Analysts created a method to evaluate corporate AI adoption across six key areas: personalization, customer acquisition, product innovation, labor productivity, supply chain, and inventory management. Companies are then ranked on the breadth, depth, and proprietary nature of their AI initiatives.
While AI agents could shift sales away from traditional retailers, companies with extensive physical infrastructure and forward-positioned inventory have a defense. AI agents prioritizing speed and efficiency for physical goods will likely still favor these established networks, preventing full disintermediation in the new agentic commerce landscape.
Anticipating a shift to "agentic commerce," SharkNinja is actively re-optimizing its e-commerce site for Large Language Models. The company believes what drives human conversion today may not rank highest in AI-driven search and expects commerce via AI platforms to be meaningful by Christmas 2025.
Walmart demonstrates the tangible revenue impact of mature AI integration. By deploying tools like GenAI shopping assistants, computer vision for shelf monitoring, and LLMs for inventory, the retailer has significantly increased customer spending, proving AI's value beyond simple cost efficiencies.
