Home AdExchanger Talks Retail’s AI Moment Is (Almost) Here

Retail’s AI Moment Is (Almost) Here

SHARE:
Jeff Cohen, chief business development officer, Skai

Despite headline-grabbing moves, such as Walmart’s recent partnership with OpenAI and the integration of PayPal Payments into ChatGPT, agentic commerce is still in its nascent stages.

But that doesn’t mean it’s too early for retail media networks to prepare for a future of AI-driven commerce, says Jeff Cohen, chief business development officer at omnichannel commerce media platform Skai, on this week’s episode of AdExchanger Talks.

Test everything, talk to everyone, dig into the data, scout new potential partners, and move fast, he says.

“Those things are not any different than how you should have looked at business before AI became popular two years ago,” says Cohen. “It’s just that the speed of business is moving faster and faster.”

Cohen joined Skai in September after nearly four years at Amazon as the “principal evangelist” for Amazon Ads, which involved explaining ad tech to marketers in plain English and building community among advertisers and partners.

That’s a prime pulpit, so to speak. Amazon is the largest retail media player globally.

So why leave a giant for something smaller and scrappier? Because, well, reality is omnichannel.

“We’ve been talking about the funnel collapsing for a long period of time,” he says.

Brands can’t afford to focus on a single channel. They need to connect the dots across search, social, video and retail to understand and influence the customer journey. In other words, down with data siloes.

The real advantage for marketers today is in combining their first-party data across channels, Cohen says.

“When you look at [these signals] in aggregate,” he says, “you start to get a better understanding of what your customer actually looks like versus what you thought your customer looked like.”

Also in this episode: What marketers can learn from New Balance’s influencer-driven comeback, why being polite to AIs might actually matter and why so many AI assistants have human names (including Celeste, Skai’s generative AI marketing agent).

Must Read

Comic: CTV Tracking

Upfronts Advertisers Say They Want Outcomes – And Amazon Licks Its Chops

Amazon has packaged a handful of upgrades to its ads measurement solutions, obviously catered to TV and streaming media advertisers.

AdExchanger Senior Editors Anthony Vargas and Alyssa Boyle.

POSSIBLE 2026: AdExchanger's Hot Takes

AdExchanger Senior Editors Alyssa Boyle and Anthony Vargas share their takeaways from three days chatting about agentic AI at POSSIBLE.

Reddit Reports A 75% Boost In Q1 Ad Revenue As It Reaches For 100 Million Daily US Users

Generative AI search has pushed traffic off a cliff across most of the internet, but not on social platforms. Reddit included.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

POSSIBLE 2026: Can AI Help Agencies Finally Break Down Those Silos?

Domenic Venuto, indie agency Horizon Media’s chief product and data officer, sat down with AdExchanger during POSSIBLE at the Fontainebleau in Miami to unpack the role of AI in today’s media and advertising landscape.

Google Touts Its AI Ad Tech Adoption And New AI Max Features

Google announced new features and ad types for AI Max, its AI-based bidding product for search and shopping or sponsored product ads. The company also touted “hundreds of thousands” of advertisers using AI Max.

Hand pressing blue AI button on keyboard. Digital collage of artificial intelligence interface.

Meta’s Ad Machine Is Purring, So Why Did Its Stock Drop?

Meta’s Q1 call sounded like an AI and hardware pitch, but under the hood it was still about one thing: investing in AI to squeeze more money out of its ads business.