ChatGPT Instant Checkout: Deep Dive Part III/III: Open Questions, FAQs (with Answers!) and Anti-Agentic Commerce Naysayers đ„
We wrap the three part series by summarizing open questions, answering FAQs and addressing the naysayers.
Welcome to the last part of our three part Deep Dive on ChatGPT Instant Checkout. Hereâs where we are in this series:
Part I - User Experience, Merchant (DTC Brand or Retailer) Experience and what does this mean for Merchants (you, most of my readers) and Agentic Commerce strategically?
Part II - Letâs get nerdy and dig into the feed and ACP specs to understand more.
YOU ARE HEREââ» Part III - Open questions, what the naysayers are saying, and FAQs we are hearing from merchants with answers where available.
Retailgentic Housekeeping Note
This week we published:
Tuesday - The turn the tables pod with Kiri here.
Wednesday - The big Walmart/Salesforce FLASH news here.
Thursday - Today weâre closing out the ChatGPT Deep Dive with a bang!
Looking at the weekâs activity and news, thatâs 99% of whatâs going on, so there will not be a weekend roundup in your inbox Sat/Sun. Donât dismay though, because next week, weâre ALSO wrapping up our GenAI Engine Optimization Series with Part III (the big Agentic Commerce Optimization Playbook reveal!) that was delayed ~30 days due to the ChatGPT release. If you have time this weekend, go review parts I (here) and II (here) to refresh for part III.
Ok, back to your regularly scheduled substack postâŠ
First, a Word from OpenAIâŠ
We now have several new pieces of information since the release of ChatGPT on 9/30. First, we have this from Sam Altman: "âŠI think it is one of these things that is just like, as long as you let the merchant have the direct relationship with the consumer, which we do, I think itâs just better, that oneâs just better for everyone, itâs a better user experience, itâs better for merchants.â If you want the whole transcript, this if from his Stratechery interview we covered here.
Second we have Michelle Fradin, ChatGPTâs product lead for ChatGPT Commerce. She gave two interviews: CNBC here and Fortune here. Having followed OpenAI a while, they donât say a ton, but what they do say, they tend to mean, so I pay close attention to it. Hereâs her detailed quotes from these: (bolding is me)
CNBCâ
âOur vision for ChatGPT â and a lot of the technology we create, but especially ChatGPT â is that itâs not just providing you information, it is also helping you get things done in the real world,â
ChatGPT surpassed 700 million weekly active users in August, and Fradin said âa huge portionâ of the questions people are asking are related to shopping and commerce in some capacity. The questions can be specific, such as asking for help finding a pair of black boots, or more broad, such as how to plan a birthday party for 12 kids. âWhat we wanted to do is make it even easier for users to complete their journey in ChatGPT, and for merchants and developers to convert those conversations into checkouts,â Fradin said.
Fortuneâ
Still, why would OpenAI create a protocol that competitors can use, too? ChatGPT product lead Michelle Fradin framed it as a merchant-first calculation: âThe primary goal we had was making something incredibly easy for the entire ecosystemâmerchants and developersâto adopt,â she said. âSo yes, one aspect of that is, competitors or other players in the space can adopt it, too.â
At the end of the day, she explained, itâs ânet-beneficialâ if merchants have to do less work to integrate with different platforms and grow sales. âWe felt like the most merchant-friendly approach was making this available to everyone,â she added, noting there was so much demand from merchants that âwe needed to build something that could scale.â
âThe best way today to ensure as xa merchant that your product has the best chance of being chosen is to make sure that we have the most up-to-date and richest amount of information about your products as possible,â she said. Fradin added that merchants are eager to provide detailed âproduct feedsââessentially structured catalogs of their items with rich descriptions, updated prices, and availabilityâso ChatGPT has the fullest context when deciding what to recommend. In some cases, she noted, brands are supplying even more detail than they publish on their own sites, in hopes of improving their chances of being surfaced.
What are they telling us?
This is super important so Iâm going to boil it down to these 5 critical points they are telling us straight-up:
A âhuge portionâ of ChatGPTâs 800m WAUs are using it for shopping
The best way to get your products to show up in ChatGPT is to send a feed and they want the richest data possible.
Retailers and brands are supplying even more detail than they publish on their own sites
They are extremely merchant friendly, as witnessed by the unusual Merchant-of-record setup.
