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Gap says it will launch checkout within Google's Gemini, in an AI first from a major fashion company

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Why This Matters

Gap's partnership with Google's Gemini marks a significant shift towards AI-driven commerce, allowing customers to purchase products directly within the AI platform. This move highlights the growing importance of conversational AI in retail, enabling brands to engage consumers more seamlessly and stay competitive in a digital-first shopping environment.

Key Takeaways

Gap is partnering with Google's Gemini to allow shoppers to check out directly within the AI platform, making it the first major fashion company to work directly with the tech company to fuel agentic commerce, CNBC has learned exclusively.

The partnership comes as more and more shoppers move away from traditional search and toward artificial intelligence platforms for product discovery, forcing retailers to rethink their approach to marketing to ensure they're staying competitive and not missing out on customer demand.

"It's not just keyword search anymore, right? It's conversations, and so we need to be relevant to that," Gap's chief technology officer, Sven Gerjets, told CNBC in an interview. "Is it, you know, 'I'm trying to figure out what to do for a wedding, what are the things I should be looking at?' Or, 'I've got a job interview, are there some styles I should wear?' All of those things we need to become relevant to."

When shoppers are hunting for a new pair of jeans or the perfect oversized hoodie on Gemini, and the platform thinks some of Gap's products could be a fit, customers will be able to buy products from Gap's house of brands directly within the platform without having to be redirected to the brand's website.

The information about the product that is surfaced to shoppers won't be crawled from Gap's website but will be details the retailer provided to Gemini in advance so it can control for accuracy, continue to collect customer data and have better control over the customer experience.

If the shopper decides to buy the product, they'll check out via Google Pay, and Gap will handle the shipping and any other logistics.

The retailer said it's still testing the capabilities.

Gerjets said the company expects to deploy the service to customers "imminently."