New research from Tidio reveals a significant disconnect in how artificial intelligence influences consumer behavior versus how that influence is measured through traditional web analytics. While McKinsey research indicates half of consumers now rely on AI as their primary or preferred source for product research, Contentsquare’s analysis of actual retail web traffic shows AI-referred sessions account for only 0.2% of total visits. Both figures are accurate according to Tidio’s analysis, and the gap between them represents what the company calls a ‘dark AI’ phenomenon where AI shapes purchase decisions at a scale current attribution methods cannot capture.
The implications of this measurement gap are substantial for e-commerce businesses. Similarweb data shows that ChatGPT-referred U.S. retail sessions convert at 11.4%, the highest conversion rate of any measured channel. This suggests that the small percentage of tagged AI referrals represents high-intent traffic from a much larger pool of AI-influenced customer journeys that remain invisible to traditional analytics. As consumers increasingly turn to AI assistants for product discovery and research, brands may be missing critical insights into how purchase decisions are actually being made.
Industry projections underscore the growing importance of understanding this AI influence gap. McKinsey projects $750 billion in U.S. revenue will flow through AI-powered search by 2028, with brands that fail to prepare risking 20–50% of their traditional search traffic. Meanwhile, Morgan Stanley estimates AI agents will influence $190–$385 billion in U.S. e-commerce spending by 2030. These figures suggest that the current 0.2% attribution rate dramatically underestimates AI’s actual impact on consumer behavior and purchasing patterns.
The research highlights the need for new measurement approaches as AI becomes increasingly embedded in consumer decision-making processes. With AI shaping half of purchase decisions according to McKinsey’s findings, businesses must develop strategies to account for this ‘dark AI’ influence that traditional web analytics fail to capture. The full research report provides detailed analysis of this phenomenon and its implications for e-commerce strategy in an increasingly AI-driven marketplace.
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