EcommerceIndustry ContextTuesday, April 28, 20263 min read

Ecommerce Leaders Invest Big in AI – But 73% Admit They’re Not Ready for What’s Next

Tamebay16h agoamazonebaywalmart
Ecommerce Leaders Invest Big in AI – But 73% Admit They’re Not Ready for What’s Next
Executive Summary

Ecommerce companies now spend an average of $291,626 on AI annually, expected to rise 11% to $323,886 by end of 2026, but 73% of leaders admit they're not ready for rapid AI advancement. Top barriers include ethical concerns (29%), legacy systems (28%), and team resistance (27%).

Our Take

The readiness gap means competitors investing in AI infrastructure and training now will have significant advantages over those just buying AI tools. Focus on process optimization before automation - broken workflows become expensive broken automated workflows.

What This Means

This represents the early stages of AI disruption in ecommerce, where operational readiness will separate winners from losers more than technology access alone.

Key Takeaways

Audit your current operational processes before implementing AI tools - identify and fix workflow bottlenecks that automation would amplify.

Allocate 30% of AI budget to team training and change management, not just technology purchases, to avoid the 73% who aren't ready.

Bottom Line

$324K average AI spend by 2026, but 73% unprepared means opportunity gaps.

Source Lens

Industry Context

Useful background context, but lower-priority than direct platform, community, or operator intelligence.

Impact Level

medium

$324K average AI spend by 2026, but 73% unprepared means opportunity gaps.

Key Stat / Trigger

73% of ecommerce leaders admit they're not ready for AI advancement

Focus on the operational implication, not just the headline.

Relevant For
Brand SellersAgencies

Full Coverage

Ecommerce organisations are dramatically increasing their investment in AI, but most are unprepared for the pace of technological change, according to new research from Pattern Group, a leader in accelerating brands across global ecommerce marketplaces through proprietary technology and AI.

While AI spending now averages $291,626 globally and is expected to rise by 11% to $323,886 by the end of 2026, three-quarters (73%) of ecommerce leaders admit their organisations are not ready for what comes next.

The research highlights a widening readiness gap between growing financial investment and the operational, cultural, and technological maturity required to scale AI across ecommerce operations.

The findings are detailed in Pattern’s report, From Insights to Execution in AI-Powered Commerce, based on a survey of 1,000 senior business leaders across the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, and the United Arab Emirates.

Pattern’s latest study reveals several organisational barriers that are preventing brands from moving beyond experimentation into full‑scale AI deployment. The most commonly cited obstacles include ethical or regulatory concerns (29%), legacy systems and outdated infrastructure (28%), and resistance to change within teams (27%).

Collectively, these constraints create significant friction in organisations’ ability to integrate AI technologies into complex ecommerce workflows – from customer service and merchandising to forecasting and supply chain optimisation.

Addressing these barriers requires not just technical investment but a deeper focus on education and topdown advocacy, enabling businesses to shift AI from a perceived challenge to a genuine competitive advantage. The research also found stark regional differences in the challenges faced by ecommerce leaders.

In the UK, resistance to change emerged as the biggest barrier (32%), indicating that cultural adoption and internal alignment remain key hurdles. In contrast, US leaders pointed to ethical and regulatory scrutiny (35%) as their top concern, reflecting heightened governance expectations and pressures within the world’s second-largest ecommerce market.

Every brand we work with is investing in AI. The ones getting real returns are the ones who treated the operational and cultural work as seriously as the tech. You can’t automate your way past a broken process — you just get a faster version of the same problem.

That’s the readiness gap this research is capturing, and it’s bigger than the headline number suggests. – David Jennison, EU Managing Director, Pattern Despite their concerns, ecommerce leaders remain confident that AI will deliver immediate commercial value.

A striking 87% of respondents expect AI‑powered search to positively impact sales in this year, with smaller teams reporting the most significant gains in productivity and efficiency. This optimism underscores AI’s increasingly pivotal role in driving the next wave of ecommerce performance – even as organisations race to close the widening readiness gap.

Original Source

This briefing is based on reporting from Tamebay. Use the original post for full primary-source context.

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