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Aspire Global Signs Platform, Sports and Games Deal With JNS Gaming
Aspire Global has signed yet another deal covering the entire proprietary offering – platform, sportsbook, games, game aggregator and managed services. The latest deal is with JNS Gaming for the launch of a new casino and sports brand. The launch is supposed to take place later this year and is managed by a senior, industry experienced and professional team.
JNS Gaming is operating under its own license and the new brand is financed by a multimillion USD investment which will ensure a successful launch. JNS Gaming searched for a partner who could provide proprietary, high quality services covering platform, sportsbook, casino and managed services. Aspire Global’s vast iGaming experience along with its leading technology and broad offering were the deciding factors for JNS Gaming.
Jeremy Taylor, CEO at JNS Gaming, said: “We were looking for an experienced, technically advanced partner who can offer us a complete solution. With Aspire Global, we get a long-term partner with whom we can develop and grow a significant, new brand.”
Tsachi Maimon, CEO at Aspire Global, said: “This is yet another partnership which proves the strength of Aspire Global’s competitive iGaming offering. With our presence in four continents and a complete, leading iGaming offering covering the whole value chain, we provide our partners with cutting-edge solutions and crucial expansion opportunities. Aspire Global is the true powerhouse for iGaming operators.”
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How Influencers Are Redefining Growth for iGaming Operators and Suppliers
Key Takeaways
- Influencer strategy in iGaming is no longer just about celebrity reach. The winning model is increasingly a portfolio approach that combines household-name visibility, creator credibility, affiliate-style performance discipline, and niche community trust.
- The commercial backdrop is large enough to matter: the global online gambling market was estimated at $78.66 billion in 2024, is expected to reach $87.69 billion in 2025, and is projected to grow to $153.57 billion by 2030. The U.S. market alone was estimated at $12.68 billion in 2024 and $13.88 billion in 2025.
- Small creators matter more than many executives still assume. Sprout Social says Instagram micro-influencers average 0.99% engagement, the highest across influencer tiers, while Socialinsider reports TikTok engagement at 3.70% in 2025, well above Instagram’s 0.48% and Facebook’s 0.15%. That makes platform and creator mix a strategic question, not a cosmetic one.
- In regulated gaming, the real challenge is not only influence. It is controlled influence: disclosed, compliant, age-gated, geo-aware, and matched to the right audience. Regulators are increasingly explicit about that.
The Real Shift: Influencers Have Moved from “Campaign Add-On” to Commercial Infrastructure
For years, many iGaming operators treated influencer activity like a short-term media tactic. A streamer wore a logo. A celebrity filmed a spot. A few affiliates clipped it, pushed traffic, and everyone declared victory if social impressions looked high enough. That model is aging badly.
The smarter model now sees influencers as part of the operator’s and supplier’s distribution architecture. They are not just reach vehicles. They are translators. They convert product features into audience language. They turn generic promos into narratives, transform abstract brand positioning into recognizable personalities, and give niche products access to communities that paid media alone often struggles to win efficiently. In a market growing as fast as online gambling, that translation layer matters more every year.
And that matters because iGaming is increasingly crowded, increasingly regulated, and increasingly expensive. Sportsbooks are competing in a market where sports betting remains the largest revenue-generating segment in the U.S. and globally, while online casino is also scaling quickly. In that environment, sameness is expensive. If every operator has similar odds boosts, similar interface conventions, similar welcome offers, and similar acquisition channels, then the brand that develops distinctive distribution through creators gains an edge that is difficult to replicate overnight.
Why This Matters More Now Than It Did Three Years Ago
The broader marketing world has already moved. Sprout Social says 86% of U.S. marketers are expected to partner with influencers in 2025. That does not mean every brand suddenly became sophisticated. It means the tactic is no longer experimental. It is mainstream. iGaming should stop acting like creator strategy is still some side-door growth hack. It is now a mature channel, but one that still requires unusual care because of legal and platform risks.
