Home > Casino & games > Bingo > Assessing the online bingo opportunity

Assessing the online bingo opportunity

| By iGB Editorial Team | Reading Time: 4 minutes
Bingo is booming, argues Lillian Grey, though the vertical does not necessarily get the attention it deserves. Operators need to meet the rise in player demand if they are to continue to drive growth.

The online bingo vertical does not always get the attention it deserves with operators focusing their efforts on chasing growth opportunities in casino and sports betting. 

But the bingo vertical has plenty to offer, and after enjoying something of a boom during the first half of the year there is plenty of potential for savvy operators to leverage. 

What’s more, as the Gambling Commission continues to tighten its requirements for casino and sports betting, bingo is emerging as the vertical that aligns best with new safe gaming rules. 

This, combined with the lower cost per acquisition that bingo offers as well as the ability to cross-sell players to other verticals, means that operators should be buzzing when it comes to bingo. 

Below, I take a closer look at the growth the sector has enjoyed over the past year, whether it is sustainable and how operators can maximise the opportunity in front of them. 

Online bingo is booming

The growth seen in the online bingo vertical over the past 12 months is not just anecdotal; according to Google Trends data there has been a significant rise in the number of searches relating to bingo. 

If you take the term “online bingo” as an example, the volume of searches* increased month on month from January 2020 to April 2020, as outlined below. 

January – 42

February – 45

March – 63

April – 85 

* Google Trends shows the volume behind specific searches each month. The search term is scored out 100 with 100 being the highest volume of search. 

The March and April numbers are particularly high, representing a 40% and 98% year-on-year increase on 2019 respectively. 

Understandably, the search volume for online bingo started to decrease with the return of sports events and sports betting in June but crucially remained up or the same year on year. 

May – 72 (+64% YoY)

June – 56 (+ 21% YoY)

July – 66 (+69% YoY)

August – 43 (level)

September – 44 (level) 

This is supported by data from the Gambling Commission’s most recent participation survey. 

The survey found that the percentage of players that had taken part in bingo from January to June had increased from 24.1% in 2019 to 38.7% in 2020, marking a 60% rise from the prior year. 

Growth can be sustained

As the numbers show, search volume for “online bingo” continued to rise year-on-year even after lockdown restrictions were lifted and sports events and betting returned. 

And while growth levels in August and September were flat, October and November saw a 23% and a 46% increase in search volume respectively. 

Of course, there have been spikes in interest and often around extraordinary factors such as lockdown measures being enforced – there was a huge spike on the week commencing 16 March. 

But despite this, the data shows that interest has remained above 2019 levels throughout the year. 

While operators may be more focused on slots and casino games due to them being major revenue generators, there is genuine and significant appetite for online bingo. 

For example, there are 2,800 Google searches per month for “best casino sites” but 5,500 for “best bingo sites”. 

Some operators understand this, and are taking the opportunity in front of them, which has also helped to drive growth this year. The challenge is how operators maintain this level of interest. 

This will mostly rely on marketing and CRM, and our sources indicate a number of operators are set to launch big TV campaigns imminently. 

But this needs to be combined with an improved bingo offering – branded rooms, new game formats (Slingo has proved to be hugely popular) as well as bonuses that deliver genuine value. 

Why operators should embrace bingo

Aside from rising player demand, the bingo vertical provides operators with several upsides that will help grow their businesses over the coming months and as the sector faces new challenges. 

Most operators will already have bingo players within their databases and many of these will go elsewhere if bingo games are not offered. 

When PlayOJO announced it was launching a dedicated bingo product earlier this year it noted that 25% of its existing players went to other brands to play bingo. 

By launching bingo, operators can ensure players do not go elsewhere, increasing their share of the wallet and driving loyalty while lowering churn. 

Bingo also allows operators to attract new players and demographics, and particularly females aged between 35 and 55 – a lucrative demographic when it comes to CPA, loyalty and cross-sell potential. 

Indeed, bingo players are much cheaper to acquire than casino and sport betting players. For example, the cost per click for “best casino sites” is $110 (£81.3/€89.8) but for “best bingo sites” it is just $35.  

What’s more, bingo players often go on to engage with other verticals offered by the operator.

If you look at high value players at online bingo sites, their value does not come through their bingo play but through their slots play. All the operator has to do is effectively cross-sell them. 

Bingo aligns with new safe gaming requirements:

Perhaps the biggest upside to bingo is that it aligns more closely with the latest responsible gambling and safe gaming requirements being introduced in regulated markets around the world. 

This is certainly true when it comes to stake limits, which could be introduced in the UK if some of the government groups looking closely at the sector have their way. 

While online slot players can and do wager upwards of £100 per spin, bingo tickets can be purchased for a little as £0.05 meaning the vertical would be less impacted by any tightening of the rules. 

The data shows that bingo is booming, and this, combined with on-going regulatory scrutiny, should be enough to catch the attention of operators. 

Some have already seen the opportunities up for grabs – PlayOJO, LeoVegas and 888 continue to make bold moves in the space – which means others must act now or miss losing out.

Lillian Grey is head of content at BingoSites.net and is considered a thought leader on all things online bingo.

Subscribe to the iGaming newsletter