They have created an open standard that can be adopted by competitors. Imagine if Amazon created an open-standard for their marketplace where anyone could plug in their own front end and then âconnectâ to all the sellers and checkout infrastructure. You canât! - Thatâs how incredibly merchant friendly this is.
This is a big opportunity with significant users looking to buy products (note to readers - this is foreshadowing and it will come up later which the naysayer section đ).
Open Questions
Itâs two weeks after the big announcement and we still have X open questions. Some are tactical/short-term, some are more medium-term and some are philosophical/theological.
Short/term (this year) tactical open questions:
When does Shopify launch?
Why wasnât Shopify ready for the launch?
Who will be next?
How many merchants will be live before Thanksgiving?
Medium term (next year) questions:
If I currently block GPTBot, OAI-Searchbot, can I send a feed and still get my products on ChatGPT? (Iâm going to guess no because if I were implementing this, Iâd have an agent ping the site and update the price and availability to make sure the product is in-stock and I have the right price, but havenât validated this yet).
What is ChatGPT charging merchants?
When will we see expansion to multi-cart?
Will ChatGPT checkout add support for loyalty programs?
Beyond Stripe, how will other payment processors be fully supported, and what adaptations are needed for non-Stripe users?
If they are so merchant friendly, will ChatGPT provide analytics or metrics to merchants about user interactions as they go through researchâbuy in ChatGPT?
Will ChatGPT allow consumers to rate merchants to help other buyers avoid fraudulent or low quality merchants?
Related - will they implement a guarantee like the Google Shopping âGoogle Guaranteed/Trusted Storeâ program (now becoming Google Verified) program?
Long-term questions:
Are we going to have two competing standards: ACP (ChatGPT/Shopify/Stripe) and AP2 (Google/Paypal/Affirm)?
Will some companies work with both or will it be entirely balkanized?
Will someone build some kind of a bridge between these two standards (seems smart and valuable)?
Sam is opening up to Ads, but being very specific that they will be for discovery and add value, whatâs that look like and when is it coming?
Will Amazon or eBay or Walmart join one of these or are the incentives aligned for them to be part of the balkanization?
Frequently Asked Questions w/ Answers
As the leading analysts and over at ReFiBuy, vendor/enabler, in this space, weâve handled hundreds of questions and tried to boil them down to X with answers:
Question: How do I get on ChatGPT Checkout before Holiday 2025?
Answer: If youâre on Shopify, keep reading. If youâre not, ChatGPT has been swamped with interest and your best bet to get in the program is to do everything you can to prepare. That means, create your feed, get it tested and get your checkout integration all wired up and tested. If you remember back in part 2, when we got nerdy, I pointed out the âProduction Readiness Guide that lives here and told you to âdo not underestimate the importance of this oneâ - well, turns out itâs pretty important. This basically gives you a guide and a checklist to do your own UAT on your ACP complaint checkout. Then, after you are buttoned up, make a full-press pitch to the team at ChatGPT. Pro tip - use this opportunity to significantly expand and enhance your product catalog. I believe this is so foundationally important for merchants going forward that I started a company whose entire focus is building Agentic technology that helps with this and gets your catalog 100% Agentic Commerce ready.
Question: Ok, but If Iâm on Shopify, what should I do?
Answer: Good news, your favorite blogger/podcast author has a pro tip - checkout this link đ. đ€« (donât tell Tobe!!)
Question: Should I open an Etsy store or Shopify store to sell on ChatGPT if my current platform is either not going to adopt ChatGPT Checkout fast enough or is opting-out.
Answer: Depends.
If you sell 100% on marketplaces like eBay or Amazon and donât have a website, Iâd say this is definitely the âopen a simple shopify storeâ moment. If you sell handmade goods - go Etsy all others go Shopify.
If you are a a mid-tier or large retailer, it gets more complicated because you need to do the math on if the Juice is worth the Squeeze?
The Juice:
800m WAUs
Likely lower take-rate than other marketplaces or paying the Google/Meta ad tax
Get a promotion for being AI forward and innovating at your companyđ„. Seriously though, every public company we talk to is under extreme pressure to âdo something and get startedâ and this will definitely check this box so when your CEO, board or public company investors search for your hero sku on chatgpt, you are in the game.