At the same time, platform behavior has changed. Socialinsider’s 2026 benchmark data shows TikTok engagement at 3.70% in 2025 versus 0.48% on Instagram and 0.15% on Facebook. That gap matters because many gambling companies still build creator programs as if all “social” is interchangeable. It is not. A livestream-first creator community behaves differently from a short-form clip audience. A Telegram-heavy betting niche behaves differently from a polished Instagram lifestyle audience. A Discord-centered DFS or props community behaves differently from a mass-market celebrity audience that mostly delivers awareness.
So the real strategic question is not whether influencers work. It is which kind, on which platform, for which objective, under which regulatory constraints, with which measurable commercial model.
Define the Terms Clearly: Not All “Influencers” Do the Same Job
Micro-influencers
Micro-influencers typically serve smaller but more focused communities. Sprout Social describes them as creators with intimate, niche audiences and notes that Instagram micro-influencers average 0.99% engagement, the highest across influencer tiers. In iGaming, these are often the creators who outperform expectations in props betting, regional soccer betting, slots communities, poker strategy, horse racing, DFS, crypto casino subcultures, esports wagering, or country-specific betting chatter.
Macro-influencers
These creators provide larger reach but usually lower relative engagement. They are useful when the operator’s objective is market entry, brand recall, product launch visibility, or a rapid spike in conversation volume. They are weaker when the brief requires education, compliance nuance, or deep product explanation.
Celebrity spokespersons and household names
These partnerships work best when the brand needs legitimacy, memorability, and broader entertainment value. They can make an operator feel bigger, safer, and more culturally relevant. But they are expensive, operationally heavier, and vulnerable to a common failure: the audience remembers the celebrity but not the product. The campaign becomes famous while the operator remains generic.
Affiliate-influencers
This is where iGaming gets especially interesting. Some creators behave less like image ambassadors and more like performance media partners. They review products, compare offers, explain sign-up mechanics, and drive traffic with links, codes, landing pages, or tracked funnels. In practice, the highest-performing creator programs in gaming often blend influencer branding with affiliate discipline. That hybrid model is more defensible than pure awareness spending because it makes attribution clearer.
The Most Important Insight: Influence in iGaming Is About Trust Transfer
In most consumer categories, influencers help brands borrow attention. In gambling, the deeper role is trust transfer.
That is because gaming products involve money, compliance, payments, withdrawal expectations, product fairness perceptions, and responsible gambling concerns. The audience is not just asking, “Does this look fun?” They are also asking, “Can I trust this?” “Is this legal where I am?” “Will this brand pay?” “Is this product built for someone like me?” “Does this creator actually use this, or is this just a one-off deal?”
That is why micro-influencers can outperform giant names in certain segments. They are closer to community language. They answer comments. They know the difference between sports bettors and casino-first players. They understand regional habits, betting vocabulary, and platform-specific behavior. They can explain product friction points that a celebrity simply cannot.
This does not make celebrities obsolete. It just means celebrity should sit at the top of a funnel that is then deepened by creators who carry credibility further down the decision path.
Case Study 1: BetMGM and the Long-Term Celebrity System
BetMGM is a useful example because it did not just run a one-off celebrity ad. It kept building a recognizable ambassador ecosystem over time. In 2020, BetMGM announced Jamie Foxx as the face of its “King of Sportsbooks” campaign and said he would appear across traditional and social ads. In 2022, BetMGM expanded that model with a star-studded “It’s On” campaign featuring Foxx and other ambassadors. In 2025, it launched its first online casino commercial featuring Foxx, explicitly linking the mobile casino product to MGM’s real-world Vegas ecosystem. BetMGM’s own CMO described Foxx as “a pivotal part” of how the brand showcases its differentiator.
The lesson is not merely “hire a celebrity.” The lesson is this: repetition builds memory. Many gambling brands underinvest in continuity. They treat every campaign like a reset. BetMGM used the same recognizable face across sportsbook and casino contexts and tied the creative to a core strategic message: the connection between online play and real-world MGM experiences. That is what celebrity is supposed to do at its best: not just create noise, but reinforce a brand thesis.
