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Are AI personal shoppers the next retail revolution?
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The internet has transformed shopping many times before. We have gone from browsing aisles in physical stores, to typing keywords into search bars, to tapping on mobile apps that deliver products with a swipe. Each step promised to revolutionise retail. And yet, most of these shifts were more evolutionary than revolutionary: e-commerce added a new channel, mobile made shopping more frequent, social media added discovery. But the underlying remained the same. Brands tried to capture our attention. We clicked, we browsed, we paid.
Agentic commerce feels different. It is not because it introduces a shiny new channel, but because it threatens to upend the entire mechanism of how commerce flows online. Instead of you searching, scrolling, and clicking, autonomous AI agents will increasingly search, compare, and buy on your behalf.
That simple shift, from recommendation to delegation, sounds almost trivial. But if you have ever outsourced travel planning, handed off bill payment to autopay, or relied on Amazon’s ‘Subscribe & Save’, you know how powerful it feels to stop worrying about routine tasks. Agentic commerce takes that delegation and scales it across all of shopping, from planning a birthday party to refilling groceries to booking a summer trip. Suddenly, everyone has a hyper-competent personal shopper available 24/7.
What is agentic commerce?
At its core, agentic commerce is AI-driven shopping, but with agency. Instead of a chatbot suggesting items, an agent executes. You give it a goal, ‘find me the cheapest nonstop flight to New York next Tuesday’ or ‘order everything I need for a Star Wars themed birthday party’, and the agent completes the workflow. This goes beyond the voice assistants or basic recommendation engines we have seen in the past. The distinguishing feature is agency: these AI tools go beyond simply recommending products and can complete purchases autonomously within the parameters you define.
This is no longer science fiction. OpenAI recently launched ChatGPT Shopping, Microsoft is experimenting with a Copilot Merchant Portal, and Perplexity already lets users ‘Buy with Pro’ directly from chat results. Walmart has publicly said it expects 50% of its e-commerce GMV to flow through agents by 2030, with its internal agent ‘Sparky’ already live in pilot form.
The ambition is clear: to move commerce from the visual web (websites and apps) into a conversational economy where shopping happens in the background of our chats and daily interactions with AI.
Why is agentic commerce emerging now?
Agentic commerce is gaining momentum in 2025 because of a convergence of technological and market factors. The most obvious driver is the rapid advancement and mainstream adoption of AI, especially large language models like OpenAI’s ChatGPT. In less than a year, tools such as ChatGPT, Google’s Gemini, Perplexity and others have become household names. People are now comfortable chatting with AI to get answers and recommendations. Extending this interaction to shopping is a logical next step. Instead of merely asking the AI to find a product, consumers can now ask it to buy the product as well. ChatGPT, Microsoft Copilot and Perplexity agentic shopping feature launches, described before, show that the technology has arrived and is being quickly embedded into popular AI platforms.
Furthermore, the sheer convenience and consumer appeal of delegating tasks to AI has created demand. We live in an age of convenience: one-click ordering, same-day delivery, voice-controlled smart homes. Consumers are always looking for ways to save time. Delegating a tedious task to an AI assistant is naturally attractive. Early trials of these AI shopping assistants promise a sort of ‘personal shopper for everyone’ scenario. You state your goal in plain language and the AI handles the complexity.
How the future might look
If this vision plays out, the entire funnel of online commerce gets flattened.
Discovery collapses. Instead of clicking into ten websites, you ask your agent once. Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) gives way to what some call Answer Engine Optimisation (AEO). Brands will have to optimise for machine-readable product feeds rather than catchy taglines or glossy images.
The storefront disappears. Agents do not care about hero images or lifestyle branding. They care about structured attributes: price, shipping, warranty, reviews, local availability. Merchants become fulfilment nodes in an invisible network.
Marketing is redirected. Budgets once spent on social ads or Google search will increasingly flow into technical infrastructure, cleaner product feeds, faster APIs, loyalty programmes aimed at algorithms rather than humans.
Payments shift. Card networks and wallets adapt to bots making purchases. Tokenisation, authentication metadata, and risk-scoring become critical to separate legitimate agent transactions from fraudulent ones.
In such a world, the competitive battlefield moves from aesthetics to plumbing. The winners will be those with the cleanest data, fastest fulfilment, and deepest agent integrations.
Where enthusiasm might be overblown
Yes, agents might reduce the importance of SEO and ads. However, brand equity will not vanish overnight. Humans still influence each other via social media, influencers, and word of mouth, signals that agents themselves may eventually incorporate.
