Artem Podrez
If you’re teeing up the launch of your own tech-driven venture, it’s never a bad idea to have a look around the current business landscape to see if you can draw on any wisdom or techniques that are proving to be successful in the market. In the US alone, the iGaming market was said to grow by 22.1 percent, per vixio.com, and by 2027, the market is forecast to be worth somewhere between $10.8 billion and $13.7 billion.
Given that it was slowly introduced in the middle of 2018, iGaming’s rapid ascent can’t be ignored. So, given that it’s a tech-driven sector, this piece will look at some key areas that have allowed for iGaming businesses to grow so rapidly.
If you bring up the idea of offering free samples or free trials to most people looking to release a digital product, you’ll be dismissed. It’s perceived as being too risky as the traditional free sampling marketing technique – the one you’ll be familiar with in supermarkets, for example – also leans on physical interactions and a human connection.
In iGaming, the equivalent of free samples is a staple of each business and a key competitive battleground. You only have to look as far as bonusfinder.com, which reviews, rates, and ranks welcome bonuses, to see how much the brands advertise and lean on these forms of free samples. Some give away ten whole days of spins, while others offer no-deposit bonuses.
For a digital product, there’s a bit of nuance to tapping into the reciprocity principle that free sampling leans on. Many will likely fit into the bracket of offering a free trial. If this is the case, you need to work out if your product can shine in the given time frame – preferably, it’ll be of use very quickly. The longer it takes someone to see the value in the product, the less likely the trial will convert them into a paying customer.