The ChatGPT customer base skews younger and categories like beauty, apparel, home improvement, furniture, appliances, personal devices and healthcare are ahead of others in adoption. Latest data we have on this is hereâ
(Burke: Shopper Journey with GenAI, 8/1/25 - we covered it here)
If you are a $100m-10b/yr retailer, I would set your expectation that this is not going to be near material this year. If you are smaller, have interesting products that just arenât getting surfaced in the categories highlighted, this could be material.
The Squeeze:
Managing inventory between X platforms is complicated and can lead to over-sells if you donât gate inventory
If you are in a bigger co, whatâs your CFO going to think about this or your operations team and customer support? If you are omni-channel, donât forget to let them know about it.
There could be some confusion with âauthorityâ down the road if you decide to shutter the Shopify shop when your direct integration goes live.
Youâre still going to still need to have a very robust datafeed if you move to shopify - so that investment is âportableâ thanks to it living in the product catalog layer and not the âbuying surfaceâ (pdp on your legacy site /pdp on Shopify).
Factoring all this in, the lower âSqueezeâ option maybe pushing through some suboptimal solutions (a nice way to say âhacksâ) with your existing site and then coming back and fixing those in Q1_26 when the dust settles. Weâre helping many retailers think through this and implement the âpush throughâ so reach out if you want to talk about it.
At the end of the day, itâs up to every merchant to weigh the Juice and the Squeeze and decide whatâs best for their business.âïžđ€
Naysayers
Iâll start by sharing my biases. As an entrepreneur, Iâm a generally optimistic person, some would say to do what we do in startup-land you need to be ridiculously optimistic. Iâll also say that thanks to the Jason and Scot showâs annual predictions, for the last 15 years, Iâve had a lot of practice predicting things in e-commerce which isnât that hard, the timing is whatâs hard.
That being said, to make sure weâre not getting over our skiâs itâs always good to look at what the Naysayers are and evaluate it and make sure we understand where they are coming from. Thereâs a lot to be learned and it helps build the argument and make Agentic Commerce proponents stronger debaters internally and externally. Itâs also more persuasive to be able to âget insideâ the naysayers head, thatâs the only way to flip them, if you can.
How do you find Naysayers?
I know about all of these Naysayers, because people alert me to them and say: âScot, what about <naysayer> do you agree, you should do a rebuttal!â or âyou should have them on the podcast with a refereeâ and battle it. Maybe some day, but analyzing their Anti Agentic arguments they have put in writing, I donât think theyâd like how it will go đ.
With that background, itâs me vs. the Naysayers in a four on one melee! Letâs see which of us can persuade you đ«”!
The Naysayers that came out of the woodwork for the ChatGPT Instant Checkout announcement can be grouped into two buckets: The Payment Risk Naysayers and the Anti-Agentic Naysayers.
Payment Risk Naysayers
The Payment Risk naysayers are typically payments/Fintech people that when they evaluate the ACP protocol, especially into the part of the protocol where you can switch out Stripe for another payment processor. This is inside the Delegated Payment Spec (here - we covered it in part 2: nerdy, told you it was nerdy). If you want to refer back to it. In this world the PSP is the Payment Service Provider (Stripe or the third party).
But First a Word about PCI
Three letters make any ecommerce exec or technologist shake in their boots - they are PCI - Payment Card Industry - the cc industry has a security standard called PCI that protects the magic risky data of credit cards - the card number and the CVV and has very clear and specific rules about those and what and when credit cards can be transmitted âin the openâ. Iâve built PCI compliant systems and it was incredibly complex and hard to build, test and certify. Avoid it at all costs, trust me. This juice is almost never ever worth the squeeze.
Enter PCI Compliant Vaults and Tokens
Because of the gut-wrenching pain of PCI, after we built our amazing PCI system, of course đ€Šââïž, someone (I think Stripe), invented this concept of âweâll do PCI for you!â Pass, donât store, the userâs cc to us, weâll store it and give you a âtokenâ. For example, letâs use an easy one and call it X. The token allows you then to say, âhey, this customers credit card is Xâ. Then you say - âhey stripe, user with credit card X (you can see the last 4 in a lookup, but thatâs it) has agreed to another charge of $20â - and stripe looks in their vault, and have stored a little db that says oh, user X, has an amex 1234 5617 8901 234 and CVV 1234 (this is a pretend number, donât panic, please donât call PCI!). Stripe marryâs their vault with their processing, a checkout and all kinds of little payment lego blocks to solve different things.
