Walmart prepares for a future where AI agents do the shopping

Skye Jacobs

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Staff
The big picture: A rise of AI shopping agents is promising to reshape the retail landscape in ways that are only beginning to come into focus. As Walmart navigates this frontier, the company's moves highlight a critical truth: the race to win over AI shoppers is just beginning, and the rules are being written on the fly.

Walmart is gearing up for a dramatic shift in retail, as artificial intelligence agents begin to change not just how people shop, but who – or rather, what – is actually doing the shopping. The retail giant is exploring ways to make its products appealing not just to human customers, but also to the AI bots that may soon be making purchasing decisions on behalf of consumers.

"It will be different," Hari Vasudev, Walmart US Chief Technology Officer, told the Wall Street Journal. "Advertising will have to evolve." Indeed, AI's influence is already visible today in how consumers research products, with search engines increasingly favoring AI-generated summaries over traditional links. But the next phase – AI agents making purchases independently – promises a far greater disruption.

Imagine a future where a user tells OpenAI's Operator, "Restock my pantry" or "Find a 65-inch TV." The agent scans the web, evaluates options based on the user's history and preferences, and completes the purchase, payment included. For retailers, this means rethinking everything from product descriptions to pricing strategies, said Robert Hetu, a retail analyst at Gartner. The stakes are high: if third-party agents handle checkout, retailers risk losing direct relationships with customers, weakening brand loyalty and access to valuable data.

Walmart isn't waiting passively. It's developing its own AI shopping tools, accessible via its app and website, capable of handling tasks as routine as weekly grocery reorders or as whimsical as planning a "unicorn-themed party for my daughter," Vasudev noted. The retailer's e-commerce sales surged 22 percent last quarter, yet it's also preparing for a scenario where shoppers prefer third-party agents like Operator.

Vasudev predicts an industry-wide protocol will emerge, allowing third-party agents to communicate with retailers' systems. These standards, still in development, would let retailers share tailored product recommendations. Alternatively, agents might scan sites independently, akin to a shopper browsing a store without assistance, Vasudev said.

But retailers face challenges. Agents like Operator prioritize factors such as search rankings, including paid ads and sponsored posts, when surfacing products. While user prompts and preferences remain central, this algorithmic approach contrasts sharply with human behavior. Bots won't linger on emotionally charged visuals, Hetu explained, and retailers must make lightning-fast pricing decisions by offering discounts or risking instant price comparisons by agents.

Despite the buzz, Hetu tempers expectations. Over 80 percent of shopping still happens in physical stores, and AI-driven purchases remain a sliver of sales. "This is going to take time to transform," he said.

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Next up: Agents will require access to your government issued ID card to register for their usage and prove that you exist and are real even though "AI" itself does not yet exist.

They're really having fun with this, aren't they?
 
This seems really silly. Who the **** is going to use AI shopping assistants? What problem is this solving?

If you don't want to go to the store, you already have shopping apps and the groceries will get dropped off at your doorstep with a slight markup.

Companies arent pouring billions of dollars into AI farms so people can make their grocery shopping arguably a smidge more convenient.
 
Let me get this straight....AI is going to look at my past shopping and history....based on what? No one store or company will have that information, nor will it have the detail and reasoning for those initial purchases. Then, after several purchases, it keeps looking at AI purchases to make more AI purchases.

Hallucinations, anyone?

But never fear, if there is no history, I'd be willing to bet that the AI will still come up with the perfect solution for everyone.......the items that make the seller the most money!

The product advertisements will probably be more informative.....and those quit being useful years ago. How many ads are there now where you're not quite sure what it is they're selling?

Then again...people are getting their news and critical information from TicTok...so it will probably be a runaway success.
 
"Imagine a future where a user tells OpenAI's Operator, "Restock my pantry" or "Find a 65-inch TV." The agent scans the web, evaluates options based on the user's history and preferences, and completes the purchase, payment included."

Anyone who lets AI choose and make major purchases for them would have to be an idіot.
 
This seems really silly. Who the **** is going to use AI shopping assistants? What problem is this solving?

If you don't want to go to the store, you already have shopping apps and the groceries will get dropped off at your doorstep with a slight markup.

Companies arent pouring billions of dollars into AI farms so people can make their grocery shopping arguably a smidge more convenient.
The problem that walmart has to pay people
 
Yeah! That's just what I need. Some hallucinating AI agent to buy crap from Walmart for me!! /s
 
So what Walmart is going to want is "buy me groceries" and it can pick out the most profitable groceries it can find to buy you.

What they REALLY need to do if they want AI agents buying stuff from them is to just make sure the web site, and the checkout itself, are designed so they can be reasonably scripted. That's literally it. Since I haven't been on their site so I can't say if their current design follows this or not (well I haven't been on there for more than a few seconds -- when I search for almost any product, including specialized tech ones, I'll get a false Walmart listing... which if you follow it admits they have zero in stock, but maybe you want to buy an umbrella instead? (or whatever random item). Then I leave their site. Why doesn't Google have a "report this result" link any more?)

I've got absolutely zero interest in this -- either AI, or buying a "Walmart special" TV from Walmart. But, just proper site deisgn is the best
 
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