WHEN BETTING BECOMES THE BIGGEST ADVERTISER By Lolu Akinwunmi

Have you noticed how betting and gaming brands now seem to dominate media space? From TV to outdoor to radio, digital to sponsorships, their presence is loud, visible and relentless. In many media plans today, they are among the most aggressive spenders.

Some observers argue that the tough economic climate is partly fuelling this surge. In periods of financial strain, more people are tempted by the promise, however uncertain, of a quick and easy win. Hope, even risky hope, becomes a powerful commercial driver.

And the scale of the industry explains the weight of that spend.

Nigeria currently has:

• 40+ active sports betting brands

• 50–70+ licensed betting operators

• 100+ licensed gaming and betting companies when you include casinos, lotto and related platforms

That is a substantial and highly competitive ecosystem. With so many operators fighting for share of wallet and mind, media investment inevitably escalates.

For us in advertising and media strategy, this raises important questions:

1 Is this concentration sustainable?

2 What does it mean for brand clutter and differentiation?

3 And what are the long-term reputational implications for media owners and agencies?

One thing is clear: betting and gaming are no longer fringe categories. They are now central players in Nigeria’s advertising economy, and we must understand the implications strategically, commercially and ethically.