Additionally, shopping is emotional. Consumers do not outsource identity, taste, and risk to a bot when the downside is asymmetric. That is especially true for high-ticket and low-repetition items. A running shoe involves fit, fabric, returns logistics, and emotional utility that is discovered in the experience, not ex ante in a spec sheet. Flights bundle schedule risk, cancellation rules, fare classes, miles, ancillaries, and service recovery. In both cases, the buyer’s utility function is multi-dimensional (price, risk transfer, post-sale service, recourse), and the penalties for error are high and salient. Until agents can prove liability coverage, expose transparent audit trails, and demonstrate superior remediation when things go wrong, rational consumers will keep the human in the loop for high-ticket and high-variance categories. Expect agentic workflows here to be assistive, not autonomous.
Agentic commerce is most compelling where preference is stable and observable, downside risk is low, and fulfilment is commoditized (such as consumables or routine services). In high-ticket or high-variance purchases, autonomy will remain bounded by trust, liability, and the desire for experiential choice.
Another important element for consumer adoption is a wide supply, meaning participation of large retailers such as Amazon or Walmart. However, why would those retailers let ‘someone’ else sit in front of their customer? The strategic logic of retail remains: own demand, own identity, own data, own payments, own service recovery. If an external agent controls the conversation, the retailer is demoted to a price-and-fulfilment node, ceding merchandising influence, ad economics, and loyalty leverage. The largest retailers will not volunteer disintermediation.
The one-agent world, where we have a single trusted personal shopper, may splinter. We may end up with walled gardens: Amazon’s agent buying from Amazon, Shopify’s agent routing through Shopify, Walmart’s agent staying in Walmart’s garden. Rather than one universal agent, expect a fragmented landscape.
Revolution or iteration?
In the short term, agentic commerce will feel like an iteration, another option in the shopping toolkit, especially useful for commodity products and repetitive purchases. Consumers will still browse, still enjoy discovery, still want to ‘see’ what they are buying. In the near term, it will mostly streamline low-risk, repetitive purchases (groceries, refills, travel add-ons) where convenience outweighs emotional or experiential factors.
But over the longer arc, the shift from attention economy to delegation economy is profound. Brands risk becoming invisible, competing on clean data, speed, and integrations rather than glossy marketing. Just as mobile did not replace desktop but became the dominant channel, agentic commerce may start as a supplement and end as the default.
The big hurdles are trust, liability, and platform control. High-ticket or high-variance purchases will remain human-influenced until agents can guarantee recourse and capture tacit preferences. And retailers such as Amazon, Walmart, and Shopify will not willingly cede customer ownership. Expect fragmented, walled-garden agent ecosystems instead of one universal AI shopper.
So, it is not a revolution overnight, but a structural evolution that compresses the middle of the funnel, changes how discovery and marketing work, and slowly rewires commerce towards a delegation economy.
Summary Q&A
What is agentic commerce?
Agentic commerce is AI-driven shopping where autonomous agents don’t just recommend products, but execute purchases on your behalf. You set a goal (e.g. “find me the cheapest nonstop flight to New York next Tuesday”), and the AI handles the search, comparison, and transaction.
How is agentic commerce different from traditional e-commerce?
Traditional e-commerce requires consumers to search, browse, and click. Agentic commerce shifts from recommendation to delegation: the AI completes the full shopping workflow, acting as a 24/7 personal shopper.
Why is agentic commerce emerging now?
Mainstream adoption of AI (ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity).
Rising comfort with conversational interfaces.
Consumer demand for convenience and task delegation.
Retail experiments, e.g. Walmart’s ‘Sparky’ agent, ChatGPT Shopping, Microsoft Copilot Merchant Portal.
How will agentic commerce change online shopping?
Discovery: SEO gives way to AEO (Answer Engine Optimisation). Agents rely on structured product data, not visuals.
Storefronts: Branding and design matter less; structured feeds, reviews, and shipping info matter more.
Marketing: Budgets shift from ads to infrastructure, APIs, and loyalty programmes aimed at agents.
Payments: Systems adapt to bot-driven transactions with tokenisation, authentication, and risk-scoring.
What are the limits of agentic commerce?
High-ticket or high-variance items (flights, luxury goods, running shoes) remain human-influenced due to risk, liability, and emotional factors.
Retailer resistance: Major players like Amazon or Walmart won’t easily let third-party agents own their customer relationships.
Fragmentation: Instead of one universal AI shopper, expect walled gardens (Amazon’s agent, Walmart’s agent, Shopify’s agent).
Where does agentic commerce work best?
Routine, low-risk purchases (groceries, household supplies, repeat services).
Situations where preferences are stable and fulfilment is commoditised.
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