When a 24-year-old retail tech CEO says she used to spend more than 15 hours a year researching gifts – and now completes her holiday shopping in just a few ChatGPT sessions – it is no longer a lifestyle anecdote. It is a structural signal. As NewsTrackerToday observes, this holiday season marks a turning point in which artificial intelligence has begun to replace traditional search as the starting point of consumer purchasing journeys.
The executive, Bhasin, describes ChatGPT as feeling like a knowledgeable in-store associate rather than a search engine. The recommendations feel contextual, the process less exhausting – and, notably, more persuasive. In fact, she admits AI has increased her inclination to buy. Early data supports that claim. Salesforce estimates generative AI could drive as much as $263 billion in global online sales this holiday season, roughly 21% of all digital orders. Adobe reports AI-driven traffic to U.S. retail sites surged 760% between early November and December.
What stands out to NewsTrackerToday is not just volume, but quality. Shoppers arriving via AI platforms convert at meaningfully higher rates. According to Adobe, they are about 30% more likely to complete a purchase and generate roughly 8% more revenue per session. In the assessment of NewsTrackerToday financial markets analyst Liam Anderson, AI is increasingly functioning less like search and more like a trust filter – narrowing choices before consumers ever reach a retailer’s site.
Retailers have taken notice. Walmart, Target and Etsy have launched or expanded AI-powered shopping assistants, while select OpenAI partners now allow purchases directly within ChatGPT. Amazon, by contrast, has chosen a defensive strategy, blocking external AI bots from accessing its catalog and doubling down on its in-house assistant, Rufus. As Isabella Moretti, who covers corporate strategy at NewsTrackerToday, notes, the retail landscape is splitting between companies embedding themselves into AI ecosystems and those attempting to keep customers locked inside proprietary platforms.
For brands, the shift is forcing a fundamental rethink of digital marketing. Traditional SEO still matters, but it is no longer sufficient. Retailers are rewriting product pages, FAQs and site architecture to align with conversational, intent-based queries rather than keyword stuffing. Companies such as PacSun, Target and Ethique Beauty say these changes have driven higher-quality traffic from AI platforms, though at the cost of significant investment in new capabilities. NewsTrackerToday sees this as the early stage of a broader migration from visibility gaming to relevance engineering.
The technology, however, remains imperfect. Some consumers report repetitive or generic recommendations, and others argue that algorithmic shopping strips away the joy of discovery. For now, AI performs best when shoppers know what problem they want solved – not necessarily when they are browsing for inspiration.
Still, the direction is clear. Artificial intelligence is no longer a novelty layer on top of e-commerce. It is rapidly becoming the gatekeeper. And as News Tracker Today concludes, the most important question for retailers is no longer how they rank on Google – but whether they are visible at all when consumers stop searching and start asking.