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iGAMING

Why the future of iGaming may depend more on people than platforms

For most of the past decade, the global expansion of iGaming was largely discussed through the lenses of regulation, market access, and technology. Operators focused on entering new jurisdictions, acquiring users, and scaling digital platforms at speed. In 2026, however, another dynamic is becoming increasingly central to the industry’s growth trajectory: talent distribution.
May 21, 2026
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The sector is gradually moving toward more distributed operational models, with companies building regional teams capable of supporting local market adaptation.

By Tatiana Martins, journalist at G&M News.

The acceleration of regulated betting markets over the past three years has significantly increased operational complexity across the industry. Markets such as Brazil, Canada and several U.S. states have introduced frameworks that require far more localized operational structures than many operators previously maintained. Regulatory reporting, AML controls, responsible gambling protocols, payment monitoring, and customer verification systems now demand highly specialized teams capable of navigating distinct legal and cultural environments simultaneously.

This creates a problem that cannot be solved through technology or scale. The industry’s expansion is increasingly dependent on people with practical experience operating inside regulated ecosystems, and those professionals remain scarce.

The era of centralized iGaming operations is beginning to evolve

For many years, the industry relied heavily on centralized operational hubs. Malta became the dominant center for global iGaming talent due to its regulatory framework, tax structure, and concentration of operators. CRM, customer support, trading, affiliate management and technology teams were often consolidated within a small number of locations serving multiple international markets.

That structure is becoming more difficult to maintain as regulation becomes increasingly localized. Operators entering markets such as Brazil are discovering that localized payment systems, consumer behavior, advertising standards, and regulatory expectations require stronger regional operational expertise. Similar patterns are emerging in Ontario, parts of Latin America, and the Gulf region.

As a result, the industry is gradually moving toward more distributed operational models. Cities such as São Paulo, Toronto, and Dubai are gaining strategic relevance as companies build regional teams capable of supporting local market adaptation.

Compliance and payments have become strategic disciplines

One of the clearest indicators of this transformation is the growing importance of compliance and payments expertise. Historically, many operators prioritized acquisition, trading, and commercial growth above operational infrastructure. That balance is rapidly shifting. In highly regulated environments, long-term sustainability increasingly depends on a company’s ability to maintain regulatory credibility and operational transparency. This has elevated the role of compliance professionals within organizational structures.

At the same time, digital payments have become one of the industry’s most important competitive layers. Instant payment systems, localized onboarding flows, KYC verification, fraud prevention, and transaction monitoring now directly influence conversion, retention and user trust.

In markets like Brazil, where PIX fundamentally changed user expectations around payment speed and simplicity, operators require professionals capable of integrating financial technology logic into betting environments. This has intensified the migration of talent from fintech into iGaming.

Professionals with backgrounds in digital banking, payment orchestration, onboarding systems, and risk management are moving into gaming companies as the overlap between the two sectors becomes more pronounced.

The competition for experienced professionals is becoming global

Another significant change is the geographic expansion of recruitment itself. Remote and distributed work structures have allowed operators to access broader international talent pools, particularly in technology and analytics. At the same time, this flexibility has intensified competition for highly specialized professionals with direct regulated-market experience.

Operators are no longer competing only with other gaming companies inside a single jurisdiction. Increasingly, they are competing for individuals capable of managing complex operational environments across multiple regulated markets at the same time.

This is visible in senior compliance, payments and regulatory affairs positions, where demand has risen sharply over the last two years. Recruitment agencies specializing in gaming and betting have highlighted shortages in experienced mid- and senior-level professionals capable of supporting multi-market expansion strategies.

The industry is entering a knowledge-intensive phase

The global iGaming industry is also becoming more ‘knowledge-intensive.’ In earlier stages of market expansion, growth could often be driven through marketing investment and platform scalability. As regulation matures, however, operational sophistication becomes more important.

This changes the type of expertise companies require. Understanding local regulation, payment behavior, tax structures, advertising restrictions, and consumer protection frameworks is becoming just as important as product performance itself.

Companies best positioned for long-term growth may therefore be those capable of building institutional knowledge across multiple jurisdictions rather than simply scaling acquisition strategies.

Talent mobility is beginning to influence industry geography

The redistribution of talent is also beginning to reshape the geography of the industry itself. Rather than concentrating entirely around traditional European hubs, parts of the sector are becoming decentralized. Regional expertise now carries greater strategic value, particularly in markets where cultural adaptation and regulatory relationships influence operational success.

This does not mean that established hubs such as Malta are losing relevance. Instead, the global structure of iGaming is becoming more distributed and interconnected than it was during the industry’s earlier phases of growth. That transition reflects the broader maturation of the sector.

analysis business careers compliance customers experience growth hiring igaming localization markets maturation migration operational models operators payment methods players professionals recruitment trends regulation relationship service sports betting strategies talent team technology workforce
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