Can AI chatbots make your holiday shopping easier?
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[December 03, 2024] By
HALELUYA HADERO
Tired of thinking about what gifts to get everyone this year? Artificial
intelligence chatbots might help, but don't expect them to do all the
work or always give you the right answers.
Anyone scouring the internet for Cyber Monday deals is likely going to
encounter more conversational iterations of the chatbots that some
retailers and e-commerce sites have built to provide shoppers with
enhanced customer service.
Some companies have integrated models infused with newer generative AI
technologies, allowing shoppers to seek advice by asking naturally
phrased questions like “What's the best wireless speaker?”
Retailers hope consumers use these chatbots, which are typically called
shopping assistants - as virtual companions that help them discover or
compare products. Prior chatbots were mostly used for task-oriented
functions such as helping customers track down online orders or return
ones that didn't meet expectations.
Amazon, the king of online retail, has said its customers have been
questioning Rufus - the generative AI- powered shopping assistant it
launched this year - for information such as whether a specific coffee
maker is easy to clean, or what recommendations it has for a lawn game
for a child's birthday party.
And Rufus, which is available for holiday shoppers in the U.S. and some
other countries, is not the only shopping assistant out there. A select
number of Walmart shoppers will have access this year to a similar
chatbot the nation's largest retailer is testing in a few product
categories, including toys and electronics.
Perplexity AI added something new to the AI chat-shopping world last
month by rolling out a feature on its AI-powered search engine that
enables users to ask a question like “What's the best women's leather
boots?" and then receive specific product results that the San
Francisco-based company says are not sponsored.
“It has been adopted at pretty incredible scale,” Mike Mallazzo, an
analyst and writer at retail research media company Future Commerce,
said.
Retailers with websites and e-commerce companies started paying more
attention to chatbots when use of ChatGPT, an artificial intelligence
text chatbot made by the company OpenAI, went mainstream in late 2022,
sparking public and business interest in the generative AI technology
that powers the tool.
Victoria’s Secret, IKEA, Instacart and the Canadian retailer Ssense are
among other companies experimenting with chatbots, some of which use
technology from OpenAI.
Even before the improved chatbots, online retailers were creating
product recommendations based on a customer's prior purchases or search
history. Amazon was at the forefront of having recommendations on its
platform, so Rufus' ability to provide some is not particularly
groundbreaking.
But Rajiv Mehta, the vice president of search and conversational
shopping at Amazon, said the company is able to offer more helpful
recommendations now by programming Rufus to ask clarifying or follow-up
questions. Customers are also using Rufus to look for deals, some of
which are personalized, Mehta said.
To be sure, chatbots are prone to hallucinations, so Rufus and most of
the tools like it can get things wrong.
Juozas Kaziukenas, founder of e-commerce intelligence firm Marketplace
Pulse, wrote in a November blog post that his firm tested Rufus by
requesting gaming TV recommendations. The chatbot's response included
products that were not TVs. When asked for the least expensive options,
Rufus came back with suggestions that weren't the cheapest, Kaziukenas
said.
An Associated Press reporter recently asked Rufus to give some gift
recommendations for a brother. The chatbot quickly spit out a few ideas
for “thoughtful gifts," ranging from a T-shirt and a keychain with
charms to a bolder suggestion: a multifunctional knife engraved with the
phrase “BEST BROTHER EVER.”
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Amazon's generative AI-powered shopping assistant, known as Rufus,
appears on a computer monitor in this photo taken on Dec. 1, 2024,
in New York. (AP Photo/Peter Morgan)
After a 5-minute written
conversation, Rufus offered more tailored suggestions - a few
Barcelona soccer jerseys sold by third-party sellers. But it wasn’t
able to say which seller offered the lowest price. When asked during
another search for a price comparison on a popular skin serum, Rufus
showed the product's pre-discounted price instead of its present
one.
“Rufus is constantly learning,” Amazon's Mehta said during an
interview.
Shop AI, a chatbot that Canadian e-commerce company Shopify launched
last year, can also help shoppers discover new products by asking
its own questions, such as soliciting details about an intended gift
recipient or features the buyer wants to avoid. Shop AI has trouble,
however, recommending specific products or identifying the
lowest-priced item in a product category.
The limitations show the technology is still in its infancy and has
a long way to go before it becomes as useful as the retail industry
- and many shoppers - wish it could be.
To truly transform the shopping experience, shopping assistants will
“need to be deeply personalized” and be able - on their own - to
remember a customer’s order history, product preferences and
purchasing habits, consulting giant McKinsey & Company said in an
August report.
Amazon has noted that Rufus' answers are based on information
contained in product listings, community Q&As and customer reviews,
which would include the fake reviews that are used to boost or
diminish sales for products on its marketplace.
The large language model that powers the chatbot was also trained on
the company's entire catalog and some public information on the web,
Trishul Chilimbi, an Amazon vice president who oversees AI research,
wrote in the electrical engineering magazine IEEE Spectrum in
October.
But its unclear how Amazon and other companies are weighting
different training components - such as reviews - in their
recommendations, or how exactly the shopping assistants come up with
them, according to Nicole Greene, an analyst at management
consulting firm Gartner.
Perplexity AI's new shopping feature allows users to enter search
queries such as “best phone case" and to receive answers derived
from various sources, including Amazon and other retailers, such as
Best Buy. Perplexity also invited retailers to share data about
their products and said those that do would have an increased chance
of having their items recommended to shoppers.
But Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas, suggested in a recent interview
with Fortune magazine that he didn't know how the new shopping
feature recommended products to customers. But in an interview with
the AP, Chief Business Officer Dmitry Shevelenko pushed back on that
characterization, saying Srinivas' comment “was probably taken out
of context.”
The context, he said, is that with generative AI technology “You
can’t know in advance exactly what the output will be just based off
of knowing what the inputs” are from the training materials.
Shevelenko said retailers and brands need to know they can't have
their products recommended in Perplexity's search engine because
they're “jamming key words” into their websites or using different
techniques to show up better on search results
“The way you show up in an answer is by having a better product and
better features,” he said.
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