2025 is wrapping up, and AI has blown up everywhere. AI images, AI videos, AI ads, AI listings, AI product research — you name it. But is it really as game-changing as everyone says?
I’m not super technical, so here’s my thought:
What if we just had a simple AI agent that handles all the boring stuff?
Throw your data at it — analytics, PPC reports, product research, listing performance — and let it actually tell you what to do.
Right now we have AI tools for images, ads, and basic research.
But what would a real, mature AI agent need to include to actually help Amazon sellers? What features would you actually want?
Curious to hear from people who actually build this stuff.
I’m tired of all the hype — I just want something that actually saves time
Answers (5)
Use it for boring work: editing images, cleaning data, writing first-draft copy.
But always double-check what it gives you.
The value isn’t the AI — it’s how you use it.
– Here’s what I actually want an AI agent to do
None of this works without solid data, though.
It needs API access or reliable scraping to be useful.
I use AI for images daily — SD, ComfyUI, nanobanana, Kling, etc.
The progress is insane. Nanobanana Pro can turn a simple prompt into full 3-view product shots in an afternoon. Sora2 is already huge for TikTok.
But for actual decisions?
You have to give it good context. If your prompt is vague, the analysis is garbage.
AI speeds up work, but you still need to understand your market.
Amazon selling is just product research, sourcing, math, pricing, PPC, listings, customer service, inventory, account health.
Almost all of it is repeatable, rules-based work — exactly what AI eats for breakfast.
AI can run 24/7, never misses trends, and remembers way more data than any human.
The real question is cost: human salary vs. AI subscription.
Humans still win at strategy, brand decisions, and supplier relationships.
But everything else? AI is coming for it fast.
If you want a real, usable AI agent, the expensive part isn’t the model.
It’s getting fresh, accurate data.
Three ways agents get info:
Real talk: The AI brain is cheap.
The data pipeline is what makes it costly, especially for small sellers.