Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

Online Sales, Interactive Displays As Lottery Agencies Vie For Customers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Dec, 2018 10:15 PM
  • Online Sales, Interactive Displays As Lottery Agencies Vie For Customers

WINNIPEG — Like many millennials, Sarah Rogalsky doesn't go out of her way to buy lottery tickets.

 

The 32-year-old is part of an office pool and chips in $2 a week at her Winnipeg workplace, primarily for the social aspect of playing with others.


"I've never bought a lottery ticket on my own."


She is part of a countrywide trend that lottery agencies are trying to reverse. By upgrading technology and making gambling more readily available, they are hoping to attract and retain more young adults — a generation that has grown up with seemingly infinite entertainment options available at the click of a mouse or a swipe of the finger.


There are many ways to be entertained, Rogalsky said, and the long odds of scoring big in a lottery are not enticing.


"For example, my parents would buy lottery tickets because they thought there was a chance they would win, whereas someone like me, I know how low those chances literally are."


In 2014, the Interprovincial Lottery Corp., which represents all provincial and territorial lottery agencies, issued a request for proposals for a new lottery game that would be similar to Lotto 6-49 and appeal to adults under 35. The number of young adults buying national lottery tickets was declining at "historic" levels, the document said.


The Western Canada Lottery Corp., which represents the prairie provinces and three northern territories, reported a $150-million drop in lottery revenues in 2017 from the previous year. The Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corp. cited a "diminishing core player base" in its most recent annual report.


In recent years, lottery agencies have moved to make gambling more tech-friendly and easier for people to gain access. More provinces have opened online gambling sites, on which players can engage in casino-style games or buy lottery tickets. Lottery terminals at corner stores are going high-tech and interactive.


Last September, the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corp. introduced a new instant lottery ticket that combines the traditional scratch requirement with an animated spinning wheel that appears on the lottery terminal display screen. The agency is also making some products available at grocery store checkout lanes.


The corporation is "improving the customer experience and ensuring it is responsive to changing customer expectations by investing in digital technology and product solutions," spokesman Tony Bitonti wrote in an email.


It's a tough battle to attract younger adults who have grown up with a vast array of entertainment options, said Prof. Kelley Main, head of the marketing department at the Asper School of Business at the University of Manitoba.


From immersive video games at home to fast-action apps on mobile devices, millennials are used to having their senses fully engaged, she said.


"Our expectations about how quickly things happen have changed, and ... our expectations about how interactive these games are have also changed," Main said.


"The traditional paper format (of lottery tickets) doesn't engage our sense the same way as technology could allow some of the other options."

MORE National ARTICLES

Atheist United Church Minister Keeps Her Job; 'Heresy Trial' Called Off

TORONTO — A United Church minister who had faced an unprecedented ecclesiastical court hearing over her professed atheism is no longer in danger of a defrocking after the two sides reached an agreement in the long-running case.

Atheist United Church Minister Keeps Her Job; 'Heresy Trial' Called Off

Facebook Chooses Canada For Dating Feature Launch, But Privacy Concerns Abound

Facebook Chooses Canada For Dating Feature Launch, But Privacy Concerns Abound
  Facebook Dating, which was previously piloted in Colombia, operates with users creating profiles that are separate from their Facebook ones and kept out of sight of friends.

Facebook Chooses Canada For Dating Feature Launch, But Privacy Concerns Abound

The Latest: Trump Brushes Off Obama Book Complaint About Him

The Latest: Trump Brushes Off Obama Book Complaint About Him
The Latest on Michelle Obama's new book, "Becoming" (all times local):

The Latest: Trump Brushes Off Obama Book Complaint About Him

Two Youths In Custody After Fire Destroys Iqaluit's Largest Grocery Store

Two Youths In Custody After Fire Destroys Iqaluit's Largest Grocery Store
IQALUIT, Nunavut — Two Iqaluit youths are in custody after a series of fires earlier this week in the Nunavut capital, including one that damaged the city's largest store and grocer.

Two Youths In Custody After Fire Destroys Iqaluit's Largest Grocery Store

Liberals Again Delay Firearm Marking Regulations Despite Campaign Promise

Liberals Again Delay Firearm Marking Regulations Despite Campaign Promise
  OTTAWA — The Trudeau government is again delaying implementation of firearm-marking regulations intended to help police trace guns used in crimes — despite a 2015 campaign pledge to immediately enact them.

Liberals Again Delay Firearm Marking Regulations Despite Campaign Promise

Assisted-Dying Activist Audrey Parker Remembered At Halifax 'Celebration Of Life'

HALIFAX — Hundreds of people gathered Friday afternoon to remember a terminally ill Halifax woman whose fight to loosen assisted dying laws captured national attention as she dispensed wisdom about life from the "bed of truth" where she spent her last days.

Assisted-Dying Activist Audrey Parker Remembered At Halifax 'Celebration Of Life'