
By Tatiana Martins, journalist at G&M News.
What are the main commercial trends shaping the iGaming industry today, and how is Wise Gaming positioning itself to stay ahead of them?
Several commercial trends are shaping iGaming right now, but three stand out clearly: the demand for flexibility, faster time-to-market, and sustainable growth models. Operators are no longer looking for one-size-fits-all platforms; they want technology that can adapt quickly to changing market conditions, player behavior, and regional nuances. At Wise Gaming, we’ve positioned ourselves around platform agility and modularity. This allows operators to launch quickly, scale efficiently, and evolve without constant rebuilds. From a commercial standpoint, we’re also seeing a shift toward deeper, long-term partnerships rather than short-term supplier relationships. Operators want providers who understand their commercial realities, not just their technical requirements, and that’s where our operational experience becomes a real differentiator.
Your role spans operational oversight, KPI ownership, and forecasting. How do you balance performance-driven management with the need to innovate and adapt quickly in such a competitive and fast-changing market?
The key is clarity. We’re very disciplined around KPIs and forecasting, but those metrics are designed to support innovation, not restrict it. We focus heavily on indicators like time-to-market, retention performance, partner satisfaction, and revenue sustainability, rather than vanity metrics. From an operational perspective, we’ve built internal processes that allow teams to move quickly without losing control. Short feedback loops, agile planning cycles, and close collaboration between commercial, product, and tech teams mean we can respond to opportunities in real time. Innovation doesn’t happen in isolation; it works best when it’s grounded in clear commercial outcomes.
The company has an expanding global presence supported by B2B partnerships and a strong pipeline for new client acquisition. What qualities do you look for in potential partners, and what makes collaboration truly strategic?
We look for partners who are aligned to us on ambition, pace, and long-term thinking. A strategic partnership isn’t just about signing a deal; it’s about shared goals, mutual trust, and a willingness to collaborate closely. For Wise Gaming, the strongest partnerships are those where both sides are invested in growth. That means openness around commercial models, transparency in communication, and a hands-on approach from day one. When a partner sees us not just as a platform provider, but as an extension of their team, that’s when real value is created.
You also analyze and implement third-party products within the firm’s ecosystem. How do you assess whether a solution adds real value for operators and end-users, especially given the increasing number of tools and technologies entering the iGaming space?
We’re very selective. Every solution we integrate has to solve a real operational or commercial problem, whether that’s improving retention, reducing friction, increasing conversion, or supporting scalability. We assess products through a combination of technical due diligence, operator feedback, and commercial impact analysis. If a tool adds complexity without clear upside, it doesn’t make sense. Ultimately, value is measured by how it improves the operator’s performance and the end-user experience, not by how many features it offers.
With your extensive international network and regular presence at major iGaming conferences, what emerging opportunities or challenges do you believe will impact commercial growth in the industry over the next two to three years?
One of the biggest opportunities lies in emerging and maturing markets, particularly across Latin America and parts of Asia, where demand for well-structured, scalable solutions is growing rapidly. At the same time, competition is intensifying, and operators are becoming far more selective about who they partner with. The challenge -and opportunity- for the industry will be balancing speed with sustainability. Operators want to move fast, but they also need long-term stability, trust, and player protection. Providers who can support that balance through flexible technology, strong partnerships, and a clear commercial mindset, will be the ones driving growth over the next few years.