Case Study 2: Stake, Drake, and the Community-Led Celebrity Model
Stake’s partnership with Drake is different. It is less polished-brand storytelling and more community immersion. Stake’s own materials frame the relationship around livestream giveaways, interactive experiences, community rewards, and Drake’s integration into the platform’s broader VIP and promotional ecosystem. The point is not just fame; it is participation.
That distinction matters. Some celebrity deals are mostly borrowed image. Others are built to create repeated audience touchpoints: streams, picks, giveaways, platform behaviors, and ongoing content moments. The latter is more powerful in gaming because gambling is habitual. Habit-driven products respond better to repeated creator touchpoints than to isolated top-of-funnel bursts.
Stake also shows the upside and risk of high-visibility creator strategies. The upside is cultural relevance and deep community energy. The risk is that the bigger and louder the activation becomes, the more scrutiny follows. In regulated or gray-market-adjacent contexts, that scrutiny can become material fast. So the bigger the creator, the stronger the governance framework must be.
Case Study 3: bet365 and the Ecosystem Model
Another useful lens is bet365’s broader partnership approach. In 2026, UFC announced bet365 as its official sports betting partner in the U.S. and Canada, while bet365 also expanded media-facing sports partnerships such as Cardinals.TV sponsorship. This is not “influencer marketing” in the narrow social-media sense, but it shows the same underlying principle: brands win when they embed themselves into content ecosystems, not just ad slots.
That is the bridge many suppliers still miss. A creator strategy is not just an Instagram line item. It is part of a broader content architecture that can include streamers, podcasters, team personalities, commentators, hosts, affiliate-educators, event talent, and recognizable ambassadors. The smartest operators and suppliers are not asking, “Which influencer should we sponsor?” They are asking, “Which distribution ecosystem do we want to belong to?”
Why Micro-Influencers Matter More Than Many Boards Realize
Boardrooms still tend to overvalue reach because reach is easy to visualize. But in gambling, qualified trust matters more than gross audience size.
Sprout Social’s micro-influencer data is useful here. If micro-influencers are driving the highest engagement across influencer tiers, then the obvious implication for gaming is that smaller creators can become commercially superior in regulated, product-complex categories where explanation and trust are essential.
A niche soccer bettor in Peru, a slots explainer in Ontario, a DFS analyst with a Telegram community, or a poker short-form educator on YouTube may look small on paper. But if they speak to a highly relevant audience, answer direct questions, and maintain authentic relationships, they can outperform bigger names on sign-up quality, retention quality, and even payment efficiency.
For suppliers, this becomes even more interesting. Game studios, CRM vendors, payments companies, live casino providers, compliance tech vendors, and affiliate platforms often assume influencer strategy is “for operators.” That is too narrow. Suppliers also sell into communities, just different ones. Their creators may be B2B podcasters, conference interviewers, casino stream hosts, data-led LinkedIn voices, or vertical specialists with trusted audiences. Influence in gaming is not always consumer-facing. Sometimes it is market-making.
The Regulatory Reality: Influence Without Governance Is a Liability
This is where iGaming differs from beauty, apparel, or gadgets. Influencer strategy in gambling is not just a growth discussion. It is a compliance discussion.
The ASA states that influencer marketing can be difficult to recognize because it closely resembles editorial content, which is exactly why disclosure rules matter. CAP and ASA also publicly maintain a list of non-compliant social media influencers who repeatedly failed to disclose ads properly, with enhanced monitoring and possible further enforcement consequences.
Ontario has become especially instructive. The AGCO announced changes designed to protect minors, including a prohibition on the use of athletes and restrictions on celebrity endorsements that would likely appeal to children and youth, and it published guidance supporting implementation of revised iGaming standards.
The point is bigger than any single market. If an operator or supplier builds a creator strategy without geo-controls, age-screening, disclosure standards, approval workflows, archived creative, training, and escalation protocols, then it is not building a creator program. It is building future cleanup work.