Ok now weâre ready to tackle these Payment naysayersâŠ
First Up Nik Milanovic - Payment Naysayer
Hereâs Nikâs post on Linkedin, which Iâve captured for you to also read in-line:
What I think Nik is missing is captured in this statement: âIf Stripe owns the Buy Buttonâ. We can stop right there because this makes no sense and itâs clear Nik is very smart at payments, but he hasnât really looked at or seen how this works. For the Instant Checkout implementation of ACP, ChatGPT shows the buy button on the product card offer and when you click on it, you are taken to a (still!) ChatGPT hosted checkout. In the delegated payment spec, any marketplace can build their own checkout and under the hood you can have a different vault and a different PSP.
Nik is right about this a bit, but Shane explains it better.
Shane Curran - Payment Naysayer
Speaking of Vaults, hereâs Shane Curranâs post on Linkedinâ
Now, before we address Shaneâs point, did you see where he works? Yep, he works for a vault company. Shane is right, if you choose not to go the non-stripe payment option with delegated payment, youâre going to not only need a processor but you are going to need to solve PCI. What Shane may not realize is that, letâs say you are a large merchant, or your a e-commerce software provider, you have already had to solve this, because you are running a lot of cards already and youâd know if you are not PCI compliant.
Thereâs really three options here:
Use Stripe - built in vault and processor - good, PCI compliant
No-stripe/DIYPCI - Leverage your existing PCI system and processor - still PCI compliant. Your existing PCI work folds right in here and itâs just another card.
No-stripe/Vault+PSP - Use the non-stripe option and use a third-party vault and use a different payment processor - also PCI compliant. Our buddy Shane here would strongly recommend Evervault. But be aware that Stripe has unbundled theirs and I hear good things about VGS -details here.
Where you are NOT PCI complaint is if you go non-stripe option, and decide not to use a vault. I havenât met a modern e-commerce company that wouldnât immediate see the problem with that, but letâs assume they do, is ChatGPT going to send users into a PCI problematic checkout situation!?
I have a feeling the people at OpenAI/ChatGPT that wrote this pretty sophisticated Delegated Payment Spec are going to have PCI compliance pretty high on their checklist (remember thereâs a certification process, where before ChatGPT sends any merchant their precious users, they are going to make darn sure itâs secure, I assure you). Letâs assume Iâm wrong and ChatGPT has a bunch of payment noobs and they donât understand this - the nice people at PCI will be on top of this lickety-split.
Payment Naysayers Scoreboard:
Nick: Didnât understand how the buy button works
Shane: Trying to make people scared to use his vault
Score: ACP: 2, Naysayers: 0
Anti-Agentic Naysayers
We live in a time that, for some reason, we rarely argue about topics with logic, but we end up arguing about these really silly things that boil down to word definitions. In my first career arc, I managed developers. Developers love to argue about this constantly. The two worst ones are NULL vs. 0 and tabs vs. spaces. I get thereâs a personality type for which this is either important or fun to argue or both, but weâre focused on the big picture here -I believe this stuff is existential, itâs going to change commerce and retail substantially. If you make a decision based on a word definition for an existential crisis, it will be a huge mistake.
Anti-Agentic Naysayer: Payments in Full / Andrew Dresner
On his payments oriented substack, âPayments in Fullâ Andrew has this very Anti-Agentic Commerce pieceâ
Both of our Anti-Agentic Commerce examples make a bunch of anti-Agentic Commerce positions, I'm going to go with their top 3.
Position 1: The market for Agentic Commerce is tiny
Here he makes a very weird decision to start with the 2023 household budget from the Bureau of Labor and Stats. Turns out everyone in ecommerce knows the US Census bureau has a retail and ecommerce data report that tells us in 2024 ecommerce was $1.2T and retail was $7T. He also goes through this weird narrowing of things where he basically says you donât use agentic for high-considered purchases, you donât use it if you want a low price (just use Amazon which is funny as they arenât really lowest price on many items) and you donât use it in the discovery process. Turns out thereâs two word definition things going on here. He comes to these conclusions because in his definition of Agentic Commerce, the user has zero involvement. You say - buy me a couch and it just does it! No user would want that, so that excludes all the categories where donât already know what you want.
