Select a category

Select a category

SEARCH

AI ecommerce search: How AI agents choose what gets bought

The next visibility crisis in ecommerce may not be about losing traffic. It may be about never being considered in the first place. When AI agents begin to choose products on behalf of consumers, merchants will no longer compete only for attention on a results page. They will compete for inclusion in an agent’s decision set - and that changes what it means to be found. As AI ecommerce search evolves, visibility increasingly depends on whether autonomous systems can understand, evaluate, and trust a merchant’s data.

Jul 8, 2026 3 minutes
Digitized woman

The stakes of this new environment are high: merchants who do not adapt risk becoming invisible not to search algorithms, but to the autonomous systems that are beginning to replace them. As AI ecommerce search evolves, visibility increasingly depends on whether autonomous systems can understand, evaluate, and trust a merchant’s data. 

How AI agents select products in ecommerce search

Traditional search puts a human in the middle. They query, browse, and compare. Even when algorithms personalise results, the final decision belongs to the person clicking through. 

In AI ecommerce search, that process changes fundamentally. An agent operating on behalf of a consumer does not browse in the human sense; it interprets a goal, evaluates available options against predefined criteria – price bands, preferred brands, delivery constraints, past purchase history – and selects a merchant based on those parameters. The selection may happen in seconds, without the consumer ever seeing a results page. 

The criteria that matter shift accordingly. Ranking by click-through rate or paid placement becomes irrelevant when there is no human scrolling a results list. What agents evaluate instead is structured data quality, trust signals, execution reliability, and protocol conformance. A merchant with poorly structured product data or unclear fulfilment terms creates real barriers to agent-mediated discovery; brand recognition built for human shoppers does not automatically translate into agent visibility. 

What China reveals about AI-powered product discovery

China offers a revealing early view of what AI-driven product discovery looks like in practice. Alibaba’s Qwen agent – embedded across apps like Taobao, Alipay, and related services – reduces the need for consumers to manually move between discovery, merchant selection, and payment. The consumer states a goal; the system organises action across a commercial environment. 

In such a scenario discovery is increasingly mediated by systems that learn preferences, infer intent, and act on it, rather than waiting for a human to formulate a query. 

The risk of closed ecosystems in AI ecommerce search 

The Chinese example is not only a lesson but also contains a warning for European merchants. The same integration that makes hidden agents effective can also concentrate power and reduce transparency. If product discovery, recommendation, payment authorisation, and execution all occur within a single tightly managed ecosystem, then delegated choice becomes difficult to inspect and harder to contest. 

For merchants, this creates a real and growing risk. Becoming dependent on a small number of external gatekeepers for agent-mediated visibility replicates – and potentially deepens – the dependencies many merchants already struggle with in platform commerce. If the protocols that govern AI ecommerce search are proprietary, the firms that define those protocols also define who gets found. 

This is why the design of the protocol layer matters as much as the capability of the agents using it. Open, interoperable standards create space for merchants to be discoverable across multiple agent systems. Closed ecosystems mean merchants must play by one platform’s rules, or remain invisible to that platform’s buyers. 

How merchants stay visible in AI-driven commerce

The practical question for merchants is what adaptation looks like in AI ecommerce search. It begins with machine-legibility – ensuring the following are published in structured, agent-readable formats: 

  • Structured product data: clear titles, categories, attributes, and descriptions that agents can parse without human interpretation. 
  • Product availability: real-time or near-real-time stock information that agents can evaluate against fulfilment constraints. 
  • Delivery information: accurate lead times, fulfilment options, and geographic availability. 
  • Merchant trust signals: reviews, ratings, and reliability indicators that agents use to evaluate execution consistency.  
  • Machine-readable policies: return conditions, substitution rules, and compliance information in formats agents can act on. 

Beyond data quality, trust signals become a new form of competitive differentiation in AI ecommerce search. Agents evaluate reliability of execution, consistency of fulfilment, and clarity of post-purchase processes. Merchants with strong track records across these dimensions are more likely to be selected by agents operating within defined mandate parameters. 

Riverty’s work with merchants is built around this challenge: staying visible and commercially accessible in markets that are increasingly structured around agent selection rather than human browsing. A payment and infrastructure partner committed to open, interoperable systems is not a peripheral choice in this environment – it determines whether merchants remain in control of how they are found.  

 

Frequently Asked Questions

Agentic Commerce:

The Hidden Agents whitepaper makes the case for a specifically European model of agentic commerce, and what needs to happen now for that model to take hold.

Cover of the report Fintech 2040 Hidden Agents