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Direct Marketing: Experiences Among Individuals With Current and Lifetime Gambling Disorder

,Form of direct marketing,Direct marketing examples,Indirect marketing,Personal selling,Advantages of direct marketing,Direct marketing disadvantages
Direct Marketing Experiences Among Individuals


Gambling providers use varied  and sophisticated  marketing techniques, including marketing that targets the individual directly. Previous research indicates that individuals with gambling disorder are disproportionately influenced by gambling marketing, however,  only a few  studies have examined gamblers’ experiences with  marketing .  the present  exploratory interview study examined experiences with direct gambling marketing among 12 individuals with either current (n = 5) or lifetime (n = 7) gambling disorder. A broad research question was employed encompassing experiences with  differing types  of direct marketing and corresponding attitudes, influences, and interactions. The interview data were analyzed with thematic analysis using an inductive approach,  and therefore the  participants reported extensive and varied experiences with direct marketing. Two overarching themes, with two  and 4  subthemes, respectively, were identified. The overarching themes showed that marketing experiences were intimately connected with participants’ gambling behaviors and their relationships to their own problems. Overall,  marketing  was experienced as an interactive form of marketing with individually tailored promotions such as free gambling credits, bonuses, and special gifts. Some promotions were experienced as personal, while others were experienced as mass produced.  marketing  was in some cases experienced as predatory and was reported to hamper the participants’ ability to cope with their gambling disorder. Participants’ attitudes toward  marketing  varied as a function of the participants’ engagement in gambling.  during times  of active gambling,  marketing  was experienced as beneficial and positive as the participants took advantage of the offers or actively manipulated how the offers were made. In contrast, when attempting to reduce/abstain from gambling, the participants experienced  marketing  as aggressive,  and that they  reported making considerable efforts to try to limit it.  marketing  was experienced as a trigger for gambling urges and was reported to induce a conflict between gambling and abstinence. Directly marketed promotions are discussed in  reference to  ecological factors of access and availability that form a basis for the development of gambling disorder, and variations in experiences are  associated with  stages of change in gambling disorder. Implications for treatment are discussed where  the present  findings suggest that coping with marketing should be addressed in treatment.


Introduction

Gambling presents little or no harm  for many  people, while a minority  of individuals  experience negative consequences and loss of control. In such cases the person might, among other things, lose increasing amounts  of cash , acquire debts, commit illegal acts to finance gambling,  and knowledge  relationship or career-related losses due to their gambling behavior (Shaffer and Martin, 2011). Severe gambling problems may fulfill the diagnostic criteria for gambling disorder (GD), as described  within the  most recent edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorders (5th version, American Psychiatric Association, 2013)  and therefore the  recently published 11th edition of the International Classification of Diseases and Health Problems (World Health Organization, 2018).


Today, gambling opportunities are ubiquitous, spearheaded by the introduction of online gambling which is marketed in complex and varied ways (Gainsbury, 2012; Hing et al., 2014). Studies generally suggest positive associations between exposure to gambling marketing and GD (Binde, 2014; Newall et al., 2019). The association between GD and exposure to gambling marketing  could be  explained by disordered gamblers being more attentive to such marketing or being more likely to receive it due to their gambling history, or by exposure to gambling marketing contributing to  the event  of GD. The self-rated influence of gambling marketing is higher among those with GD and greater influence  is usually  reported in the form of increased gambling, gambling urges, or thoughts about winning in response to the marketing (Binde, 2014; Newall et al., 2019).


Promotional marketing differs from traditional basic marketing (Van Waterschoot and Van den Bulte, 1992). While basic marketing aims  to extend  wanting and brand awareness, promotional marketing aims to trigger action. Gambling shirt sponsorships of English football teams by gambling companies has been increasing over the last decade and represents a  sort of  basic marketing (Lopez-Gonzalez and Griffiths, 2017). Promotional marketing can include sign-up bonuses, deposit bonuses, cash back, and free gambling credits to new and/or established customers (Hing et al., 2015). Gamblers report influence from promotions  within the  form of increased gambling involvement, reduced perception of risk, and increased impulsive betting (Hing et al., 2014, 2017, 2019; Deans et al., 2017). Further, several studies have found greater self-reported influence from promotional marketing compared to basic marketing among people with GD (Thomas et al., 2012; Hing et al., 2017), but this has not been consistently shown (Hing et al., 2019). Hing et al. (2014) found that disordered gamblers reported salient experiences  associated with  promotional marketing. In their study, treatment-seeking gamblers reported that promotional marketing triggered gambling sessions and undermined efforts  to scale back  or stop gambling. Promotions were further reported  to steer  to longer gambling sessions through increased availability of gambling funds. Participants also experienced promotions that were tailored to their gambling history.  as an example , treatment-seeking participants who abstained from gambling reported receiving promotions that they perceived as  aimed toward  getting them to resume gambling.


Gambling marketing, including promotions,  are often  communicated directly to the individual by employing direct communication channels such as phone calls, text messages, and emails, i.e., direct marketing. Russell et al. (2018) examined  marketing  in an ecological momentary assessment study of self-reported gambling behavior and found that receiving emails was associated with increased betting intention, while receiving texts was  related to  greater likelihood of betting and increased betting amounts (Russell et al., 2018). Combining promotional marketing with  the utilization  of direct communication channels is likely to be an especially potent form of influence. People with GD spend and lose large amounts  of cash , and  this will  be assumed to make them attractive targets for such marketing and highlights the need to examine direct marketing experiences within this group (Orford et al., 2013). Studies specifically examining  marketing  are lacking,  a possible  reason for this is that direct marketing, by virtue of being available only  to chose  recipients, is harder  to review  (for an exception, see Russell et al., 2018).