In my definition of Agentic Commerce, thereâs a wide spectrum of use cases. Agentic Commerce is my buddy shopping agent. It helps me Research products (discovery), it helps me Find the lowest price and then, if Iâm cool with it, it can buy. But Iâm fine pressing the buy button, like ChatGPT, I donât look at that, throw my remote at the TV and scream THATS NOT AGENTIC AAAAHHHGGGđ±. Sure, what he describes is a destination. Thatâs why I have my 5-level charts.
Anyway, this definition allows him to say the TAM is $20T which is all of spend, then this matrix narrows it down to $400B which is SAM and then, because competitors have it all locked up (coming up next) he says - the opportunity is $20B - tiny!
I disagree, the GMV TAM in physical products is $7T, the GMV SAM is $600B - like half of e-commerce today, by next year with multi-cart and other features it will expand to 1.2T. In my world, all of that is a jump ball for AC so SOM=SAM.
Position 2: Legacy competition
He mentions Zillow because heâs big into a house buying example as anti-agentic - ok, I give you this one <sigh>. Then he mentions Amazon and Walmart and, you ready for this, Google Shopping (wut? does he know how Google Shopping works?).
Whatâs hilarious about this argument is Walmart just announced that they are going to sell on ChatGPT. Andrew hasnât talked about that yet. When you make predictions and they go horribly wrong, itâs the best indicator your view of the World, incentives, and Commerce is 180 degrees wrong.
Position 3: Retailers are blocking agents today
Heâs right. Iâve talked to maybe 100 retailers that are blocking agents and you know what? The CEO didnât know. Someone in IT chose Cloudflare and Cloudflare decided âagents bad!â and is blocking them all. But you also know what? When they find out this gets solved in about oh, 24-48hrs.
Also, if you do decide to block agents for some reason (donât do this), you can send, are you sitting down, (whispers) a direct feed of your
In fact, the very ACP protocol talks about this in great detail. Come on Andrew, do better buddy - I knocked that out with my right hand behind my back đ„
Anti-Agentic Naysayer: Andrew Lipsman
What is it with Andrews and hatinâ on agentic. This is the only Naysayer in the bunch that I actually know from ecommerce, so surely heâs going to have more dialed in tighter arguments. Letâs see!
Hereâs his piece from October 6. This is after ChatGPT announced ACP and only 10 days ago. Can we all agree I didnât go cherry pick something from 2024 or something here?
Position 1: Consumers donât want Agentic Commerce
Andrew, letâs do some math here. 800m WAUâs on ChatGPT alone, put that at 1B for all the answer engines.
Andrew: â0% want agenticâ
Scot: Ummm, hey, letâs ask some experts. Who would be good to ask? Letâs start with OpenAI. If only, they released actual usage data. I bet they didnât because 0 is so embarrassing. Wait, this just in!
If only there was a substack that covered this âčïž. Oh wait! There is? Whatâs this - some rando has done math on this and, guess what? Itâs a bit more than 0â
Donât believe me and OpenAI? How about Melisaâs survey of over 1000 us consumers?
How about this small bank called Morgan Stanley?
Position 2: Yep, you guessed it - word thinking.
<sigh> Andrew a very smart guy, surely he doesnât really look around and see 0 people interested or using Agentic Commerce, whatâs up here. Well, conveniently he drops his definition.
Look familiar? Yep, ever Anti-Agentic believerâs foundation is built on a very limited and almost religiously applied (spaces vs tabs!!!) fervor:
AGENTIC MUST HANDLE THE ENTIRE BUYING PROCESS!!!!
-Anti Agentic Enthusiasts screaming loudly as all the shoppers leave their site.
Whatâs ironic about this is Andrew is strongly advising Retail Media Networks execs: âshouldnât waste a single moment preparing for this âthreat.â and this advice is going to get these people REKT.
Hereâs my logic:
RMNs are ads on ecommerce sites. Think of all the stuff on Amazonâs home page and in the search results that keep you from finding the product you are looking for.
All the paths to see an ad for RMN are in the Research and Find part of the funnel. Once you get to a PDP youâve survived the gauntlet and finally can see some non-ad information (the product detail page).
