belgium sportsbook platform in omnichannel deal appeared first on EE Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.

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Blueprint Gaming

Blueprint Gaming rolls out Rapid Fire Jackpots to NetBet UK

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The expanded integration will bring Blueprint’s full Rapid Fire Jackpots portfolio into NetBet’s casino lobby over time.

Blueprint Gaming has expanded its partnership with UK-facing operator NetBet by rolling out its Rapid Fire Jackpots™ progressive jackpot content to the operator’s casino lobby.

The companies first partnered in 2025, with NetBet already offering Blueprint releases including Fishin’ Frenzy™ Lure ‘Em In, Eye of Horus and King Kong Cash. NetBet has also run a selection of Rapid Fire Jackpots™ titles, including Fishin’ Frenzy™ Big Catch 3, The Goonies™ Quest for Treasure 2 and Fishin’ Frenzy™ Even Bigger Fish 2.

Under the extended collaboration, Blueprint said the entire Rapid Fire Jackpots™ portfolio will be integrated into NetBet’s casino lobby over time, starting with an initial batch of titles now made available to NetBet players.

Rapid Fire Jackpots™ launched in June 2024 and is positioned by Blueprint as a complementary mechanic to its Jackpot King™ product, designed to deliver more frequent jackpot wins. Jack Lawson, Senior Account Manager at Blueprint Gaming, said: “Rapid Fire Jackpots™ has added a new dimension to our portfolio since launch, giving players access to more frequent jackpot drops alongside the premium gameplay experiences our content is known for.

“Expanding the rollout of the mechanic with NetBet allows us to build on the strong momentum already generated through our partnership, while further cementing our position as a leading supplier in the UK market.” Claudia Georgevici, PR Manager at NetBet Casino, said: “Blueprint Gaming’s titles have proven to be a strong addition to our casino lobby over the past year, and the integration of Rapid Fire Jackpots™ is set to further boost that offering.

“The mechanic’s combination of achievable, frequent jackpot wins and engaging gameplay delivers exactly the type of experience that resonates with our players, making it a valuable addition to our growing content selection.”

The post Blueprint Gaming rolls out Rapid Fire Jackpots to NetBet UK appeared first on EE Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.

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