As consumers use AI to analyze contracts and diagnose problems, sellers will deploy their own AI counter-tools. This will escalate negotiations from a battle between people to a battle between bots, potentially requiring third-party AI arbitrators to resolve disputes.
Influencing $3 billion in Black Friday sales, AI shopping agents automate both product discovery and price hunting. This ushers in an era of "self-driving shopping" that forces radical price transparency on retailers, as AI can instantly find the absolute cheapest option online for any product.
Unlike human salespeople who may use pressure tactics, AI can be programmed to focus purely on informing customers. This educational approach builds trust and attracts better-informed buyers who are less price-sensitive, ultimately proving more effective than manipulative sales strategies.
The future of AI in e-commerce isn't just better search results like Amazon's Rufus. The shift will be towards proactive, conversational agents that handle the entire purchasing process for routine items, mirroring the "one-click" convenience of the original Amazon Dash button but with greater intelligence.
Insurers use AI to auto-deny claims and require tedious phone calls for appeals. Lunabill provides hospitals with an AI voice bot to automate these calls. This creates an arms race where one company's AI will inevitably negotiate with another's, foreshadowing a future where many adversarial B2B processes become fully automated AI-to-AI interactions.
While AI shopping agents promise to protect consumer privacy by abstracting away direct retailer relationships, this is a false dawn. Power will likely centralize with the major tech companies providing these agents, not empower individual users with decentralized control. The battle for "owning the customer" simply moves to a new layer.
The next phase of AI will involve autonomous agents communicating and transacting with each other online. This requires a strategic shift in marketing, sales, and e-commerce away from purely human-centric interaction models toward agent-to-agent commerce.
For years, businesses have focused on protecting their sites from malicious bots. This same architecture now blocks beneficial AI agents acting on behalf of consumers. Companies must rethink their technical infrastructure to differentiate and welcome these new 'good bots' for agentic commerce.
Amazon is suing Perplexity because its AI agent can autonomously log into user accounts and make purchases. This isn't just a legal spat over terms of service; it's the first major corporate conflict over AI agent-driven commerce, foreshadowing a future where brands must contend with non-human customers.
Unlike traditional SaaS where high switching costs prevent price wars, the AI market faces a unique threat. The portability of prompts and reliance on interchangeable models could enable rapid commoditization. A price war could be "terrifying" and "brutal" for the entire ecosystem, posing a significant downside risk.
The proliferation of separate AI tools for providers (upcoding, auth requests) and payers (denials, downcoding) will lead to automated conflict. This friction could worsen administrative burdens rather than easing them, creating a high-speed, zero-sum game played by algorithms.