In my definition (wide spectrum of helping the user with agents), they have all started at the Research/Find and until ChatGPT checkout, you would then go to the PDP to transact.
Guess who makes $0 in that flow? RMNs
Also, have I ever mentioned clicks from Google are trending to zero as a reaction to Agentic Commerce? You think that is going to be good for RMNs when all that traffic to the home page goes away and instead itâs replaced by off-site transactions OR Agents sending traffic to PDPs - both of those paths result in $0 for the RMNs.
Andrewâs tight definition of Agentic Commerce has an entire sub-section of ecommerce ignoring the biggest existential crises they have ever faced.
If only there was a big event đ€ where Andrew would snap out of this World viewâŠ.
Position 3: Retailers Donât Want Agentic Commerce
Maybe Andrew didnât see this, but ChatGPT Checkout has two launch partners: Etsy (ok, not a retailer, Iâll give you that, but hold on) andâŠwait for itâŠ.Shopify!
WHAT! I thought retailers donât want it? I imagine Andrew saying to this, âweâll I meant large retailers, like Amazon! I mentioned Amazon!!!
Scot hands Andrew yesterdayâs WSJâ
Does this count? Checkmate.âđ
Actually, the fallback is always: âThat doesnât count because AGENTIC MUST HANDLE THE ENTIRE BUYING PROCESS!!!!â
On the Amazon point letâs parse through that a bit too. Letâs say Amazon never embraces ChatGPT - I think thatâs what theyâll do, until they canât which will happen faster than everyone thinks.
Like Walmart, Amazon is a mix of 1P and 3P inventory. Some facts:
60% of Amazonâs sales are 3P
Amazon 1P is 12m products -they only stock the top sellers (remember this)
Amazon 3P is 588m
1P is 2% of inventory and 3P is 98%
That inventory is by no means locked in at Amazon - those sellers can sell on Walmart, many do and Walmart can put that inventory on ChatGPT. Also most Amazon sellers have a shopify store, they can put that on ChatGPT directly themselves.
Then remember the 1P product is only 12m SKUs and they are the top sellers. You know who has about 100% coverage of those SKUs? Walmart and Target. When Target joins in, Amazon wonât have any unique products (meaning not also on ChatGPT) with the exception of Amazonâs large and growing private label biz (Amazon Basics, etc.) and Whole Foods. But, those are trade-down things like batteries and commodity goods where unique selection doesnât matter.
My point is Andrew makes it seem like Amazonâs inventory is unique and defended, it is not. In fact, hmmm, keep reading, I have some more thoughts.
Agentic Naysayers Scoreboard:
Andrew1: Bad TAM math, weird Agentic definition, doesnât understand why retailers are accidentally blocking bots today
Andrew2: He says 0, rest of world says 50-75% of buyers, says retailers like shopify and walmart have zero interest, yet they signed up, word thinking about Agentic Commerce definition.
Score: ACP: 2, Andrews: 0
Overall score: ACP: 4, Naysayers 0 đ
Seriously though, I hope this review of the Naysayers has helped you think about these arguments and how to approach them when they come up at industry events or inside your company. Iâve now learned to start at the naysayers definitions of things, because it almost always comes back to that. OH, another one Iâve run into is someone thinks when we say Agentic Commerce, weâre talking about the old OpenAI Agent thing that opens a terminal window and does stuff, which is now called Operator. Thatâs a somewhat bad experiment and 100% not good for buying stuff. My Agentic Commerce always starts in an Answer engine and goes from there. Watch for that one.
As a bonus for long posts, I like to throw a little fun surprise in for those of you that made it this far. Here we go. Deep breath.
If I Were Sam Altman for a DayâŠ.
Use your đȘand make me Sam Altman for the day, aside from REKing Amazonâs RMN and taking out $60B in margin by changing internet traffic patterns to go to their PDPs, the second weak-spot is their biggest strength - the marketplace. You can get 60% of Amazonâs sales and 98% coverage of their SKUs by moving the sellers over to also sell on ChatGPT for cheaper (this is the genius of Marc Loreâs original Jet pitch for you OGs out there đ).
