Shopify Brings Agentic Commerce to ChatGPT — So What Happens to the Website?

Shopify Brings Agentic Commerce To Chatgpt So What Happens To The Website
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Shopify just announced a partnership with OpenAI that enables direct buying inside ChatGPT. Instead of being redirected to a storefront, a shopper can open ChatGPT, browse products, add to cart, and check out without even seeing the actual website.

Shopify calls it “agentic commerce” — the idea that AI doesn’t just recommend products or provide links to sites, but actually completes the entire buyer’s journey.

“People are discovering products in AI conversations, not just through search or ads,” explained Shopify VP of Product Vanessa Lee. “This will let our merchants show up naturally in those moments and give shoppers a way to buy without breaking their flow.”

That’s great marketing for Shopify. But for hosts, it may be a preview of a next-gen customer journey where a client’s website may never be visited at all.

The New Role of the Website

For two decades, SEO determined whether a business could be found, as keywords reigned supreme. But an AI-first internet is forcing traditional search to fade into oblivion: Already a quarter of all websites created between 2013 and 2023 no longer exist, and traffic from search engines to websites could fall by roughly 25% by 2026.

Google’s AI Overviews were a first sign, Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) was the next, and now, Shopify’s integration with ChatGPT shows how the entire search and transaction can live inside the very chatbot that users already rely on for everyday tasks.

Harvard Business Review argues that AI agents are already the primary discovery channel for commerce. And the fact is that agents don’t care about thoughtfully designed websites. It just wants structured data.

If it comes to a point where an AI agent handles the search, the comparison, and the checkout for every eCommerce store, the buyer may never even know a site exists. All they’ll know is that they found a product, liked it, and checked out in the same chat box.

So what’s the website for?

No one is arguing the site disappears — yet. Instead, it’s about how its role is shifting. Experts — including digital agency Olive & Co. — predict the website will move away from being the main traffic driver and instead serve as something like a validation checkpoint.

In this model, AI engines guide users through most of the buyer’s journey. The website becomes the “data hub” behind it — the source where all critical information lives, including product details, contact info, FAQs, knowledge bases, live chat, self-service portals, and so on.

Hosts Have Seen This Before

We’ve already seen a shift from websites in the past few years — just on much smaller scales:

  • Social media shops: Instagram, Facebook Marketplace, and TikTok storefronts led SMBs to question the need for sites
  • Link-in-bio tools: Platforms like Linktree showed content creators how to get audiences through a single “link in bio,” bypassing websites altogether
  • Marketplaces: Amazon, Etsy, and eBay have already long captured sales for merchants who haven’t built and hosted their own stores

These changed the definition of the website, but the era of AI is different. That’s what makes the hosting pitch harder. So providers may want to prepare to reposition sites as proof of credibility.

This means making sure client sites’ schemas are readable and browsable by agents, and if they sell products, that their entire catalog and checkout process can be understood by bots as easily as by their human counterparts.

Otherwise, clients will eventually ask the question: “If nobody’s visiting my site, why am I paying for hosting?”