The current study is based on a series of semi-structured interviews concerning direct marketing with a sample consisting of individuals with current or lifetime GD. Differentiation between current  and lifelong  GD allows for nuances regarding how direct marketing is experienced by individuals in different phases of GD. Given the findings that marketing experiences are influenced by GD characteristics, this seems to be  a crucial  distinction. The study was guided by  the subsequent  research questions:


What experiences do individuals with current or lifetime GD have with gambling-related  marketing  with regards to:


(1)  the kinds  of direct marketing experienced and their attitudes toward these types?


(2) their interaction with direct marketing?


(3) the perceived influence from direct marketing?


The research questions were understood  during a  broad manner.  sorts of  direct marketing refer to form, content, or general characteristics. Interaction refers to any  sort of  activity involving direct marketing, including actions in response to  marketing  offers and exchanges between gamblers and gambling company representatives. Finally, influence refers to the perceived influence on gambling behavior and other areas deemed important by the participant. The research questions capture several aspects that Binde (2014) argues should  tend  priority in gambling marketing research, namely content, attitudes, and influence. Further, qualitative studies  are  argued to be especially valuable in providing insights into possible mechanisms of influence in gambling marketing and to be appropriate for initial exploratory research on this topic (Binde, 2008, 2014; Hing et al., 2014).


There are various regulations for marketing across different nations and provinces (Planzer et al., 2014).  the present  study was conducted in Norway in which the state-owned gambling providers Norsk Tipping and Norsk Rikstoto have a monopoly on lotteries/sports betting and horse betting, respectively (Rossow and Hansen, 2016). Norsk Tipping and Norsk Rikstoto may only directly market general information about games to consenting customers (e.g., reminders about upcoming lotteries) (Ministry of Agriculture, 2014). Unregulated gambling operators are prohibited from marketing in Norway, but  this is often  circumvented by advertising on television channels that are aimed at Norwegians (i.e., marketing using Norwegian language and content) but which are broadcast from abroad. Consequently, unregulated online gambling operators are  well-known  and easily accessible for Norwegian customers.


Materials and Methods

Study Design

Individual semi-structured face-to-face interviews were conducted taking a phenomenological approach that prioritizes participants’ own perspectives and experiences (Creswell and Poth, 2016). Participants’ accounts were treated as reflecting their inner psychological experiences, which  may be a  theoretical position referred to as realism (Madill et al., 2000).


Recruitment and Sample Characteristics

Purposive criterion sampling was  wont to  recruit individuals with either current or lifetime GD (Patton, 2002). Participants were recruited through Norwegian self-help groups for GD. Organizers of the self-help groups were contacted,  and that they  forwarded study information to attending members. Those  curious about  participating provided their telephone numbers and were contacted by the project leader (AS). Information about the study was repeated, and a time and place for the interviews were  prescribed . Questions  associated with  the DSM-5 criteria for GD were asked to verify that the participants suffered for this disorder either currently or lifetime (American Psychiatric Association, 2013). In total, 12 participants were recruited  to make sure  a sufficient sample size to identify patterns across the data set, while also keeping  attention  on individual experiences in line with our phenomenological approach. We aimed  to succeed in  the recommended sample size for small scale interview studies that employ thematic analysis on participant experiences, i.e., between six  to 10  participants (Braun and Clarke, 2013).  the choice  to include 12 instead of ten participants was made in order to account for possible participant attrition.


A semi-structured interview guide was developed by AS, SP and RM (see Supplementary Materials).  the event  of the interview guide was influenced by the current lack of research on direct marketing. As such, we prioritized open-ended and broad questions covering  sorts of  direct marketing, possible influences from  marketing  and interaction. The questions were developed  supported  existing knowledge of types of gambling marketing and communication channels (Binde, 2014; Newall et al., 2019) formulations regarding topics  that ought to  be explored in research on gambling marketing (i.e., content, attitudes and influence). We included descriptive, contrast and evaluative questions (Willig, 2013). Descriptive questions concerned general accounts of their experiences with  marketing . Contrast questions involved comparisons between participants’ experiences with direct versus indirect marketing. Evaluative questions were  associated with  participants’ feelings toward and potential influence from direct marketing.  a variety  of interviewing techniques were used in the interviews (Brinkmann and Kvale, 2015). Participants’ accounts were followed up with probing questions for greater detail and specifying questions for clarity. Silence was  wont to  allow for greater reflection in the interview. Interpretive questions were also  wont to  summarize participants’ accounts and strengthen mutual understanding throughout the interview.


Sampling and interviewing  happened  during the fall of 2017. The interviews were conducted in Norwegian and lasted between 28 and 51 min with  a mean  of 37 min. Participants were compensated 250 NOK (approximately 25 €)  for his or her  participation.  the ultimate  sample consisted of 12 individuals (including two women) who met the criteria for either current (n = 5) or lifetime (n = 7) GD. Participants’ ages ranged from 29 to 55 years with  a mean  of 41 years (SD = 7.76 years).


Ethics Statement

The study was approved by the Regional Committee for Medical and Health Related Research Ethics in Western Norway (no. 2017/1172). All participants provided written  consent  in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki. Written,  consent  was obtained from the participants for the publication of any potentially identifiable data included in this article. Specifically, information on age, gender and gambling history and use of verbatim quotes.


Data Analysis

The data were analyzed for meaningful patterns in relation to the research questions through thematic analysis (Braun and Clarke, 2006, 2013; Clarke and Braun, 2018). In thematic analysis, the identified patterns, called themes,  are often  categorized based on either an inductive approach (where the data are given priority) or a theoretical approach (where predetermined analytical categories are given priority).  during this  study the inductive approach was used.