This is not hard - but you do need a strategic partner. Itâs super hard though, because they need to be able to spin up a store quickly and deal with whatâs going to be millions of SMBs. Who could we possibly call that knows about that. OH! Iâd call Tobe over at Shopify, he can help with this and, what? Thatâs right, they are already a launch partner of Checkoutđ€Ș
ChatGPT and Shopify create a âupgrade to ChatGPTâ program where an Amazon sellerâs Amazon inventory is pulled over to a Shopify store, that is just a templated home page and a ton of PDPs. The product catalog is then automatically listed on ChatGP.
That gives us the catalog, now how do we make it even more compelling? I know! We offer them a sweetheart deal!! Amazon Sellers have to reduce their prices 5-10% ONLY on their Shopify/ChatGPT store. How can they do this you ask? Well, they can because Amazon charges them 15% AND they all have to spend another 5%+ on RMN over there just to be seen amongst the sea of ad slop. Pay Amazon 20% or pay us 5%, reduce your prices 10% and you net 5% increase in margin - this is like 3Xâing margin for these sellers, they are on-board. Oh yeah, YOU are merchant of record thanks to our friends Stripe (already integrated with Shopify, how handy!) and you get to keep those customers. Amazon doesnât let you do that, never have never will -remarket to them till you drop friends.
To summarize, what did we just do? We copied 600m SKUs from Amazon to ChatGPT at a 10% discount. We have Amazon-scale selection at lower price and we have distribution. buyers are going to love this. Maybe we run a âSave $100 on Prime, come over to ChatGPT Agentic Shopping and also save 10%, price compare to Amazon today!â TV ads on the super bowl.
Oh wait - what about fulfillment?! Good news friends, you get to keep using FBA, and to encourage you to, weâre going to put a âChatGPT verified 2-day shipping!â badge on your listings too. Now you have 600m SKUs, lower price, exact same service level and no Prime membership necessary.
Thatâs Phase I, but Iâll stop there because thereâs only one day đ.
I mention this to help everyone think a little outside the box. We live in a world where the GAM (Google, Amazon, Meta) hasnât really faced a real competitor. OpenAI is the biggest threat these folks have ever seen and is moving at an unbelievable speed with massive massive resources and if you donât think Sam Altman and team understand this stuff and see these weakspots, I think youâre going to really be surprised over the next 2-3 years whatâs about to happenâŠ.
Conclusion to the Trilogy!
Hopefully this series has armed you with all you need to know about ChatGPT Checkout.
In Part 1 - We started at the top, looked at the consumer experience and the merchant experience. We thought about what it means for merchants and Agentic Commerce. Hopefully Iâve convinced some of you that this is a big deal and then the events of this week solidified that (itâs just the start)
In Part 2- We got a bit nerdy, talked about specs, data feeds, etc.
In Part 3 - We covered some of the open questions out there, provided some answers to FAQs weâve gotten and finally heard from the naysayers to make sure weâre looking at both sides of the argument.
Key Takeaways
ChatGPT Instant Checkout and ACP is a tectonic shift in the retail and ecommerce World. Itâs going to create a huge anti-GAM alliance that now includes ChatGPT, Stripe, Shopify, Walmart and Salesforce with more to come.
ChatGPT from the CEO down is committed to ChatGPT Checkout being the most merchant friendly solution available for selling online. This is unique and a huge strategic advantage. I believe it could be the key to really giving Amazon some heartache over the next 2-3 years. Weâll see how that unfolds.
Invest deeply in your product catalog, this is hugely strategic. Do not just dust off your Google Shopping feed and send it to ChatGPT. That is a serious self-inflicted error. Conversely, the biggest strategic move you can make right now is investing in upgrading your product catalog to be 100% Agentic Ready. Before the ChatGPT Checkout news hit, we had just put out Part II of our three-part GenAI Engine Optimization series (part 1 is here and part 2 is here.). In Part III coming next week, we will go into deep details on this. Stay tuned, and read parts 1 and 2 to get ready and understand more of why this matters.
Donât believe the naysayers. Their arguments are flawed because they are based on not understanding retail and ecommerce, or very narrow/limited and aggressively applied word/definition thinking. This has been, and will be, proven out by their predictions being incorrect over and over again.
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Thanks for writing this, it clarifies a lot. This series has been really insightful. Your analisys of agentic commerce and the open questions around ChatGPT checkout is spot on. I agree with your perspective completly. Keep up the great work.