Amazon is rapidly experimenting with new use cases of Generative AI to help drive more sales and improve the customer experience. One of their main products is Rufus, a conversational shopping assistant embedded directly into the search experience.
What do we at alby think about this experience? Is this something other brands and retailers should adopt? Read below for our review.
If you type a long-form question into the search bar on the Amazon app, the Rufus shopping assistant will automatically pop up to answer your question and show you relevant products:
Rufus then acts similarly to ChatGPT, allowing shoppers to ask follow up questions and providing more information.
However, there is one big problem with Amazon’s Rufus: the experience is not intuitive. Very few (if any) shoppers will even know they can use the search bar this way.
Amazon is “overloading” the search bar to try to do two things at once: (1) simple quick searching for products (the old search experience) and (2) long-form complex questions (the new Rufus thing). This is also the strategy that Google is taking with search with their “AI Overview” under search results. Overloading the search bar often confuses shoppers
At alby, we have experimented with this type of experience on various e-commerce websites. We found that less than 0.1% of shoppers type a long-form query into the search bar (even when prompted to do so). Muscle memory is real and 25 years of keyword-based searching has trained shoppers to search in a very specific way.
This means that Amazon’s Rufus will either (1) change shopper behavior to expect search bars to support these types of long-form queries (we are skeptical, but it is possible) or (2) Amazon will abandon this kind of experience for something else (we believe this is more likely).
Amazon has also started to experiment with embedding Rufus directly in product detail pages (PDPs) and automatically predicting an initial set of questions (similar to the alby experience):
Based on our experimentation, we believe that this use case will generate more traction compared to the search bar experience. Embedding Rufus directly into PDPs ensures that customers receive relevant assistance exactly when they need it—while they are considering a purchase. This contextual help can guide customers through their decision-making process without requiring them to leave the page or disrupt their shopping flow.
We believe experiences like this, that don’t “overload” the search bar, are more likely to succeed with shoppers. We have seen 10x more engagement in these types of embedded experiences.
Rufus is a great step forward for using Conversational AI in e-commerce experiences and will certainly impact shopper expectations going forward. However, we are still in the early days of figuring out the right user experience for these AI shopping assistants. While the search bar integration may face challenges due to long ingrained shopper behavior, the embedded experience on product pages shows promise and could become a key feature in enhancing the online journey for Amazon shoppers.
Brands and retailers should take note of these developments coming from and consider how similar integrations could benefit their customers.