I had a great conversation with Evan Schuman, author of a recent article on bot shoppers. As the article describes, bots are autonomous AI agents that compare, select, and buy on behalf of people – are expected to become common within 2–3 years. The piece argues most retailers aren’t ready and will need to redesign the full buying journey for machines: product data, pricing, promotion, checkout, returns, and post‑purchase support. Key challenges flagged include returns at “bot scale,” who earns loyalty points, and new fraud/liability norms (analogous to early e‑commerce’s “Zero Liability” programs).

It also raises trust questions (is the bot working for the buyer or its owner?) and suggests retailers may need bot‑friendly – even bot‑only – storefronts with structured, API‑accessible data. Industry experts predict bot shoppers could reach ~1% of retail revenue by 2028, and urge retailers to enable “agentic” integrations that let automated decisions happen outside the retailer’s walls. A likely upside: richer SKU‑level data that benefits human shoppers, too.
I was quoted in the article:
“I think this really calls into question the underlying processes for retail today, (because) we are used to doing everything through a human lens,” said Frank Diana, managing partner at Tata Consultancy Services. “Retailers will need to optimize product data not just for human browsing, but for machine parsing — clear, structured, and API-accessible information becomes essential. This will “force retailers to rethink fixed pricing, loyalty models, and discount structures.”
The article was added to my media library.
Discover more from Reimagining the Future
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Data provenance will be worth more than gold – Michael W
LikeLike