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TDMC (The Digital Media Collective), a certified Google Premier Partner, Meta Business Partner, and Shopify Select Partner shares their analysis of Google’s AI in Action conference held in Cape Town in July, highlighting the direct impact on South African e-commerce businesses.
The Google event, themed AI is Now, demonstrated practical AI applications that will reshape how South African consumers shop online and how merchants operate their stores. The conference featured live demonstrations of Google’s Gemini AI models and new tools that can automate complex marketing and customer service tasks.
Key TDMC team members attended the one-day conference which cemented many of their own beliefs in the power of AI in the e-commerce marketplace and galvanised their commitment to harnessing many of the new innovations shared at this gathering of innovators.
“We’re seeing the end of AI experimentation and the start of AI implementation,” says TDMC media director Caleb Shepard. “Our clients who operate Shopify stores need to understand that AI isn’t coming, it’s here – and their competitors are already using it.”
Google announced several developments that directly affect online retail, including:
“This commitment to humanising the shopping process should serve to build trust for consumers, a crucial sentiment in building loyalty,” says Shepard.
Speaking at the event, country director for Google South Africa, Kabelo Makwane, said: “We believe in the immense potential of AI to transform businesses while uplifting the economy, and significantly improving lives across South Africa.” He said this was evident in additional health sector and educational commitments the global giant is intent on making in the region.
The AI race between Google, OpenAI’s ChatGPT, and Meta is intensifying around e-commerce features. While Google focuses on search and shopping integration, ChatGPT is developing checkout capabilities that could bypass traditional e-commerce platforms. Meanwhile, Meta is building AI shopping directly into Instagram and Facebook.
TDMC’s analysis shows that businesses using all three platforms strategically are seeing 35% higher conversion rates compared to single-platform approaches. As Shepard elaborates: “The retail winners won’t be those who choose one AI platform. Their success requires understanding how Google’s search AI, Meta’s social commerce AI, and Shopify’s merchant tools work together – or investing with agencies that have the know-how and inroads with these providers to maximise these advancements on their behalf.”
For consumers, AI will enable:
For merchants, the changes require:
TDMC’s technical analysis identifies three immediate requirements for South African e-commerce businesses:
The agency’s integrated approach combines Google’s search advertising AI with Meta’s social commerce capabilities and Shopify’s merchant tools. “We pride ourselves on being at the forefront of innovation in e-commerce, our agility and first-to-know status is where our clients reap the rewards,” says Shepard.
Shepard recommends South African e-commerce businesses take three immediate steps:
The agency predicts that businesses slow to adopt AI will face increasing pressure as competitors automate pricing, personalise experiences, and reduce customer acquisition costs through AI-powered targeting. “Google’s education initiative alone – where they are partnering with the Raspberry Pi Foundation to train 4,200 teachers and reach 210,000 students across five provinces – shows they’re investing in South Africa’s AI future,” says Shepard. “Businesses that start now and work with their agencies to implement robust AI protocols will have a significant advantage as these capabilities become standard.”