Thematic analysis consists of  the subsequent  six phases: (1) familiarizing yourself with the data, (2) generating initial codes, (3)  looking for  themes, (4) reviewing themes, (5) defining and naming themes, and (6) producing the report (Braun and Clarke, 2006, 2013). AS conducted  the most  analysis of the data. The themes and supporting data were credibility checked by RM and a second researcher from the University of Bergen. Inclusion of several researchers  within the  credibility check of themes is in line with the recommendations of Elliott et al. (1999). Credibility checking featured throughout data analysis with repeated discussions of themes and their representation in codes. We  aimed toward  satisfying Braun and Clarke (2006) checklist of criteria for good thematic analysis.


Data analysis began at the phase of familiarization. The audio-taped interviews were transcribed verbatim but without detailed paralinguistic features. That is, they included what was said and by whom, including all words and verbal utterances (e.g., “ehh”), but not non-vocal signals (e.g., body language). Significant paralinguistic features  like  laughter and long pauses were also transcribed, albeit not at  the identical  level of detail. Initial notes  and concepts  for themes were made during this phase, and familiarization continued with repeated readings of the transcripts.


Initial codes were generated with  the assistance  of the software program NVivo 11. Complete semantic coding was done  because the  interview transcripts were worked through. The coding was complete  therein  it included all aspects that were relevant to the research questions, and  it had been  semantic in that it mapped onto what was said with minimal interpretation at this stage. An example code is “DM content - bonuses”  pertaining to  any talk of directly marketed bonuses. Transcripts were worked through multiple times because the initial coding highlighted aspects that were relevant to recode. After the collapsing  of comparable  codes, 72 unique codes remained.


Searching for potential themes involved identifying meaningful patterns across codes. Themes were identified  supported  a central organizing concept—a coherent idea. Subthemes contained distinctive patterns within these themes, and these were useful if a theme’s central organizing concept played  call at  different ways.  one  code could appear in more than one theme if it was related to the central organizing concept of the different themes.


The next phase involved reviewing themes. This was conducted by AS, RM and  a 3rd  researcher from the University of Bergen. Themes were changed or combined if they  didn't  cohere well within themselves or overlapped too much with others. Reviewing involved two phases.  the primary  phase involved examining coded extracts and deciding if their content was adequately represented in the themes that were identified. The second phase involved going over all data items (interviews)  to make sure  that everything relevant to the research questions was represented in the themes. An example of credibility checking at this phase concerned a discussion of the central organizing concept of the second overarching theme “psychological distance to gambling determined the  marketing  experiences.” One alternative suggestion was that (lack of) abstinence to gambling would be a meaningful idea connecting reported experiences. However,  it had been  ultimately decided that a participant’s psychological distance to gambling better captured participant’s accounts because even participants who struggled to abstain from gambling could express rejection of gambling marketing, suggesting that gambling  wasn't  consistent with their ideal selves. Examination of interview extracts were instrumental in resolving this discussion.


Themes and subthemes were then defined and named. Definitions included clear statements about the central organizing concept and statements regarding  the general  relationship between the themes and the research questions.


Finally, a unified report was created.  the primary  paragraph in the theme and subtheme sections contained a definition of the corresponding central organizing concept. The themes primarily consisted of meaningful parts of  the info , and their relevance to the research questions was prioritized over their frequency  within the  data. Despite this, some quantifying language was also  wont to  give a sense of the frequency of different experiences.  the subsequent  terms were thus used to refer to the number of participants: “a few” 1–3, “several” 4–5, “many” 6–8, “most” 9–11, and “all” 12.


Results

Two overarching themes with two  and 4  subthemes, respectively, were identified.  the primary  theme – “The types of direct marketing received and its relation to gambling behaviors” – covered participants’ experiences with types of direct marketing. That is, what  sorts of  direct marketing received and under which circumstances and channels they received it. The second theme – “Psychological distance to gambling determined the  marketing  experiences” – covered gamblers’ experiences with direct marketing interactions, influence, and attitudes. That is, how the  marketing  participants received was reacted to and perceived. Figure 1 provides a thematic map of the identified themes and subthemes.


The Types of Direct Marketing Received and Its Relation to Gambling Behaviors

This theme captures participants’ experiences with  differing types  of direct marketing,  also  as showing how direct marketing was experienced as both similar to and different from indirect marketing. The central organizing concept of this theme  is that the  relation between gambling behaviors and the type of marketing received. Experiences with some  sorts of  direct marketing were found to independent of gambling behaviors (see section “Common Bonuses and Free Spins”) while other types of direct marketing were dependent on level of engagement with gambling companies (see section “Getting Special Treatment”).


Common Bonuses and Free Spins

This subtheme captures how certain  sorts of  direct marketing were experienced as especially common. This included promotions  like  bonuses, free spins,  and little  amounts of free credit.


When participants were asked to freely describe the content of the  marketing , promotions  within the  form of bonuses and free spins comprised the most salient parts of their descriptions. Not only were they mentioned by all participants, but they were also often implicated throughout  the whole  interview. The contents and terms  of those  promotions were described in a matter-of-factly and familiar way, as illustrated  within the  following quote:

No, it’s always  the identical  way, it’s just, go make yourself an account or deposit money  and obtain  the 5-fold (bonus for the deposited amount), then  you've got  to play for probably 30-fold (of the deposited amount) to be able to withdraw the winnings, right. (46-year-old woman, lifetime GD).


Such promotions were considered by the participants to be mass communicated and generic. They mostly concerned casino games and were mainly communicated by email, although some mentioned texts and postal promotions  also .  for instance , while contrasting different channels for sending the promotions, one participant said: “[…] emails are more, like, general. They  send  loads of them to everybody” (55-year-old woman, lifetime GD).


