What Happened
New data from Adobe — based on direct transaction data from more than 1 trillion visits to U.S. retail websites — shows a dramatic shift in how AI-driven traffic performs compared to traditional channels.
The headline number: AI-driven visits converted 42% better than non-AI traffic in March 2026. A year ago, AI traffic was 38% less likely to result in a purchase. That's a complete reversal in 12 months.
Traffic from AI sources increased 393% year-over-year in Q1 and 269% in March alone. Engagement metrics are also up: 12% higher engagement, 48% more time on site, and 13% more pages per visit.
Consumer adoption is accelerating. Adobe's survey of 5,000+ U.S. consumers found that 39% have used AI for shopping, and of those, 85% said it improved the experience. Two-thirds believe AI tools provide accurate results.
Vivek Pandya, director of Adobe Digital Insights, noted that AI traffic is now converting better than non-AI traffic across channels including paid search and email marketing.
The caveat: while traffic and conversions are growing, many retail sites still aren't optimized for AI visibility — especially on product pages. Adobe's report suggests significant untapped potential for retailers who invest in AI-readiness now.
Key Takeaways
- AI traffic to U.S. retail sites surged 393% YoY in Q1; conversions flipped from -38% to +42% versus non-AI traffic.
- Engagement metrics up across the board: +12% engagement, +48% time on site, +13% pages per visit.
- 39% of consumers have used AI for shopping; 85% of those say it improved the experience.
- Most retail websites remain under-optimized for AI visibility — a growing competitive gap.
The ONmetrics Take
AI search changes are real, but don't abandon traditional SEO.
1. AI Overviews cite sources — Be the best answer, not just an answer 2. Brand mentions matter — Get on Reddit, YouTube, industry pubs 3. First-party data wins — Your insights can't be AI-scraped
The bottom line: A year ago, the narrative was "AI traffic doesn't convert." That's now dead. For London, Ontario retailers — and any business selling online — the question isn't whether AI traffic matters. It's whether your site shows up when someone asks ChatGPT or Perplexity for a recommendation. If your product pages aren't structured for AI visibility, you're leaving money on the table. We're already building this into client strategies.