
OpenAI’s introduction of the Instant Checkout feature in ChatGPT is an audacious play to place shopping in the hands of AI agents, with users now having easy access to shop just about anything through the AI-powered chatbot. This has blurred the once-sharp boundaries between chat, advice, and commerce.
Agentic Commerce: The Technology Behind This Feature
The technology behind this breakthrough is the Agentic Commerce Protocol (ACP), a collaborative system OpenAI developed with Stripe. ACP was designed to help AI agents, users, and businesses alike to interact securely and efficiently.
OpenAI says they’ll be open-sourcing the tech to allow more e-commerce merchants and AI developers to build their integrations.
The ACP is the system that provides the language in which the AI agents and businesses use to complete users’ purchases.
Chat, Click, Buy: A Shift in the Shopping Experience
OpenAI’s newly launched Instant Checkout feature is rewriting e-commerce’s rulebook. Available first to ChatGPT users in the U.S, this innovation will allow shoppers to ask, discover, and purchase in one seamless conversation.
Users can start with simple questions or prompts like “Find me minimalist lamps under $100,” and within the same chat, ChatGPT will list recommendations based on whether the said product is supported by the Instant Checkout feature. Users can then end this process with the “Buy” buttons attached to products from integrated merchants.
In other words, they only have to click on “Buy,” and the order goes through, checking-out with users’ already saved info linked to their ChatGPT account.
For now, users can only make purchases on Etsy and Shopify products, as they are the only commerce platforms integrated into ChatGPT’s systems.
What This Means For The Tech and E-Commerce World?
The e-commerce world is quickly becoming competitive and saturated with many platforms vying for consumer attention. By streamlining the process of users searching for what to buy and eventually buying it, OpenAI is positioning ChatGPT at the front door for digital shopping trips.
More importantly, e-commerce giants like Amazon and even search engine giants like Google now face a new rival in the name of ChatGPT that can control the entire journey from product search to purchase.
And if OpenAI moves beyond integrating Etsy and Shopify, more brands and sellers will gain instant access to ChatGPT’s over 700 million active users weekly, increasing the reach and influence of the popular AI-powered chatbot.
What This Really Means For ChatGPT Users
For users, this means AI agents have moved past recommending as they can now take decisions on their behalf – shopping, booking, scheduling, etc. The list of things ChatGPT is capable of doing keeps increasing.
According to OpenAI, Instant Checkout’s architecture was intentionally designed to minimize risk. Still, with every major leap or update in AI automation, there’s the realization that security isn’t just technical, it can also be relational.
Users’ trust in AI-powered chatbots to recommend, purchase, and transmit data may be shaky, especially for newcomers who want answers to questions such as “Who gets my data? How is it used? How can I opt out?”
Another caveat users might also have to adjust to is merchant trust. Technically, the merchants, Etsy and Shopify for now, remain responsible for payment, delivery, and customer support. But since the interface in which the product was purchased is OpenAI’s, users must trust that their shopping journey and personal information won’t cross any lines.
As such, questions asking the efficiency of their customer support teams and even their brand representation lingers. If, for example, a purchase goes wrong due to conversation or AI misunderstanding, the question is who will shoulder the responsibility for the mishap?
Will OpenAI’s Agentic Commerce Protocol Become The New Normal?
OpenAI’s launch of its Instant Checkout feature, powered by the Agentic Commerce Protocol, introduces a shift in how products can now find people, how users can make easier decisions on what to purchase, and more importantly, how much agency users grant the rising digital companions.
As AI-powered chatbots like ChatGPT become the new storefront for people looking to buy stuff, another question to ask is who will keep control of the shopping journey as companies like OpenAI continue to build AI agents to be more assertive?