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.


