From CBD-based products to cryptocurrency services, the most challenging digital marketing niches are often found in gray areas that have not yet been fully regulated. But how can platforms operating in dubiously compliant industries build authority without spending millions on paid content and ads?
To get a better glimpse of how to create a results-driven SEO strategy that hits the mark in a gray online niche, we have contacted the marketing team behind Sweep Coins, one of the newest sweepstakes casinos to enter the U.S. market. They have provided us with five insightful tips that can be useful in and outside the sweepstakes landscape.
Why sweepstakes casinos? Well, these platforms are the quintessential example of a grey niche in 2026's SEO because they explore a loophole in U.S. gambling law that allows them to operate in most states.
Sweepstakes casinos are not considered gambling services because games are played using virtual tokens instead of relying on direct deposits. Moreover, the competitiveness of the sector makes it particularly challenging from an SEO standpoint.
1 – Double Down on Transparency
The fundamental challenge of building authority for a sweepstakes casino such as Sweep Coins is to promote trustworthiness in a sector that's often viewed as untrustworthy. The lack of regulation generates the opportunity for the sweepstakes operators, but it also makes consumers suspicious, especially of newly released casinos.
At its core, our SEO strategy for the platform is based on the idea of transparency. Because the business operates in a gray niche, our number-one job is to promote safety over quality. We do so because we believe that users are more concerned with the safety of sweepstakes casinos than with their specific services, such as the number of available games, bonuses, and so forth.
2 – Focus on Basic Domain Authority & Long-Tail Keywords
This tip is more closely related to the high competitiveness of the sweepstakes casino sector than to its lack of regulation, but it's worth mentioning because we still see a lot of SEO strategies oriented to the most popular keywords. Our conviction is that the old days of pushing to rank for the most searched terms are over, at least when it comes to highly competitive niches.
Instead, our SEO strategy is oriented towards building domain authority via high-value mentions and exploring long-tail keywords. We may not have the capital to rank for "best sweepstakes casino", but we can drive significant organic traffic by tackling more specialized search queries. We've been doing this for years, but it makes even more sense today because of how AI is changing online search behavior.
3 – Understand & Meet the Needs of Your User Base
One of the most challenging aspects of building authority in a gray niche is understanding the needs of your user base. When you're creating an SEO strategy for a fully compliant business, there's a direct selling point (for example, "buy computers" for an online tech shop). For sweepstakes casinos, however, the selling point ("buy tokens to play online games") doesn't directly reflect what users are genuinely looking for.
So, it's key to identify these genuine needs and to tailor your SEO and overall marketing strategy accordingly. We had a lot of success with Titan Treasure, another U.S. sweepstakes casino we've recently collaborated with, because we understood that many users saw "VIP availability" as the main selling point. The solution? To create and promote the most complete VIP program and features we could think of.
4 – Humanize Your Brand
Usually, brands operating in dubiously compliant industries show a tendency to operate in the dark. Domains appear and disappear in mere months, customer support is limited, and information about the people who make the brand is virtually non-existent.
For sweepstakes casinos, we work on "humanizing" the brand by showing potential customers that we don't want to keep anything in the dark. You see this strategy work for all types of businesses, so why should the sweepstakes casinos be an exception? Focus on stuff such as CEO interviews, Reddit AMAs, user-generated content, and so forth.
