EEG sat down with Ivan Bilash, Director of Partner Operations at SOFTSWISS, after the SiGMA Central Europe Summit, where the company launched its 2026 iGaming Trends report. With over eleven years of experience in project and product management, Ivan brings a practical yet visionary understanding of operational excellence and partnership building. In this conversation, we explore key iGaming trends for 2026, the importance of data-driven insights, and how SOFTSWISS uses technology and collaboration to help operators improve player acquisition and build stronger relationships with affiliates.
Interview by Maria Emma Arnidou for EEG, HIPTHER.
The SOFTSWISS iGaming Trends report has become a highly anticipated annual playbook for industry professionals. What inspired this initiative, and how has it evolved into a vital resource over the years?
When we released the very first edition four years ago, the idea was to bring together everything the industry was experiencing but hadn’t structured yet. There was a lot of noise in the market – regulatory changes, new technologies, shifts in player behaviour, and so on. But there was no single place that connected all these dots.
Over time, the report has evolved into a tool that helps the market understand where things are actually heading. And that’s why it is so anticipated by both iGaming professionals and newcomers. It’s not just ‘trends for the sake of trends’ – it’s grounded in real data and clear patterns we observe, supported by our experience in analysing them.
For us at SOFTSWISS, it’s also a way to share what we see from the inside. We work with hundreds of operators, so we naturally spot early signals before they become global trends. The report is a way to turn all of that into something useful for the entire industry.
This year’s 2026 edition gathers insights from over 350 experts and applies AI analysis to more than 120,000 media headlines. From your perspective, what are the most striking or transformative findings emerging this year?
To be honest, there are many, which is why the report is over 100 pages long. But let me highlight the key points.
The first thing that jumps out is how quickly the industry is maturing. As we note in the report, the industry has outgrown its ‘Wild West’ phase. We see this in regulation, taxation, responsible gambling, and advertising. Many markets are tightening rules, but they are also becoming more predictable. That’s a good sign of a sector moving towards sustainable growth.
Another big takeaway is the scale of M&A activity. It’s no longer just large companies buying smaller ones. It’s about building ecosystems and obtaining technologies that help acquirers prepare for a world where efficiency is as important as market share.
And last but not least, of course, there is AI – not as a buzzword, but as infrastructure. Companies have moved past experiments, and now expect AI to deliver real value. This primarily concerns fraud detection and player protection. But I think it’s fair to say that AI has permeated all areas of business, from coding to marketing, and this shift is happening fast. In the report, we call this the industrialisation of AI.
When you combine all these trends, you realise that iGaming is becoming more mature and more structured, but also far more competitive. And with that comes a new reality: the industry is now much more demanding operationally.
The report presentation launched alongside the iGaming Trends Marathon at SiGMA Central Europe. What role do live discussions and community dialogue play in shaping industry progress?
I strongly believe that conversations matter more than slides. Trends only become useful when people challenge them and connect them to their own experience.
During the marathon, we saw something important: different parts of the industry – operators, suppliers, tech companies, media – are finally speaking the same language. Everyone understands that the next stage is about taking responsibility and making smarter decisions.
Events like SiGMA create that space. When you place 200+ people in one room and let them debate AI, regulation, M&A, and marketing, you get insights you would hardly get from reading a report alone. These discussions help operators understand why acquisition is becoming more complex and why working closely with affiliates, rather than treating them as a separate layer, is increasingly important.
For me, as someone responsible for partner operations, this is invaluable. These events show what operators are truly concerned about and what they expect.
Speaking of acquisition, how do you see the role of affiliates changing within the iGaming ecosystem?
This is an important topic that frequently arises in conversations with operators. Traditional acquisition channels are becoming increasingly expensive, more restricted, and in some cases simply unavailable. Naturally, this pushes the industry to rely much more on affiliates.
But affiliates today are no longer just traffic suppliers. Many have grown into strong, independent ecosystem players with their own strategies, data, and long-term goals. They understand user behaviour extremely well and often have deeper insight into acquisition funnels than anyone else in the market.
We also see another interesting shift: some large affiliate groups are moving into direct operations. This changes the dynamics. On one hand, there is less traffic available on the open market. On the other, new operators emerge with very strong marketing expertise from day one. That naturally increases competition for the end player.
Budgets are no longer the only decisive factor. Operators’ success now also depends on the quality of partnerships, transparency in working with affiliates, and having a product and strategy capable of converting and retaining high-quality traffic. From our perspective, this is a long-term trend that will shape the industry’s growth in the coming years.
The 2026 iGaming Trends report builds on years of data, but also integrates new analytical layers powered by AI and expert research. What makes this edition stand out, and how can professionals best use its insights?
This edition stands out because it explains why certain trends are emerging. AI helped us process more than 120,000 media headlines, and confirmed what operators tell us privately: the market is recalibrating. Responsible gambling rules are strengthening, cybersecurity is becoming a board-level topic, and compliance is now part of product design.
If you’re an operator or a supplier, the best way to use this report is as a planning tool. We’ve done all the heavy lifting and distilled each business area down to the most important insights. We have also introduced ‘Adaptation Paths’ at the end of each chapter. It’s a kind of checklist that operators can refer to when building their strategy.
Of course, the report won’t make decisions for everyone, but it gives a very clear map of the road ahead.
Finally, as Director of Partner Operations, what do you see as the most valuable trait in industry partnerships going into 2026?
I’d say consistency. Everyone talks about innovation, but in practice, what partners value most beyond stable operations is predictable communication and support they can rely on.
This year’s report shows that growth will depend on how well companies adapt to the new reality of increased speed and stricter regulations. In 2026, the best partners will be those who can combine flexibility with discipline: reacting quickly when needed while also thinking long-term.
For SOFTSWISS, this approach is in our DNA. We work side-by-side with operators through technical support, risk management, and daily operational guidance. When the market becomes tougher – which it inevitably will – this kind of partnership becomes a competitive advantage.
As SOFTSWISS continues to pioneer data-driven growth across the global iGaming ecosystem, the 2026 iGaming Trends report reaffirms the company’s commitment to knowledge sharing, collaboration, and innovation.
The 2026 iGaming Trends report is available – download it now!



