When there was low interactivity, the  marketing  content mirrored that of indirect marketing. Similar offers were communicated by both unknown gambling companies and familiar ones.  the subsequent  quote captures such similarities:


I don’t see it as that different actually [talking about indirect marketing]; it’s mostly free spins and bonuses, get something free for depositing money. That’s usually what  it's , it’s usually the casinos,  on the other hand  there’s football, so sports betting, but that’s  an entire  other world.  therein  case there’s very little direct advertising. In fact, what gets seen on TV  is extremely  similar [comparing it to direct marketing],  apart from  gifts and stuff, but that wasn’t  fairly often . (33-year-old man, lifetime GD).


As the above quote also illustrates,  marketing  experiences were related to game types. Some engaged exclusively with electronic slot machines or other  sorts of  casino games such as blackjack or roulette. Others also engaged in sports betting, stock trading, and poker. However,  no matter  whether the participant played mainly casino games or not,  marketing  for casino games was a typical experience and was even expected among the participants.


Getting Special Treatment

Participants described how increased engagement with gambling companies led to changes in promotions  like  bonuses and free spins and that the participants also received new forms of direct marketing. Turnover requirements  associated with  bonuses were lowered, and free credit was increased.  some  had experiences with custom arrangements in which they were returned a fixed percentage of losses over a given period, i.e., “cash back.” One participant with high engagement in gambling compared  the various  agreements he had experienced, noting that  the odds  and time periods varied: “[…] I get cash back on, if I, let’s say I’ve lost hundred, hundred thousand [NOK, approximately 10,000 €] in 3 days, then  they might  probably give me fifteen thousand, five thousand back immediately” (29-year-old man, current GD).


Losing large amounts  of cash  with certain casinos could result in substantial amounts of free credit too, as shown  within the  following quote (the context of this quote suggests that the participant refers to losses with an online casino):


[…] If  i used to be  very active and had spent many hundreds of thousand [NOK] at a casino then it was seemingly often that they then added money as time went by. First two thousand kroners, three thousand kroners, five thousand kroners,  then  they keep going. (34-year-old man, current GD).


Phone calls were reported less frequently compared to other channels of  marketing  and mostly involved instances in which the participant engaged heavily with a given company.  marketing  through phone calls might involve simple invitations to participate in marketing surveys or information about bonus offers. However, experiences with phone calls more often entailed a more personal quality and involved tailored or specific offers. Participants stated that they were addressed by name  which  the callers referred to special events such as holidays. One participant recalled how the caller referenced his upcoming birthday, asking what he wished for. Participants described interactions  during which  the callers generally emphasized that the participant was a special and highly valued customer.


Many participants had experienced what  are often  regarded as special and, in some cases, extravagant offers. This included sponsored dinners with other valued customers, attendance to parties with celebrity ambassadors, sponsored trips to foreign countries, free access and means to attend gambling events, sponsored gambling cruises, and items  like  guitars, gift cards, shirt cuffs, pens, and candy. Such special offers were reported by seven participants, and their accounts revealed that  that they had  high engagement with the company in question. The participants also interpreted this to  flow from  to their loyalty. One participant who received both dinner and party invitations from her gambling company of choice surmised: “No, I just assume that I used  plenty  of money to play so I entered into some sort of VIP thing” (55-year-old woman, lifetime GD). How participants were influenced by and interacted with special offers  trusted  how the participants related to their own gambling problems (see “Becoming Part of the Problem”).


Many of the participants also spoke of  marketing  being perceived as more dynamically linked with their gambling patterns. Here marketing was tailored not only to the strength of their engagement, but also to nuanced parts of their gambling patterns. They were left with the impression that they received bonus offers when actively depositing money and gambling and received free credit  once they  became inactive. The descriptions of absence-induced promotions mostly involved phone calls, although some mentioned emails or spoke of it more generally like this participant: “[…] in some cases  they're going to  actually go as far as to give you free money in your gambling account just to get you going again” (44-year-old man, current GD).


Psychological Distance to Gambling Determined the  marketing  Experiences

This theme captures how experiences with  marketing  were found to be related to how psychologically distanced the participants were to their own gambling problems and to gambling overall. Accounts of experiences with  marketing  took the form of “back then versus now” among participants with lifetime GD. This was also the case  for 2  participants with current GD who stated that they had now clearly distanced themselves from gambling. The three remaining participants with current GD gave accounts that were  implicational  ambivalence (see below). It appeared that  it had been  the rejection of gambling more than the status of their diagnosis or their length of abstinence that characterized the way the participants reported their experiences with direct marketing.


Participants with lifetime GD  and people  with current GD who made a clear separation between “then and now” reported experiencing direct marketing and gambling marketing overall as predominantly positive during active gambling, which was contrasted to a predominantly negative experience now that they  didn't  gamble. Reports were more conflicting  within the  “ambivalent group” of those with current GD.  the primary  two subthemes reflect active play periods and periods when gambling was psychologically close, while the last two contain experiences  associated with  periods where the participants rejected marketing and gambling overall.


Assisted by and Using  marketing 

All participants had taken advantage of  marketing  offers during their active play periods. During play periods, these offers were experienced as welcome assistance that became interspersed with their gambling activities. This subtheme was supported by direct accounts  also  as indirectly through accounts of interactions with such marketing. The subtheme captures the way  that gives  from direct marketing were used.


People interacted differently with  marketing  offers.  half  the sample made use of them as they came, while  the opposite  half actively sought out more or better offers as well. Collectively these descriptions indicated that some marketing techniques allowed them to sustain gambling beyond what would  rather be  possible. Bonus offers extended gambling funds, and free spins and free credit allowed for gambling even when the person was broke. One participant stated succinctly: “They give me gambling money  once I  don’t have any myself, [laughs]” (55-year-old woman, lifetime GD).


