According to Forbes, AI-driven traffic to retail sites is delivering higher conversion rates, longer engagement, and larger basket values than traditional search or social channels. The publication reports that AI chatbots and agents — tools like ChatGPT commerce plugins and voice assistants — are sending qualified buyers who arrive with intent already shaped by conversational prompts. One commerce platform, Swap, reported 2× conversion rates on its AI-powered storefront compared to conventional web traffic, per the same coverage. The pattern is early but documented: agents pre-qualify, guide product selection, and reduce decision friction before the click.
The mechanism is intent compression. Traditional search sends a user to a category page; the user still faces paradox of choice. An AI agent narrows the field in dialogue, surfaces one or two products that match stated criteria, then delivers the buyer to checkout with decision fatigue already cleared. The user trusts the agent's curation, treats the recommendation as advice rather than advertising, and completes purchase faster. Basket value rises because the agent can upsell contextually — "you mentioned a gift; add a card?" — without the hard sell that kills email conversions.
For a physical-product brand, the steal is to treat your DM and email flows like an agent conversation. Instead of a weekly broadcast with eight product tiles, send a two-question SMS: "Still looking for a gift under $50? Reply yes." Wait for the reply. Then send one product, one sentence of reasoning, one link. The format mirrors agent interaction: narrow, personal, low-friction. Brands running this structure on Postscript and Attentive report reply rates above 18% and click-through near 9%, well above broadcast norms, because the recipient feels consulted rather than pitched.
The play works at any scale. A one-person candle brand can set up a Zapier webhook: when a subscriber replies to the first question, trigger a personalized follow-up with a single SKU and a reason tied to their reply. Cost is near zero; the trade is time for margin. An in-house team with budget can use Klaviyo conditional splits and dynamic blocks to simulate agent logic: if the user clicked "outdoor gear" in the last email, the next message opens with "you were looking at packs — here's the one that fits a 15-inch laptop." The user perceives guidance, not automation. Conversion rate on those segments routinely doubles.
The broader pattern is that conversational commerce works when it actually converges the choice set instead of expanding it. AI agents succeed because they say no to ninety products and yes to two. Email and DM can do the same if the brand stops treating every message as a catalog flip. The next move is to audit your highest-intent segments — cart abandoners, post-purchase one-time buyers, site visitors who clicked a category but did not add — and rewrite those flows as two-turn conversations. Ask, wait, recommend one thing. The agent aesthetic, without the agent tax.