Why the vendor taxonomy matters before you prospect
The fastest way to waste a quarter of BD effort is to treat every iGaming supplier as interchangeable. An operator does not buy "software" — it assembles a stack from many specialised vendors, each owned by a different stakeholder. The person who signs a payments contract is not the person who approves a new game studio, and neither of them touches the KYC roadmap. If you are selling a competing or adjacent product, you need to know which slot you fit, who owns it, and what it sits next to.
That is also how you read the market. When you browse an operator directory and see a brand's licences, jurisdictions and tech footprint, the value is in decoding which vendor categories that operator has already filled and where the gaps are. The taxonomy below is the lens that turns a flat list of igaming suppliers into a map of who needs what.
The core categories of online casino providers
At the centre of the casino stack sit three layers that get confused constantly. Getting them straight is the difference between a credible pitch and an embarrassing one. The major online casino providers fall cleanly into platform, studio, and aggregator — distinct roles that happen to overlap commercially.
- Platform provider (PAM). The operational backbone — player account management, wallet, bonusing, CRM, reporting and back-office. An igaming platform provider is the system the operator logs into every day; switching it is a months-long migration, which is why these contracts are sticky and the buyer is usually the COO or CTO.
- Game studio. The creative houses that design and build the actual games — slots, table games, crash and instant titles. Studios are content vendors; their buyer cares about portfolio performance, exclusivity windows and RTP configuration.
- Casino game aggregator. The middle layer. A casino game aggregator wholesales content from dozens of upstream studios and ships it to operators through a single API, absorbing the technical, commercial and certification overhead of running many studio integrations at once.
The aggregator model is the one most often misunderstood by vendors. An aggregator is not a studio with more games — it is an integration and distribution layer. For an operator, one aggregator connection can replace dozens of separate studio contracts, each with its own revenue share, release schedule, and per-jurisdiction game-certification renewals. That convenience is precisely why aggregators have become gatekeepers: if you are a small studio, your fastest route to operators is often through an aggregator, not around it.
The betting and content suppliers beyond casino
Casino is only one vertical. The moment an operator runs sports, the supplier list grows again. Sportsbook providers deliver the betting engine — the odds compilation, in-play pricing, risk management and trading tools that let an operator take bets without running a trading desk in-house. Some operators buy a fully managed sportsbook; others license only the odds feed and run their own risk. That distinction matters enormously to anyone selling into the betting side, because it tells you whether the operator owns its margin or outsources it.
Alongside the sportsbook sit specialist content categories that increasingly behave like their own verticals: live casino (real-dealer studios streamed in real time, an operationally heavy product with its own studio infrastructure), virtuals, and emerging formats. Each is a separate procurement decision with a separate champion inside the operator.
Infrastructure, compliance and acquisition vendors
The least glamorous categories are often the most defensible, because they touch regulation and money movement. These are the vendors an operator cannot launch without in a regulated market.
| Vendor category | What it does | Typical buyer | Maps to operator need |
|---|---|---|---|
| Payments / PSP | Deposits, withdrawals, cashier, alternative payment methods, FX | Head of Payments / Finance | Conversion, geographic coverage, settlement |
| KYC / AML | Identity verification, age checks, AML transaction monitoring, sanctions screening | Compliance / MLRO | Licence conditions, fraud, regulatory reporting |
| Affiliate & marketing | Affiliate tracking, attribution, CRM, retention tooling | Head of Acquisition / CRM | Player acquisition cost, LTV, channel mix |
| Geolocation & data | Location compliance, responsible-gambling signals, BI | Compliance / Data | Per-jurisdiction rules, audit trails |
The compliance categories are tightly coupled to where an operator holds licences. A brand live in Malta (MGA), Britain (UKGC) and Ontario (iGaming Ontario under the AGCO) is operating under three different rule sets, each with its own KYC, AML, and responsible-gambling obligations — which directly shapes which vendors it can use. A KYC vendor pitching a multi-jurisdiction operator should already know that footprint cold; the jurisdictions hub is where that mapping starts. Payments vendors read the same data inversely — a fresh licence in a new market is a buying trigger before the operator has even gone live there.
How the categories overlap — and where the lines blur
The clean taxonomy is a starting point, not a fixed reality. The biggest commercial confusion in iGaming BD comes from vendors who straddle categories. A full-stack igaming platform provider may bundle a built-in aggregator, a payments orchestration layer and a sportsbook into one contract — meaning that pitching a standalone aggregator to that operator competes not with another aggregator but with the platform vendor's roadmap. Conversely, a large studio may run its own aggregation arm, and an aggregator may publish exclusive in-house titles that compete with the very studios it distributes.
These blurred lines change your pitch. A standalone vendor's strongest argument against a bundled incumbent is usually depth — better odds models, a broader payment-method footprint, a faster KYC pass rate — versus the convenience of one throat to choke. Knowing whether a prospect runs a best-of-breed stack or a single-vendor bundle tells you which argument lands. It also tells you the switching cost: ripping out a bundled component is far harder than swapping a modular one, and that friction is exactly what a competing vendor has to price into its offer.
For acquisition-side vendors, the overlap runs the other way. Sportsbook providers, affiliate platforms and CRM tools all touch the same player-value conversation, so the buyer often evaluates them as a portfolio rather than in isolation. Reading which of these an operator already runs — and which it has outgrown — is the cleanest way to time an approach.
How to map vendor categories to operator needs
The practical move is to invert the taxonomy. Instead of asking "who might want my product," start from the operator and ask "which category am I, and is that slot open, full, or about to change?" An operator that just won a new licence, launched a vertical, or replaced its platform is reshuffling its entire vendor list — and those are the windows where switching costs are temporarily low.
This is exactly where market-intelligence beats cold lists. Filtering a directory of operators and igaming suppliers by entity type, vertical, jurisdiction and recent signals lets you build a target list that is already sorted by which category seat is in play. From there, the corporate-network and decision-maker layers tell you who owns that seat, so your pipeline is mapped before the first email — the approach we lay out in the iGaming partnership pipeline guide and in how to find iGaming operators.
If a term in this taxonomy is unfamiliar, the glossary defines the category vocabulary, and the Insights hub goes deeper on each vertical.
Summary
iGaming "vendors" are not one market — they are a stack of distinct categories, each with its own buyer and integration path. Platforms run the operation, studios make the games, aggregators distribute them, sportsbook providers price the bets, and payments, KYC and acquisition vendors keep the whole thing compliant and funded. Classify the major online casino providers and their adjacent categories correctly, map each to the operator need it serves, and your outreach stops being noise and starts naming the gap.