A few of those who did not seek out offers still made extensive use of the offers they received, as  are often  illustrated in the following quote:


If I didn’t have any money then I made use of all the offers with free spins […]. If I had money, then I made use of bonus deposits that I could get; that way I could get  the foremost  to play for at any given time. (37-year-old man, lifetime GD).


The other half who actively sought out offers were proactive in several ways.  this might  involve taking advantage of how marketing was tailored to their activity by deliberately switching between companies to get better offers.  some  would negotiate better offers with company representatives. One participant recalls getting a call from a representative: “Yes,  i attempted  to keep him warm, tried  to urge  him to give me an even better offer because I didn’t think the offer was especially good” (44-year-old man, current GD). Another stated that he had reached  bent  company representatives multiple times in order to get better cash back terms.


Becoming  a part of  the Problem

All but one participant explicitly said that direct marketing influenced them during active play periods. Further, as noted above, all participants (including the participant who  didn't  report being explicitly influenced) made use of direct marketing, which also presupposes some  sort of  influence. The one participant who denied being influenced stated that his gambling had been so extensive that despite actively using  marketing , he believed that the absence or presence of  marketing  would have made no difference. Influence from and interaction with  marketing  was reported to be intimately linked to GD, a link  that's  captured by this subtheme.


Participants reported influence from direct and indirect marketing  within the  form of such marketing eliciting gambling and gambling urges. Most emphasized stronger influences from  marketing  which were experienced to include more attractive offers and to make them feel special. One participant contrasted between direct and indirect marketing  during this  way: “What comes directly to you is more tempting because people are treated differently, people are different” (29-year-old man, current GD). There was one exception  during which  a participant said that television commercials had a greater effect because of the vivid sounds and imagery that triggered gambling urges.  some  participants noted that direct marketing could also trigger gambling or gambling urges indirectly by reminding the participant of gambling in general even if the participant did not make use of the specific offer.


Free credit and free spins were emphasized by many participants. Such offers were highlighted as causing increased gambling or triggering gambling urges. This was detailed in various ways. One participant recalled: “It was  sort of a  trigger then, or the way  i assumed  about free spins, it’s like I don’t actually use any money so it’s not dangerous. I could just play those free spins” (37-year-old man, lifetime GD). Another participant with current GD echoed the sentiment that such offers seemingly presented no downsides, but recognized cases  during which  he continued to gamble with his own money afterward.  yet one more  person with current GD explained that he struggled with the knowledge that he had readily available gambling funds waiting for him – this made him feel restless and triggered hopes of recovering losses. Two participants reported valuing gambling funds  quite  special offers of similar or higher monetary value that could not be used directly for gambling, which indicates gambling salience among these participants. One participant wanted money  rather than  an expensive guitar or a trip, and another chose more gambling funds over a sponsored trip abroad:


They offer you a trip, it’s  a touch  funny, they call and ask if  you would like  a trip to London to watch football or if you would like so and so amount of money [deposited] into your [gambling] account… You would have said football trip to London, right? I’d say deposit money into my gambling account. (33-year-old, man, lifetime GD).


Several participants reported that they tried  to hide  their direct marketing use along with their overall gambling behavior during active periods. None of the participants who received special offers to attend sponsored dinners, parties, cruises, or trips to foreign countries accepted these offers. Probing questions revealed that one reason was  the priority  that others would learn of their gambling if they attended. They worried that gambling companies would actively use their dinner or party attendance for more public marketing campaigns, possibly exposing them.  some  said they made efforts to conceal all instances of direct marketing.  they might  talk about making efforts to hide texts and emails and to destroy postal letters so that significant others would not see them. At  the identical  time,  they might  be reluctant to attempt to exclude themselves from marketing because they also wanted to make use of the offers.


Many participants, comprising both those with current GD  and lifelong  GD, stated that marketing could trigger unpleasant memories  associated with  gambling and the different kinds of losses that they associated with it.  together  participant stated: “I feel like it, it triggers extra aggression and problems  within the  family,  which  kind of thing […] That’s hard on both the one playing and the rest of the family” (41-year-old man, lifetime GD).


Direct Marketing as Predatory

This subtheme captures the finding  that a lot of  participants experienced direct marketing as negative and/or incessant and that such experiences were more common when the persons had distanced themselves psychologically from gambling.


When participants with lifetime GD talked about their current experiences and attitudes toward  marketing ,  it had been  mostly in negative ways. This was also the case with two participants who had current GD but who had distanced themselves psychologically from gambling. Their statements indicated a realization of the “true nature” of  marketing  techniques; that these offers had been manipulative or even scams all along. Communication that was previously seen  nearly as good  customer service was now regarded as strategies meant to disproportionately benefit the gambling companies. One participant spoke of the marketing  during this  way:


[…] see here  you've got  three thousand [NOK], so if you  come  you’re going to play for forty [thousand NOK], then that’s not so good  on behalf of me , but it’s probably  excellent  for them,  although  it seems like a very good offer for me (42-year-old man, lifetime GD).


Bonuses were perceived as trickery because the turnover requirements were seen as very high, making net gains unlikely. Free spins were also seen as being of little importance. Negative accounts of promotions were also mentioned by the remaining participants with current GD who were less psychologically distanced from gambling, although their grievances highlighted other aspects.  instead of  emphasizing morality, these three participants put more emphasis on the unattractiveness of the offers – that they were bad offers. As stated by one participant: “They’re uninteresting because you get  little or no  bonus and there’s a big turnover requirement for being able to withdraw money” (44-year-old man, current GD).