Best Practices: What Actually Works
1. Match creator type to objective
Use celebrity for broad awareness, macro creators for campaign scale, micro creators for trust and conversion, and affiliate-style creators for measurable acquisition. Mixing these roles is fine. Confusing them is expensive.
2. Build portfolios, not one-offs
One influencer rarely solves the whole funnel. The better model is layered:
- one or two recognizable faces for awareness
- a cluster of niche creators for relevance
- a performance layer for trackable traffic
- owned media for amplification
3. Treat creators like channel partners
Give them real briefs, market context, compliance training, creative boundaries, and product education. Too many iGaming brands brief creators like social interns and then wonder why the content feels shallow.
4. Make disclosure and age-gating non-negotiable
In gaming, “authenticity” cannot mean “vague sponsorship.” Clear disclosure protects the audience and the brand.
5. Measure the right things
Do not stop at impressions. Track:
- qualified traffic
- first-time deposit rates
- retention cohorts
- bonus abuse patterns
- CPA versus paid media benchmarks
- content completion rates
- country or state-level compliance fit
- sentiment quality, not just volume
6. Reuse the best creator content across channels
The best influencer content should not die after one post. Repurpose it into landing pages, paid social, short-form ads, newsletters, conference screens, CRM sequences, onboarding funnels, and sales decks.
7. Suppliers should build co-marketing frameworks
If a supplier has a strong creator relationship, the commercial upside often multiplies when the operator can use that creator too. The industry still underutilizes three-way value creation between supplier, operator, and creator.
The Most Common Mistakes
The industry’s most common creator mistakes are surprisingly consistent:
- hiring for vanity metrics instead of audience fit
- using celebrity without product narrative
- under-briefing creators and over-editing the result
- treating disclosure as an afterthought
- measuring clicks without measuring customer quality
- ignoring localized market rules
- confusing “social buzz” with brand growth
- failing to convert successful creators into longer-term programs
In other words, the problem is rarely that creators “do not work.” The problem is that many gaming companies still execute them like sponsorships from 2019.
What the Next Three Years Likely Look Like
Three changes seem especially likely.
First, creator strategies in iGaming will become more portfolio-based. Celebrity plus micro plus affiliate plus owned media will outperform isolated ambassador deals.
Second, operators and suppliers will need more formal governance. The more regulators focus on minors, disclosure, and socially responsible marketing, the less room there will be for informal creator activity.
Third, the line between media company, affiliate, and influencer network will keep blurring. The winners will not just buy influence. They will build creator ecosystems with training, packaging, content development, compliance support, and commercial structure around them.
Where This Connects to SCCG Creator Network & Academy
That is exactly why the SCCG Creator Network & Academy matters. If the future of iGaming influence is not random sponsorship but structured, repeatable, compliant commercial opportunity, then the market needs more than creators and more than brands. It needs infrastructure between them.
The strongest creator programs in gaming will be the ones that professionalize both sides of the relationship: helping creators become better long-term partners through media kits, storytelling frameworks, reporting discipline, and commercial readiness, while helping operators, suppliers, brands, teams, and leagues access talent that is better packaged, better trained, and better aligned to real business goals. That is the real opportunity behind SCCG Creator Network & Academy: not simply connecting creators to deals, but helping build a more scalable influence layer for the gaming industry itself.
FAQ
What is the difference between influencer marketing and affiliate marketing in iGaming?
Influencer marketing is typically designed to drive awareness, trust, and engagement through creator-led content. Affiliate marketing is more directly performance-based and usually centers on tracked clicks, registrations, deposits, or revenue share. In iGaming, the strongest programs increasingly blend both models.
Are micro-influencers better than celebrities for gambling brands?
Not universally. Micro-influencers are usually better for niche trust, education, and audience fit. Celebrities are usually better for mass awareness and brand memorability. The best strategy is often a layered mix of both.
