Will Amazon Win The AI Commerce War? | Fast Five Shorts
This Omni Talk Retail Fast Five segment dives into Amazon’s rollout of conversational Alexa shopping and why it could fundamentally reshape how consumers buy products online.
Chris Walton, Kelly Carey, and Chad Lusk discuss Amazon’s long-term AI strategy, why controlling the transaction layer matters more than building the smartest AI model, and how conversational commerce could reduce shopping friction to almost zero.
They also debate whether Amazon could emerge from the AI era with an even stronger grip on commerce than it had before ChatGPT and Claude changed the technology landscape.
⏩ Tune in for the full episode here.
#Amazon #Alexa #AIShopping #ConversationalCommerce #RetailTechnology
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Transcript
Amazon is rolling out Alexa for Shopping to all US Customers, merging its Rufus generative AI shopping assistant and its next gen Alexa plus Voice model into a single unified conversational shopping experience available on the Amazon app, Amazon.com and Echo show devices.
Speaker A: customers reportedly used in: Speaker A:And they do it to deliver a targeted shopping experience where customers can browse and shop the full Amazon store using Voice, Touch, or both.
Speaker A:Alexa for Shopping replaces the standalone Rufus Assistant and is available free to all Amazon customers when signed into their account.
Speaker A:No prime membership, no Echo device, no Alexa app is even required.
Speaker A:Key features include and these are important.
Speaker A:Everybody give it a listen.
Speaker A:Asking shopping questions directly in the main Amazon search bar, General generating personalized shopping guides, dynamic product comparisons up to a full year of price history, automatic cart building and deal finding, and scheduled actions that can restock household items on a recurring basis.
Speaker A:The new service, let's also not forget, also includes full access to Shop direct.
Speaker A:Tell them what they've won, Bob.
Speaker A:Amazon's feature that allows customers to discover and purchase products from retailers across the web.
Speaker A:And also, and also, just because we.
Speaker B:There's more.
Speaker A:There's more, Chad.
Speaker A:There's more.
Speaker A:Buy for me.
Speaker A:Buy for me.
Speaker A:Which is also really darn important, which allows Amazon's agentic AI to complete a purchase on behalf of the customer on another retailer's website.
Speaker A:Chad.
Speaker A:I know, right?
Speaker A:Yeah, it is kind of.
Speaker A:It is kind of a. Whoa, Chad, big question here.
Speaker A:Big question.
Speaker A:Getting probabilistic, putting your statistic, statistician hat on.
Speaker A:What is the probability?
Speaker A:I want you to give me a percentage that we will all look back on the rise of chat, GPT and Claude and say, you know what?
Speaker A:Amazon actually came out of the AI area with an even stronger grip on commerce than it had going in.
Speaker B:Well, okay, when you put it that way, honestly, pretty high.
Speaker A:Really.
Speaker A:Okay.
Speaker B:You know, I mean, I'll, I'll.
Speaker B:These are always hard questions.
Speaker B:Answer, Chris, because I know you.
Speaker B:I always know you got a number in your head.
Speaker B:And so you're going to be surprised one way or another.
Speaker B:I don't know.
Speaker A:I'll.
Speaker B:I'll do the same, you know, kind of 60, 70% range.
Speaker B:And the reason I say that is, you know, today with AI commerce, everyone is obsessing over who builds the smartest AI model.
Speaker B:But Amazon is kind of quietly focused on a different question, which is who actually captures the transaction?
Speaker B:Right.
Speaker B:And that's what matters most, right?
Speaker B:Like the transaction layer, you know, like, actually, you heard me and others, Chris, at Shop Talk a couple months ago talk about how consumers are utilizing AI in their shopping journeys, right?
Speaker B:And it's mostly at the top of the, you know, discovery and research and brainstorming and comparisons.
Speaker B:ChatGPT can help you decide what to buy, and Claude can help you write a beautiful product comparison.
Speaker B:But Amazon, Amazon completes the purchase, right?
Speaker B:They handle the logistics, they manage the returns, they have your payment information, they know your preferences and behaviors.
Speaker B:And listen, they're not trying to build the best AI.
Speaker B:They're integrating probably good enough AI into their extremely frictionless commerce engine, right?
Speaker B:And personally, I've been down on the Alexa interface and a critic of it for a long time, but voice shopping through Alexa isn't about having the most sophisticated conversation.
Speaker B:It's about reducing purchase friction to literally just speaking.
Speaker A:Right?
Speaker B:And when that works, because it really hasn't yet, but like, when that works, I mean, I, I think there's a better than not chance that future AI shopping, you know, even the agents and concierge, like, it still routes through Amazon pipes, right?
Speaker B:And so, yeah, I'll, I'll put it in, I'll put in a 60 to 70% neighborhood.
Speaker B:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker A:No, I think, I think you're hitting on something really important, Chad, is that you're hitting a.
Speaker A:Fundamentally on the psychology of where we buy as consumers.
Speaker A:That's also incredibly important.
Speaker A:And why we choose to buy from Amazon is because the confidence they give us and all the things that go on in and around the purchase itself.
Speaker A:And the other point I'd make too, and I'm with you, and the reason I asked the question the way I did is because, like, are we, you know, if you just have a needle, is the needle moving in Amazon's favor or is it not, given all the rise of, you know, Claude and ChatGPT and the like.
Speaker A:And from my perspective, when I step back, I go, I just look at it and go like, okay, pre AI, first product searches were happening two places, Amazon and Google.
Speaker A:Who am I more worried about on that front?
Speaker B:Google.
Speaker A:Like, I'd be much more worried about Google losing its territory in that space where Amazon's trying to keep a foothold on it and can do it, because the psychology of already why you went to Amazon versus Google hasn't changed because of what you said, the psychology of where you buy.
Speaker A:And then the other point I'd make too is the, the buy for me capability is really interesting over time.
Speaker A:If People are still going there with the intent to purchase, knowing Amazon can provide all the things in the background that it does.
Speaker A:The buy for me and how that evolves is also really, you know, captivating to me.
Speaker A:So that's why I think, yes, long run, we'll look back and say, you know what, Amazon did fine during this period.
Speaker A:But, Kelly, what do you think?
Speaker C:Yeah, you know, it's interesting.
Speaker C:As you were reading the headline out, my first reaction was 40%.
Speaker C:It feels like, okay, we're throwing pain at the wall.
Speaker C:Like, there's a lot of different applications to AI they're playing with, but what's the plan?
Speaker C:What's the strategy?
Speaker C:It felt a little scattered, but.
Speaker B:After.
Speaker C:Reflecting a little more, maybe that's kind of what AI is all about right now.
Speaker C:There's so much change.
Speaker C:Like we take the time to play and see what works and, and drive them something new.
Speaker C:So I think there's definitely an opportunity there.
Speaker C:And to your point around the buy now, if people are already going to Amazon to purchase and I can just say to my phone, you know, Alexa, buy dog food, like, that's pretty incredible.
Speaker C:And I already have that habit that I'm going to be going to Amazon to do that.
Speaker C:But if you can just further reduce the friction, I think it builds on the proposition they already have.
Speaker A:That's really true.
Speaker A:Yeah, I never thought about that.
Speaker A:The buy for me capabilities of all the purchases that are happening routinely that aren't happening on Amazon, that if Amazon can take a share, even a slice of those.
Speaker C:Exactly.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker A:Yeah, that's really interesting.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker A:Like, why am I going to chewy for that if I can just do the same thing through Amazon?
