AI shopping agents are rapidly becoming a meaningful share of online “shoppers.” New research shows that many classic e-commerce persuasion tactics built for human psychology—scarcity, countdown timers, strike-through pricing, vouchers, and bundles—do not reliably influence AI agents and can even reduce selection depending on the model and product category. In thousands of simulated shopping rounds across four leading models and four common product categories, only star ratings consistently increased choice in the expected direction, while price reliably decreased it; other cues produced unstable, model-specific effects, with more advanced reasoning models often appearing skeptical of overt persuasion. The implication for marketers is clear: Treat AI models as distinct segments, prioritize fundamentals like competitive pricing and authentic reviews, and invest in a testing infrastructure that continuously measures how different agents respond as models and prompts evolve.

AI shopping agents are rapidly becoming a meaningful share of online “shoppers.” New research shows that many classic e-commerce persuasion tactics built for human…

Retailers have spent years experimenting with AI, but consumers are now signaling that the technology has become an expected part of the shopping journey.