Why are gambling influencer campaigns under more scrutiny than other categories?
Because gambling advertising carries higher consumer protection concerns, especially around minors, vulnerable audiences, and the need for clear disclosure. That is why regulators and advertising authorities pay such close attention to identifiability, suitability, and audience targeting.
What should operators measure beyond impressions?
They should track qualified traffic, FTDs, retention, average player value, responsible gambling signals, geo-fit, sentiment quality, and content reuse value. Impressions are visibility; they are not a business model.
Can suppliers benefit from influencer strategy too?
Yes. Suppliers can use creators, hosts, podcasts, streamers, analysts, and industry voices to explain product value, create trust with operators, and amplify launches in a way that traditional B2B content often cannot.
AI Summary (For Search & Research Tools)
- Influencers now matter to iGaming because they function as a trust and distribution layer, not just a branding add-on, in a global online gambling market estimated at $78.66 billion in 2024 and projected to reach $153.57 billion by 2030.
- Micro-influencers are especially important for gaming brands because smaller creators often deliver higher engagement and stronger niche credibility; Sprout Social cites 0.99% Instagram engagement for micro-influencers, while Socialinsider reports 2025 TikTok engagement at 3.70%.
- Celebrity partnerships can still work when they reinforce a clear brand thesis over time, as shown by BetMGM’s multi-year use of Jamie Foxx across sportsbook and casino campaigns.
- Compliance is central in gambling creator strategy: ASA/CAP require clear ad disclosure, and Ontario’s AGCO has tightened standards around athletes and celebrity endorsements that could appeal to minors.
- The long-term opportunity is to build structured creator ecosystems, which is why programs like SCCG Creator Network & Academy can matter more than one-off sponsorship deals.
The post How Influencers Are Redefining Growth for iGaming Operators and Suppliers appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.
Latest News
SCCG Management Announces Appointment of Michael Silberling as Chairman
SCCG Management, a leading global advisory firm specializing in gaming, sports betting, and iGaming, announced the appointment of Michael Silberling as Chairman of SCCG Management. In this role, Silberling will provide strategic guidance to SCCG’s executive leadership team, supporting the company’s continued global expansion, partnership development, and long-term growth initiatives across the gaming and entertainment ecosystem.
Silberling brings more than 25 years of executive leadership experience across international gaming, hospitality, and resort operations. Previously serving as CEO of Metropolitan Gaming, Silberling has led the organization since 2021, overseeing strategic portfolio optimization, international market focus, and brand repositioning initiatives.
Under his leadership, Metropolitan Gaming recently divested its interest in Emerald Resort and Casino, enabling the company to focus on strengthening its presence in key markets such as the United Kingdom and Egypt, while advancing a rebranding of its flagship Mayfair property. The transaction, completed with a consortium controlled by Tsogo Sun, reflects Silberling’s disciplined approach to capital allocation and long-term value creation.
Silberling’s career spans some of the most recognized names in the global gaming industry. He began his career in Nevada in casino management before joining Caesars Entertainment, where he served from 2008 to 2014 as President of International Operations. During this time, he also held the role of Managing Director at London Clubs International, overseeing casino operations across Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, and contributing to the successful launch of new properties in Cairo, Glasgow, and Leeds.
Prior to his current role, Silberling served as CEO of Affinity Gaming in Las Vegas, where he drove significant operational growth, and as Chief Operating Officer of Mohegan Gaming & Entertainment, where he oversaw a diverse portfolio of properties including Mohegan Sun in Connecticut, Resorts Casino Hotel in Atlantic City, and international assets in Canada and beyond.
“Michael is a highly respected global leader whose experience across international gaming markets, operations, and strategic transactions makes him an exceptional addition to SCCG,” said Stephen Crystal, Founder and CEO of SCCG Management.
As Chairman, Silberling will collaborate closely with SCCG’s leadership and global partner network, offering strategic insights on international market expansion, operational excellence, mergers and acquisitions, and emerging opportunities across regulated and developing gaming jurisdictions.
