You open ChatGPT. You ask for the best headphones under £100. Instead of a dry list of search results, it gives you a shortlist of options, complete with images, reviews, and direct links to buy, all tailored to you.
Welcome to the future of product discovery. OpenAI just turned ChatGPT into a shopping assistant. And honestly? It could shake up everything from SEO to affiliate marketing.
Here’s what you need to know.
OpenAI has rolled out shopping features in ChatGPT.
That means:
- You can ask ChatGPT for product recommendations, and it’ll serve up curated picks across fashion, beauty, homeware, and electronics.
- You’ll see images, reviews, and pricing, with links to buy directly from third-party retailers.
- It uses memory (for Pro/Plus users) to personalise suggestions based on your previous chats. So if you’re always talking about mid-century interiors or Korean skincare, expect ChatGPT to remember.
- Trending searches + autocomplete are now a thing (much like Google’s autosuggest.)
It’s like Google Shopping, Amazon search, and TikTok’s For You Page had a super-intelligent baby.
No ads (yet). But don’t get comfy.
OpenAI says it’s not taking a cut from purchases right now. But they’ve also said they’re open to “tasteful” affiliate models basically charging for purchases, not priority placement.
That distinction is key. If they pull it off, it could change how trust is built in search-based recommendations. No more ad-heavy clutter. Just results that (allegedly) put user intent first.
That said, anyone who’s ever worked in PPC knows how slippery that slope can be. If affiliate fees become the model, marketers will have a whole new frontier to optimise for and ethical debates will sure to follow.
What this means for digital marketers (aka you)
Here’s the big shift: ChatGPT isn’t just answering questions anymore, it’s guiding decisions.
That means if your products aren’t findable via structured metadata, they might not exist in this ecosystem at all.
According to OpenAI’s product discovery guide, you’ll need:
- Clean, consistent metadata (pricing, descriptions, categories, images, etc.)
- Trust signals (reviews, ratings, FAQs.)
- Fast, mobile-friendly landing pages.
But here’s the kicker... ChatGPT isn’t just recommending what to buy. It’s also starting to recommend what not to buy.
Yep. Some users are already reporting that the chatbot highlights poor products and steers users away from them. Imagine spending six figures on brand awareness, influencers, and PPC only for ChatGPT to eliminate your product because… well, the reviews suck.
If your product isn’t genuinely solving problems and delighting customers, AI will sniff it out and call it out!
That means:
- You can’t outspend bad UX anymore.
- You can’t disguise flaws with flashy creative.
- You definitely can’t afford to ignore customer feedback.
This is the era of product-first marketing. No more papering over cracks. You’ve got to exceed expectations, fix what's broken, and earn your spot in the recommendation engine. Because if you don’t? ChatGPT will tell people to avoid you.
And that brings us to the next big piece of the puzzle...
The unique angle
This is where things get really interesting, and a bit murky.
ChatGPT’s memory function is what sets this apart from traditional search. It’s not just suggesting “top-rated moisturiser” it’s suggesting your next moisturiser, based on how you’ve interacted with the bot before.
For marketers, this is a dream. You’re no longer blasting the same message to everyone. You’re appearing in exactly the right moment, to exactly the right person, with exactly the right product.
But for users, it’s a privacy grey area. Will people be happy with ChatGPT remembering their style, budget, and preferences? Or will it feel invasive?
Expect the debate to get loud, especially if/when monetisation comes into play.
So, what do you need to do next?
If you’re in eCommerce, digital marketing, or product content:
- Audit your product data. Make sure it’s clean, complete, and structured.
- Optimise for discoverability. You’re not just competing on SERPs anymore, you’re competing in AI-driven chat results. (See our latest blog Is SEO dead because of AI?)
- Follow OpenAI’s guidelines. Seriously. They’re not fluff. They’re the new rulebook.
- Get ready for affiliate models. Even if they’re not live yet, they’re coming.
- Keep one eye on personalisation ethics. Your brand’s stance on data and memory will matter. (Another good blog on this - Trust is the new currency of success.)
- Fix bad products, fast. AI doesn’t care about your ad spend if the product sucks.
Conversational commerce is here, and the platforms that know your customers best are about to own the entire buying journey.
The question is: will your brand be there when they ask?