Many stated that  that they had  or were experiencing overwhelming amounts of direct marketing, which made them angry or annoyed,  and that they  described the marketing as aggressive and constant.  some  participants emphasized that indirect marketing in the form of TV commercials added to this oversaturation. Most  couldn't  recall giving permissions for direct marketing, but also stated that  they could  have done so carelessly when signing up for gambling sites. However, all participants had experienced cases without giving permission  also , evident by  the very fact  that they received large amounts of direct marketing from unknown gambling companies. This was also the case for the participants who had been abstinent for  an extended  time.  some  added that they thought gambling companies carelessly shared their personal contact information with other companies.


The majority of those who had attempted to exclude themselves from gambling sites had stopped receiving marketing from those specific gambling sites/companies, but  there have been  several exceptions. One participant said she had gotten a call from a gambling representative months after she had excluded herself. The representative had offered her 6,000 NOK deposited into her previously locked gambling account  with none  conditions for use. Another participant was phoned by  the corporate  a year after she excluded herself,  and therefore the  gambling representative emphasized that the participant had been a valued customer and the participant was asked if the gambling company could offer her anything to make her return to the gambling site. A participant that received unwanted  marketing  reported difficulties making it stop:


So  i've got  called them and asked if they can delete me from the list, but  they assert  that’s not possible because you have to go into your account to stop the text communication, but my account’s locked so that’s impossible (37-year-old man, lifetime GD).


Disengaging With  marketing 

This subtheme captures how interactions with  marketing  changed when the participants had stopped or were trying to stop gambling. Participants with current GD expanded upon the influences reported  within the  subtheme “Becoming part of the problem” with statements about how they coped with these issues. Some strategies were  associated with  direct marketing specifically, while others concerned all  sorts of  gambling marketing.


Participants with lifetime GD and long abstinence stated that direct or indirect marketing exerted little current influence in terms of eliciting gambling urges or increasing self-perceived risk of relapse. In one exception, a participant stated that marketing could still trigger gambling urges, which he handled by playing social gambling games with fake money. Another participant recalled relapsing  thanks to  a combination of direct and indirect marketing during a previous attempt to abstain from gambling. Current influence was generally perceived  during a  way that indicated that marketing had lost its significance, leaving just the negative attitude noted  within the  subtheme above. Thus, the gamblers  didn't  speak of any need to actively exercise coping behavior anymore. Even substantial offers were ineffective, and  within the  following quote the participant had been offered a cruise trip and was asked if he chose to take it:


No, [laughter], I didn’t. But  it had been  related to gambling. The cruise  are some things  they do then, so gambling companies rent  a ship  and then they have a cruise and you gamble on the boat. […]  and that i  didn’t want that when I had quit gambling. (42-year-old man, lifetime GD).


There were different coping experiences among participants with current GD. Again, this  appeared to  be related to how psychologically distanced they were to gambling overall. One participant was still actively gambling and  didn't  speak of any active coping efforts, although he conveyed negative attitudes toward  marketing . Another gambler had recently  began to  deal with his problems and stated that the marketing influence was dependent on whether or not he was in “resistance mode” or “play mode.” The third had been abstinent for  some  weeks and stated that direct marketing could still trigger urges to play, although he resisted by  that specialize in  the negative consequences of gambling. The fourth had stopped gambling for  some  months. Despite easily resisting the more common promotions, he anticipated that information about potential large-scale gambling events with attractive prizes would pose a challenge. The last participant had been abstinent for several months and  didn't  speak of much current influence.


When considering concrete strategies,  the foremost  frequent was to either attempt to exclude oneself from the gambling company/site or to dispose of the emails, letters, and texts as soon as they came. This was done by those with lifetime GD, because  they might  continue to receive direct marketing,  also  as those with current GD.  those that  spoke of actively excluding themselves described this as a cumbersome process and one that was ineffective in handling direct marketing from unknown gambling sites/companies and, as noted above, even from  a number of  those sites that were frequently visited.  some  noted that they ended up opening a new email account in order to avoid direct marketing.


Discussion


This exploratory study was conducted with broad research questions  so as  to capture as many experiences related to gambling-related direct marketing as possible. The results showed that the participants had varied experiences  associated with  all aspects of the research questions, including  sorts of  direct marketing and corresponding attitudes, influences, and interactions. Two key findings  within the  present study were that the marketing experiences were intimately connected to the participants’ overall gambling behavior as well as to their relationships to their own gambling problems and that direct marketing was an interactive form of marketing, both in itself  and thru  the promotions it contained.


Types of Direct Marketing and Attitudes

The participants’ experiences with  differing types  of direct marketing map onto several trends in the use of marketing techniques and the gambling market overall. The participants experienced  marketing  that was primarily related to online gambling providers outside Norway (except for two participants who had consented to and received lottery reminders from Norsk Tipping) because state-regulated providers in Norway face strong restrictions on direct marketing (Ministry of Agriculture, 2014). The close connection between  marketing  and online gambling manifested itself in two ways.  marketing  was conducted through online channels and was used to direct the potential gambler to online gambling opportunities.  marketing  by email was perceived as especially well-known and generic, which has its own set of implications. While mass communication  and private  communication (i.e., direct marketing)  are  conceived of as separate (Van Waterschoot and Van den Bulte, 1992),  a number of  the experiences found in the present study suggest some overlap.  whether or not  emails and texts can be sent directly to one recipient,  they will  also be routinely and automatically sent out to several costumers at once,  and therefore the  participants in the current study often experienced them as being automatically generated and impersonal.


