Agentic Commerce: How to Get Your Store Ready for AI Sam PageUpdated on June 22, 2026 7 Minute Read AI agents are starting to do more than recommend products. They complete the purchase. Agentic commerce is the model where a shopping agent finds, compares, and buys on a customer’s behalf. Here is how these agents choose what to surface, which platforms already support them, and the practical steps to make your store ready. My last post looked at the discovery layer of AI search, the work of getting your content cited inside AI answers. This one covers the execution layer: what happens when the AI does not just suggest a product but checks out for the shopper. Both subjects came up at the AI in Retail: GEO & Agentic Commerce Workshop I spoke at, hosted by Doing Business in Bentonville with NWACC and Google. Agentic commerce drew the sharpest questions in the room, because it changes who your store is selling to. What Is Agentic Commerce? Agentic commerce is online shopping where an autonomous AI agent handles the full purchase on a shopper’s behalf, from finding products to paying for them (Shopify, 2026). The shopper sets the goal and the limits. The agent does the searching, comparing, and checkout, then reports back for approval. This is a different class of software from the support chatbots stores have used for years. An agent holds a goal, calls external systems, and can build a cart, authorize a payment, and start a return without a person navigating any pages (Salesforce, 2026). The interface stops being your website. It becomes the conversation the shopper is already having with an AI assistant. How Is Agentic Commerce Different From Today’s Online Shopping? The mechanics of a sale change at almost every step. A human shopper forgives a missing spec or an ugly product page. An agent does not. Traditional Online ShoppingAgentic CommerceWho navigatesThe shopper browses and clicksAn AI agent acts on the shopper’s intentWhat it readsPages, images, visual designStructured product data and feedsWhere the sale happensYour storefront and checkoutInside the AI conversation, through a protocolWhat winsBrand, design, ad spendClean data, accurate inventory, trust signalsKey metricClick-through and sessionsWhether the agent surfaces and buys your product Which AI Shopping Platforms Already Let Agents Buy? This is no longer a pilot. Several surfaces already let an agent complete a purchase: ChatGPT Instant Checkout has been live since September 2025, powered by the Agentic Commerce Protocol from OpenAI and Stripe. Shoppers buy inside the chat without visiting the merchant’s site (Opascope, 2026). Microsoft Copilot Checkout went live in the United States in early 2026 (nShift, 2026). Google’s Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP), announced at NRF in January 2026, is an open standard developed with Shopify, Target, Walmart, and others to let agents discover and transact with merchant catalogs (WooCommerce, 2026). Large retailers are also building their own agents, including Walmart’s Sparky, which was a focus of the Bentonville workshop. The momentum shows in the numbers: Shopify reported that orders from AI-powered searches grew fifteenfold year over year through 2025 (Shopify, 2026). How Do AI Agents Decide Which Products to Recommend? Agents do not scroll your storefront or admire your photography. They read structured product data, your titles, descriptions, images, price, availability, shipping speeds, and return terms, then match it against what the shopper asked for (Shopify, 2026). Backend data, not homepage design, now decides whether you enter consideration (Invisible Technologies, 2026). That reorders a lot of priorities for teams used to optimizing visuals first. The product page still matters for the humans who do visit. For the agent, the feed behind it is what gets read. Why Does Your Product Data Quality Decide the Sale? The blunt version: if your data cannot answer the agent’s question, it recommends a competitor whose data can (WooCommerce, 2026). There is no second look, no “maybe I’ll click anyway.” Incomplete data simply removes you from the set. Consistency is its own ranking factor. When your title, price, or attributes differ between your site, Amazon, and Google Shopping, agents read the mismatch as a risk signal, so your catalog needs to be the single source of truth (WooCommerce, 2026). Stale inventory and pricing get skipped too, because an agent will not recommend a product it cannot confirm is in stock at the listed price (Rewarx, 2026). Reviews, clear return terms, and accurate fulfillment promises build the trust that agents weigh before they buy (BigCommerce, 2026). Where Does Hosting Fit Into Agentic Commerce? Here is the part most readiness guides skip. Agents query your product feeds, APIs, and endpoints directly, and they do it in real time before every recommendation. If that endpoint responds slowly or times out, the agent moves on, and no human ever sees the miss. Uptime stopped being a back-office metric. It is now the difference between