Skip to main content

Is Amazon tweaking its search algorithms with a new A.I.-driven shopping site?

Amazon is testing out a new site called Scout designed to shift customers away from traditional search — while collecting even more data on their habits, demographics, and preferences.

Amazon hasn’t started promoting the site yet, but CNBC first reported on it this week, followed closely by Business Insider. The company is using its proprietary machine learning technology to absorb customers’ preferences: Shoppers can like (thumbs up) or dislike (thumbs down) a product, and Amazon’s artificial intelligence responds by showing other products based on their choices. The site is currently accessible via amazon.com/Scout and on the Amazon App as well.

Scout is currently available for seven product categories: Home furniture, kitchen and dining products, women’s shoes, home décor, patio furniture, lighting, and bedding. It’s no stretch of the imagination, however, to speculate how Amazon’s engineers might use this vast amount of data to turn everyday product recommendations into a more personalized and highly specific experience on its home site.

“Amazon uses imagery from across its robust selection to extract thousands of visual attributes for showing customers a variety of items so they can select their preferences as they go,” Amazon said in a statement.

The company says that Scout is for shoppers who might not know what they want, or don’t know how to craft a written description that might yield the desired results. It’s also a brilliant (if a little bit diabolical) way to compete with the fledgling commerce sites that have exploded at visual platforms such as Instagram and Pinterest.

The resulting aesthetic at Scout is “A beautiful and inspirational image feed, which gives customers the ability to explore a wide range of products in a playful and personalized manner with just a few clicks,” according to Amazon.

Shares of Stitch Fix were reported to have dropped following reports of Scout’s test phase. Some analysts surmised that other online retailers might be spooked as well, given that shares of Williams-Sonoma and Pier 1 Imports also took a hit as the site was announced. For Amazon, Scout represents yet another new market for a company that is dabbling in everything from subscriptions to streaming platforms to grocery delivery, let alone its championship over the smart speaker market.

Editors' Recommendations

Clayton Moore
Clayton Moore’s interest in technology is deeply rooted in the work of writers like Warren Ellis, Cory Doctorow and Neal…
Amazon’s Dash Wand shopping device is about to lose its magic
amazon to end support for its dash wand shopping device

Amazon will end support for its Dash Wand device on July 21.

The online shopping giant launched the Dash Wand in 2014, allowing AmazonFresh shoppers to order food items by scanning bar codes on products that you have, but may run out of soon. If you didn't have a bar code to scan, you could simply place an order by speaking into the Wand’s microphone. The second version, which launched in 2017, also answered any questions that you fired at it, with the replies spoken by Amazon’s digital assistant, Alexa.

Read more
Amazon pushes again to rid its shopping site of counterfeit goods
Amazon Prime Day packages

Amazon is reportedly stepping up its fight against third-party merchants who sell counterfeit goods on its platform.

The renewed effort includes handing more information about fake items to law enforcement -- and passing it on more quickly -- so they can better deal with offenders, a Reuters report said on Monday, January 13.

Read more
Amazon bets big on its internet-from-space plan with major new facility
Jeff Bezos

SpaceX and OneWeb, among others, have already started launching so-called internet satellites into space, and Amazon wants to do the same.

Despite lacking regulatory approval to deploy even one satellite, let alone the 3,236 that it wants to launch, Amazon has just announced plans for a major research and development center, as well as a manufacturing base, for its ambitious Project Kuiper initiative.

Read more