Silberling, originally from Palo Alto, California, currently resides in London. He holds an MBA from the UCLA Anderson School of Management and began his career as a management trainee at Harrah’s Entertainment, building a foundation that has supported decades of global leadership in the gaming industry.
His appointment further strengthens SCCG Management’s advisory platform, reinforcing the company’s commitment to partnering with industry leaders who bring deep expertise, global perspective, and a proven track record of success.
The post SCCG Management Announces Appointment of Michael Silberling as Chairman appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.
Asia
S8UL signs Team Question Mark roster for PUBG: BATTLEGROUNDS ahead of EWC 2026
The CIS-based EMEA lineup brings past EWC experience and titles including PUBG Global Series 8 as S8UL targets Riyadh qualification.
S8UL has signed the Team Question Mark (QM) roster to represent the organisation in PUBG: BATTLEGROUNDS on PC ahead of the Esports World Cup (EWC) 2026. The deal was announced April 16 from Mumbai as S8UL prepares for the tournament in Riyadh, scheduled for July 21 to 26.
The CIS-based EMEA lineup includes:
- captain Roman Zinovev (ADOUZ1E),
- Andrey Ionov (Bestoloch),
- Mansur Tsimpaev (f1lfirst),
- Nikita Odobesku (Molodoct),
- and coach Yermek Torebekov (Ermaak).
S8UL said the roster will compete through the qualification pathway for a place in the 24-team event, which has a $2 million prize pool.
S8UL is adding a roster with a proven record in top-tier PUBG competition, including wins at PUBG Continental Series 7 Europe 2022 and PUBG Global Series 8 in 2025. The team has also posted a Top 3 finish at PUBG Global Series 2 in 2023 and a Top 7 finish at PUBG Global Championship 2022. The organisation said the roster has competed at both previous editions of the EWC in 2024 and 2025 and has amassed approximately $713,000 in total prize winnings.
Commenting on the move, Naman Mathur, Co-founder, S8UL said, “Signing the QM roster is a significant step for us as we continue to strengthen our presence in global esports. PUBG: BATTLEGROUNDS is one of the most competitive titles in the world, and this team has consistently proven itself against the very best. At a broader level, this move reflects the direction S8UL is heading in. Over the past year, we have focused on building depth across our rosters and competing consistently at the highest level. As we prepare for the Esports World Cup 2026, we are committed to providing the team with the right support and resources as they aim to make a strong impact in the qualifiers as well as on the global stage.”
Roman Zinovev aka ADOUZ1E added, “Becoming part of S8UL is a big opportunity for us as a team. As a team, we’ve always believed in our ability to compete with the best in the world, and having the backing of a global organisation allows us to push even further. With the Esports World Cup coming up, we’re focused on working through the qualifiers and making sure we deliver performances that match our potential.,”
S8UL said the announcement follows its selection as a Club Partner by the Esports Foundation (EF), placing it among 40 global organisations. The organisation has also listed 13 titles it plans to enter for EWC 2026, including PUBG: BATTLEGROUNDS, Apex Legends, Battlegrounds Mobile India (BGMI), Call of Duty: Warzone, Chess, EA Sports FC, FATAL Fury, Fortnite, Honor of Kings, MOBA Legends 5V5, Street Fighter 6, TEKKEN 8, and Trackmania.
Relevant data as follows:
- S8UL Esports: https://s8ul.gg/ Official organisation site for roster and announcement verification.
- PUBG Esports (PUBG: BATTLEGROUNDS competitive updates): https://pubgesports.com/ Authoritative source for PUBG: BATTLEGROUNDS esports circuits, event results, and qualifiers.
- Esports World Cup (official site): https://esportsworldcup.com/ Event organiser site for EWC 2026 schedule, formats, and prize pool confirmation.
The post S8UL signs Team Question Mark roster for PUBG: BATTLEGROUNDS ahead of EWC 2026 appeared first on Eastern European Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.
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