Shoppable Ads Flopped at First. Here’s What Agentic Commerce Execs Can Learn
Arjun Bhargava
Co-founder and CEO @ Rye
Aug 26, 2025
1 Minute Read
It took 15 years for shoppable ads to get momentum. Agentic shopping can mature faster if it absorbs the relevant lessons about interface, checkout, and trust.
1. The Interface Problem: Interruptions Don’t Sell
Some of the biggest early hype around shoppable ads came from the idea that you could click to buy what you saw on screen, whether it was an outfit on a TV character or a gadget in a livestream. The first clickable TV ads debuted way back in 2010.
In practice, the user experience was often clunky and interruptive. When you’re watching a show, you probably don’t want to stop, dig through a complicated menu, and complete a purchase. TV watching is for relaxing, not shopping. Because shoppable ads required interaction at the wrong moment, many consumers simply ignored them like just another commercial interruption.
Lesson for agentic commerce: Experiences win when they fit in, rather than disrupting attention. Agents succeed by surfacing the right product at the right time, when a consumer is actually interested in making a purchase.
2. The Checkout Problem: Cart Abandonment Is Real
3. The Trust Problem: Skepticism Lingers
Agentic Commerce Has the Advantage — If We Learn the Lessons
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