All participants had experienced promotional marketing  like  free spins and bonuses,  and therefore the  participants’ attitudes toward these promotions were somewhat similar to the findings reported by Thomas et al. (2012) who investigated attitudes toward gambling marketing among problem and non-problem gamblers. Like those with current problem gambling  therein  study, participants in our study stated that they  wont to  appreciate promotions during active play periods.  this  attitudes toward direct marketing among participants with lifetime GD in our study were in line with the general findings by Thomas et al. (2012) there was a perceived oversaturation in marketing and promotional marketing  also  as a perception that the marketing was deceitful to varying degrees. Furthermore,  within the  present study the attitudes of those with current GD were more varied, with some statements suggesting that the  marketing  offers was seen as immoral, whereas others were more concerned with the attractiveness of offers. A preoccupation with  the private  gains related to the offers suggests less psychological distance from gambling, i.e., being at an early stage  of adjusting  gambling behavior (Prochaska and DiClemente, 1986; Petry, 2005).


Access and availability  are often  understood as prerequisites for the development of GD (Blaszczynski and Nower, 2002). The participants’ experiences with  marketing  types appear relevant to both. Availability for both known and unknown gambling companies was conveyed through  marketing  in a way that was experienced as overwhelming and aggressive by the participants. In terms of access,  the mixture  of direct and promotional marketing seems important. Similarly, to the study by Hing et al. (2014)  it had been  found that promotions were tailored to participants’ gambling patterns and were based on the individual’s overall gambling intensity with a company and their current level of activity/inactivity. While gambling intensively, typical marketing was characterized by bonuses and cash back agreements, whereas marketing targeted at currently inactive gamblers was characterized by free credits. Better and personalized bonuses and cash back agreements  also  as substantial amounts of free credit suggest that direct marketing is important for motivating increased expenditure at the site and to encourage gamblers who have reduced or stopped their gambling to resume.


The finding that some participants received free credits  once they  were inactive could be regarded as intrusive. Such intrusions may interfere with what would  rather be  a natural pause in the gambling involvement, including both momentary distancing and possible reflection over one’s own behavior, which is seen as  a crucial  stage in changing gambling behaviors (Petry, 2005; Derevensky et al., 2010). The experiences captured  within the  subtheme “Direct marketing as predatory” showed that some participants were induced to return to gambling even when they had attempted to exclude themselves. Hing et al. (2014) also report some cases of promotions through emails and texts  getting used  to attract former gamblers.  within the  present study, these experiences involved email promotions but also phone calls that involved money/free credit offers or appeals for dialog and negotiation.


Influences and Interactions With  marketing 

Participants reported that  marketing  had influenced them by increasing their gambling. The effect on their gambling was generally described as greater than for indirect marketing, with some explaining that the tailoring and personalization of the  marketing  made them feel special. One could argue that  this sense  might increase a sense of commitment to gambling and perhaps to the specific gambling company as well.  marketing  triggered gambling urges and induced conflicts between gambling and control behavior, as described  within the  subtheme “Becoming part of the problem.” The subtheme “Disengaging with  marketing ” highlighted coping strategies but also concerned how direct marketing continued to exert an influence during more concentrated efforts on behalf of the participant to stop gambling. Participants with current GD who tried  to prevent  gambling reported direct marketing to interfere with this, while participants with lifetime GD or longer periods of abstinence mostly denied any present influence from marketing overall. In terms of the stages of change model,  this means  that direct marketing may exert an influence during the action stage but not during the maintenance stage (Petry, 2005).


The current findings are comparable to those of previous studies but are also novel in certain respects.  almost like  Binde (2008) it was found that participants reported an influence from marketing because it triggered gambling urges and increased involvement. However, the influence was described as more extensive  within the  present study compared to what was reported in Binde (2008) study,  which could  be due to a focus on basic marketing in Binde (2008) study. This explanation is supported by studies suggesting stronger influences from promotional marketing compared to basic marketing (Hing et al., 2014; Deans et al., 2017).


Interaction and influence from  marketing  were closely connected. Experiences captured  within the  subthemes “Using and assisted by direct marketing” and “Becoming part of the problem” indicated that direct marketing became part of the actual gambling behavior,  additionally  to being something that influenced it. Participants would make different use of offers, and either manipulated how they occurred or made use of them as they were offered. Regardless, they took  a lively  role when interacting with them. The interaction was 2-fold, involving both direct communication with gambling companies  and therefore the  use and manipulation of the promotions being offered.  marketing  enabled continual exchanges between the companies and the gambler. Promotional marketing afforded more opportunities for interaction compared to basic marketing,  for instance , bonus offers  could be  differently acted upon.  it had been  found that participants used promotions to enable and extend gambling sessions,  almost like  what was reported in Hing et al. (2014). Some participants stated that  they might  make use of free spins more often when they were out of gambling funds and would make use of bonus offers when they wanted to extend their gambling funds. These accounts of how gamblers interacted with promotions provide further support for the role of promotions in increasing access to gambling.  additionally , and as suggested by Hing et al. (2014)  they could  also be understood as reinforcement of gambling behavior and thus as facilitating addictive development (Blaszczynski and Nower, 2002).


The current findings can be interpreted within a cue-reactivity framework. Tricker et al. (2016) found that increased cue-reactivity is mediated by an altered state of consciousness, which they suggest not only elicits urges, but also elicits cognitive biases that are normally active under gambling (Toneatto, 2002). Such an interpretation might explain the findings from previous studies suggesting that GD are more influenced by promotional marketing compared to non-problem gamblers, which is explained by those with GD viewing the offers as more attractive  thanks to  cue-activated cognitive biases.  within the  present study promotions were seen as attractive during active play and as trickery when the participant had been abstinent for a long period. Direct marketed promotions  could be  special in the sense that personalized offers and an emphasis on customer relations can potentially strengthen the illusion of control/skill (Toneatto, 2002). Getting the “special treatment”  could be  seen as evidence for one’s own success or as a signal that continued gambling involvement might eventually pay off.