being in a transaction and being invisible to it. Real-time inventory and pricing also put steady load on your backend, since agents expect fresh answers on demand rather than batch updates (Kenner Soft, 2026). That favors a stack with room to handle frequent automated requests without slowing down for your human shoppers. Content gives you a second edge. When two stores carry the same product with equally complete feeds, the catalog alone does not separate them; the editorial context around it, buying guides, FAQs, and comparison pages, gives the agent more to work with (WooCommerce, 2026). WooCommerce stores have a structural advantage here, because content and commerce live together on WordPress. Hosting choice is what makes that hold up under pressure. Reliable WordPress hosting keeps both the product feed and the surrounding content fast and available, while the ability to scale to a VPS or dedicated server gives you headroom as machine-paced traffic grows. At InMotion Hosting, that runs on hardware we own and operate across data centers in Virginia, California, and Amsterdam, backed by a 99.99% uptime SLA, 24/7 human support, and the ability to scale without replatforming. How Do You Make Your Store Agent-Ready? You can start without a full re-platform. These steps map to the requirements agents actually check, ordered by impact: Add complete product schema. Mark up name, brand, GTIN or SKU, price, availability, and images using Schema.org Product so agents can parse your listings (Mirakl, 2026). Clean your feed and fix identifiers. Correct GTIN, MPN, and SKU values, and resolve any attributes flagged as missing, because each flag can quietly exclude a product (WooCommerce, 2026). Sync inventory and pricing in real time. Push changes within minutes, not days, to keep agent trust (Rewarx, 2026). Write specific, machine-readable descriptions. Replace vague marketing copy with precise attributes, and add buying guides and FAQs for context (Mirakl, 2026). State policies explicitly. Put shipping, returns, and eligibility rules into structured, comparable form so an agent does not skip an ambiguous offer (nShift, 2026). Connect your catalog to the platforms. Use Google Merchant Center for UCP and the relevant feed setup for ChatGPT and Copilot (WooCommerce, 2026). Monitor where agents surface your products. Test common queries and track recommendation rates the way you track rankings (commercetools, 2026). What Should Agencies Do for Client Stores? Agencies feel this shift across a whole portfolio at once. One client on a slow host with a messy feed can underperform no matter how good the catalog work is, and agent readiness becomes a service you can scope and sell. Standardizing client stores on reliable infrastructure removes a layer of that risk and makes feed quality easier to maintain at scale. Our Agency Partner Program is built for that model, consolidating client environments onto one platform with predictable performance and operational support, so agent-ready becomes a repeatable standard rather than a per-client scramble. What Comes Next for Agentic Commerce? The trajectory is steep. Gartner estimates that by 2030 about 20% of online shopping transactions will flow through AI platforms and agents (commercetools, 2026), and McKinsey projects the channel could reach several trillion dollars in global spending by the same year (Opascope, 2026). Adobe found AI referral traffic to US retail sites grew roughly twelvefold in seven months, and it converts well once it arrives (Mirakl, 2026). The reassuring part is that the work compounds. Clean data, accurate inventory, clear policies, and dependable infrastructure pay off across every AI surface, including ones that have not launched yet (digitalapplied, 2026). You are not betting on a single platform. You are making your store legible to machines in general. Build the Foundation Agents Can Trust Agentic commerce rewards the stores that are easy for a machine to read, verify, and act on. That means structured product data, real-time accuracy, and infrastructure that answers every time an agent comes knocking. Get those right and you are ready for the agents shopping today and the ones arriving next quarter. If you want help making sure your hosting can keep up with agent-driven traffic and real-time feeds, talk to our sales team about managed hosting and WordPress hosting built for performance and uptime. Share this Article Related Articles Agentic Commerce: How to Get Your Store Ready for AI Your AI Site Is Built. Now Who Keeps It Running? AI-Assisted Development Tradeoffs for Agencies and Clients Citizen Developer, Real Infrastructure: When Business-Built Apps Need Real Hosting How Agencies Can Manage No-Code AI Client Sites Without Losing Control Rate Limiting AI Crawler Bots with ModSecurity AI Web Development: What You Need to Know in 2026 AI Hosting 101: From Website Builders to Predictive Analytics AI Lead Scoring: How Brands Can Turn Data Into Revenue Lovable Acquires Molnett: What AI Code Generation Means for Software Deployment