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There was no shortage of AI-related announcements from retailers in 2025.

From mass retailers to apparel brands, companies across the industry laid bare their efforts to utilize — and adapt to — AI internally and in consumer-facing ways. 

But despite the seemingly endless AI mentions from retailers in 2025, the industry is falling behind others. 

Sectors such as telecommunications and finance outpace manufacturing and retail in adoption of the technology, according to the 2025 AI industry adoption study by the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. 

The outpacing of retail is surprising, “given the number of potential use cases around customer experience, workforce management, marketing, supply chain, and pricing,” the report noted. Additionally, the return on investment is slower for retail, likely due to its more complex physical operations compared to other industries. 

Still, companies like Amazon seem eager to use AI to streamline internal processes and make work more efficient. Additionally, retailers such as Target are reading the tea leaves, showing some consumers are using external AI platforms for product research and recommendations, rapidly changing their shopping behaviors.

Between Nov. 1 and Dec. 1, AI-driven U.S. e-commerce traffic increased 758% year over year, according to Adobe’s Holiday Shopping report from this year. Specifically on Cyber Monday, AI traffic to U.S. retail sites grew 670%. 

However, the actual base of users remains modest when looking at larger e-commerce retail traffic, per Adobe’s findings.

“It’s still a very small base,” Nikki Baird, vice president of strategy and product at retail technology provider Aptos, told Retail Dive. “We’re like on the long tail before the inflection point still. But having said all of that, I think retailers should be very worried about it because they lose complete control and visibility of everything that … took that consumer to that particular product page.”

This may be the reason why some mass retailers — those with the capital to spend — have been building their own AI agents in addition to making deals with external platforms like OpenAI’s ChatGPT, where some shoppers are choosing to do their own product research.

If you can’t beat them, join them. And indeed, many retailers have done just that.

Whether or not it’s yielded a good ROI for retailers, 2025 was awash with AI news. Here’s a list of companies that made concrete generative AI announcements throughout the year.

Walmart

Walmart launched a generative AI assistant for merchants called Wally that helps with tasks such as data entry and advanced calculations. The retailer also debuted a customer-facing AI agent dubbed Sparky to help plan purchases and summarize product reviews, as well as marketplace seller AI tools to speed up go-to-market rates.

The moves feed into a larger, centralized “super agent” strategy from Walmart that integrates similar technology across the business. In addition to working with OpenAI for employee training courses on AI, Walmart also enabled the ChatGPT Instant Checkout feature for chat users to shop Walmart products without leaving the platform. 

Target

Target expanded its generative AI strategy in 2025 as incoming CEO Michael Fiddelke has made technology a core priority for the company’s turnaround. The retailer has utilized the technology internally to speed up merchandise ideation and review applications for third-party marketplace sellers.

The retailer launched an in-platform ChatGPT shopping app, allowing customers to make multi-item purchases, buy fresh food products and select from several fulfillment options. For the holidays, Target also debuted an AI- powered gift finder tool on its own e-commerce website. 

Ashley

Furniture retailer Ashley debuted the ability for customers to buy products directly through the AI search platform Perplexity and pay using PayPal. Consumers can also use it to ask for product recommendations. 

Amazon

E-commerce giant Amazon updated a seller tool it previously debuted in 2024 with new agentic AI capabilities. The updated version, available to U.S. merchants initially, can monitor inventory levels, analyze demand patterns, optimize shipments and more. 

Amazon also released a conversational assistant for marketers that uses AI to help with product and audience research, brainstorming and storyboarding, and more. 

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