thomas.wieberneit@aheadcrm.co.nz
Agentic Commerce: A Genuine Paradigm Shift or Just Another Vendor Pitch?

Agentic Commerce: A Genuine Paradigm Shift or Just Another Vendor Pitch?

The e-commerce industry has been pushing the exact same shopping cart down the exact same digital aisle for the better part of two decades. We have endlessly debated the optimal color for a checkout button. We have deployed massive Customer Data Platforms (to track users across the web. We have implemented traditional Customer Relationship Management tools and a full-on MarTech stack to send personalized emails that usually find a direct way into the spam folder. Yes, despite all this expensive digital plumbing, the average conversion rate stubbornly hovers around a meager two percent. Enter the industry’s latest shiny toy: agentic commerce. The vendor pitches are certainly alluring. We are moving away from the tedious “click and wait” era into a frictionless “talk and buy” reality. On the surface, it sounds like a massive leap forward. However, any technology analyst worth a grain of salt must ask the difficult questions. Is this actually revolutionary, or is it just a database update with a new coat of paint? Are we solving a genuine consumer friction point, or is this just a solution looking for a problem to help a vendor’s stock price? TL;DR If you rather want to watch the CRMKonvo, find the mobile optimized version here and the tablet/laptop version here. Or feel free to read on. Or do both. The Death of the Traditional Search Bar Raj Balasundaram, founder and CEO of agentic Commerce vendor Bayezon AI identifies a fundamental shift in consumer behavior. The traditional search engine model is dying. For years, the standard consumer journey has been a repetitive four-step process. You type a query into a...
The Algorithmic Bazaar

The Algorithmic Bazaar

The digital commerce industry has spent the last twenty-five or so years optimizing a single, unit of measurement: the session. We built cathedrals of conversion rate optimization (CRO), obsessed over pixel-perfect hero images, and deployed armies of “customer success” bots that were little more than glorified FAQ routers. We tracked users from the moment they landed on the homepage, watched them struggle through navigational hierarchies, and celebrated when 3% of them actually bought something. Anywhere else, a 97% failure rate would be grounds for executive termination. In e-commerce, it was the benchmark for success. We can safely say that the era of the session comes to an end, thanks to conversational and then agentic commerce, which put the “homepage” on life support. What comes more and more into the foreground is the intent, whichis what the session was supposed to help derive. And crucially, the entity expressing that intent is increasingly likely to be a machine, not a human. What we are seeing now is the transition from browser-based commerce, where humans operate interfaces, to agentic Commerce, where AI agents operate APIs. This isn’t just a channel expansion like conversational commerce; it is a fundamental inversion of the retail power dynamic. In the browser era, the retailer controlled the environment. In the agentic era, the customer (or their proxy) controls the context. This is quite similar to what happened in the 2000s with the advent of social media. And it will likely be countered by vendors as fast as the power shift back then, e.g., using GEO instead of SEO. The demise of the search box Since the rise of Google, the...