A cue-reactivity framework  is additionally  applicable in explaining the experiences captured in the subtheme “Disengaging with direct marketing.” Participants who had been abstinent for long periods  of your time  noted how marketing lost its significance,  and that they  had more negative attitudes toward the offers, thus implying that the role  of selling  as a discriminative stimulus had changed. Understood  during this  way, longer periods of abstinence might weaken cue-reactive responses,  which can  not only reduce urges but also avoid the activation of cognitive biases. The participants with current GD also reported different levels of influence, which  seemed to  be dependent on the amount of time the participant had been abstinent.


Implications for Treatment and Regulation

The participants reported exposure to vast amounts  of selling ,  and therefore the  marketing was perceived as having a negative influence on their coping.  this means  that treatments for GD should address marketing. Cognitive behavioral therapy is currently  the foremost  well-established treatment model for GD (Cowlishaw et al., 2012) and employs both exposure techniques and cognitive restructuring, sometimes combining  the 2  (Tolchard, 2017). While simple exposure  could be  effective in reducing the influence of basic marketing,  it's going to  be that a combination of cue-exposure and cognitive restructuring is necessary for changing beliefs, urges, and behaviors  associated with  promotional marketing. Such interventions could then be conducted during treatment sessions by accessing and challenging related beliefs when viewing the promotions. However, homework in terms of planned exposure to  marketing  stimuli coupled with response prevention could also be included (Blaszczynski et al., 2005).  marketing  should also be a topic for relapse prevention sessions in therapy as gamblers may continue to receive direct marketing after they have quit gambling.-The findings  even have  implications for policy makers.  it's  been found that users of online gambling sites report promotional marketing such as bonuses and free credit to be an important reason for gambling on the sites (Gainsbury, 2012).  within the  present study, promotions  like  these were heavily tailored and directly marketed to the individual. On account of being unregulated in Norway, these online sites  don't  face the same restrictions on marketing as licensed gambling companies. The apparent influence  of selling  on GD makes the lack of regulation of some gambling companies’ marketing problematic, and  this is often  especially so when considering that regulation of online marketing has been found to be significantly associated with reduced rates of GD (Planzer et al., 2014). The influence of  marketing  reported here needs to be confirmed in future studies, but  the prevailing  research quite consistently suggests that direct marketing should be of interest to policy makers because it potentially has a stronger impact on gamblers than indirect marketing.


Limitations, Further Research, and Conclusion

Sample characteristics  might be  regarded as a limitation of the study because they precluded the investigation of some experiences that could be an interesting inquiry for future research. Among these are experiences  associated with  other stages of change (Hanss et al., 2015).  it's  possible that different experiences are present among people with GD who do not yet see themselves as having a problem – those in the pre-contemplation stage. The perceived effects of accepting  marketing  involving events such as sponsored trips, dinners, and parties  couldn't  be investigated in the present study because none of the participants had accepted such offers.  it's  therefore still unknown how attendance at such events is experienced by people with GD. The sample was also limited by containing just two women.


The experiences  within the  current study are likely to resonate with gamblers beyond the study sample, termed transferability in qualitative research (Tracy, 2010). The participants  within the  current study experienced direct marketing as attractive, intruding, and/or triggering. Similar  sorts of  experiences have been reported in relation to other types of gambling marketing (Binde, 2008; Thomas et al., 2012; Hing et al., 2014). The common nature  of those  types of experiences suggest that gamblers receiving direct marketing in other countries may also resonate with the experiences reported in the current study. However, questions regarding  the overall  prevalence and frequency of exposure, the strength of the influence,  and therefore the  levels of interaction are better answered through quantitative study designs. As argued by Binde (2014) the influence from gambling marketing is best understood relative to other factors, and thus investigating the influence of  marketing  while controlling for different group memberships and risk factors is warranted. Finally, a more in-depth content analysis of  marketing  could give insights into its unique aspects in terms of wording and implicated game types. Getting access to  marketing  content might be challenging because it is sent to the individual person and thus is not publicly available like television commercials,  for instance . One solution  might be  to allow participants with varying levels of gambling involvement to submit copies of emails and texts that they have received.


The present study has some notable strengths.  a selected  and unexplored form of marketing was examined with broad research questions, which led to the identification  of various  experiences. The study provides insight into particularly intense marketing experiences among  a gaggle  that has previously been found to be more influenced by gambling marketing than other gamblers. Furthermore, this study provides insights into how marketing experiences might vary  counting on  stages of change.


Data Availability Statement

The datasets generated for this study  won't  be made publicly available. The dataset analyzed for this study  isn't  publicly available because the participants and the ethical committee that approved the study have been guaranteed that only named researchers will have access to the dataset in order to ensure participant privacy and confidentiality.


Ethics Statement

The studies involving human participants were reviewed and approved by Regional Committee for Medical and Health Related Research Ethics in Western Norway (No. 2017/1172). The patients/participants provided their written  consent  to participate in this study. Written,  consent  was obtained from the participants for the publication of any potentially identifiable data included in this article. Specifically, information on age, gender and gambling history and use of verbatim quotes.


Author Contributions

AS, RM, and SP conceived and designed the study. AS conducted  the info  collection. AS and RM conducted  the most  analysis. All authors made substantial contributions to the interpretation of  the info , contributed to manuscript revision, read and approved the submitted version.


Funding

This study was funded by the Norwegian Competence Centre for Gambling and Gaming Research but received no specific grant.


Conflict of Interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted  within the  absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.


Acknowledgments

We would like to thank the participants and the self-help organizations that assisted in the recruitment of participants. We also thank Martin Monsen Berg  for his or her  assistance with creating Figure 1.  we might  also like to acknowledged the Associate Professor Helge Molde at the University of Bergen for their valuable feedback during data analysis.

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