AI shopping

April 20, 2026

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Will Shoppers Ever Stop Second-Guessing AI Brand Recommendations?

A recent Idea Grove study unearthed an interesting and significant statistic: When consumers are presented with an unknown brand following an AI recommendation, nearly all of them (98%) pivoted to verify that recommendation from other trusted sources.

The study, “How Consumers Verify AI-Recommended Brands,” outlined that despite massive effort, energy, and spend being allocated to AI ranking and optimization coming from brands and retailers, the average shopper is still highly skeptical of the results generated by artificial intelligence models.

“The other 98% go looking for something more: reviews, search rankings, press coverage, a website that holds up. The AI recommendation opens the door. What’s on the other side of it determines whether anyone walks through,” the study authors reported.

Other interesting findings pulled from the report:

  • Customer reviews are the No. 1 trust signal after AI recommendations: Respondents ranked customer reviews in the top slot (78%) regarding trust signals following an AI brand or product recommendation, even though these can also be subject to fraud or misrepresentation. Next were Google rankings (71%), business longevity (69%), and press coverage (58%).
  • Nearly half of U.S. shoppers unaware that AI recommendations are often influenced by agencies: About 48% of those polled did not know that hired agencies were frequently paid to influence AI results, with that stat increasing to 65% among older Americans.
  • A generational trust and usage divide exists: While over two-thirds of Gen Zers use ChatGPT for brand research (compared to just 30% of baby boomers), when it comes to trust, younger shoppers are more likely to trust AI recommendations (43% of zoomers and 39% of millennials, versus 18% of boomers).

Skepticism Over AI Brand, Product Recommendations Remains High, But Shows Signs of Abating

Overall skepticism was quite high across the board, regardless of demographic concerns, although that trust is growing, particularly with younger consumers — a third (32%) of respondents indicate that they trust AI brand recommendations more than they had a year prior, while just 16% indicated less trust versus last year. A majority (52%) were not persuaded in one direction or the other.

The largest bloc? Described as pragmatic skeptics (40%) by Idea Grove, these shoppers find AI useful but remain skeptical. Next up: those more skeptical, who believe that certain brands may have “gamed” the algorithm to present themselves in a more positive light (27%). A full 19% said they do not trust AI recommendations whatsoever, while the smallest cohort (15%) placed their faith in AI recommendations as being the best options.

“AI is changing where people start their brand research, but it hasn’t changed what convinces them to buy,” said Scott Baradell, founder and CEO of Idea Grove.

“Consumers treat an AI recommendation as a starting point, then fall back on the same signals that have always built trust — reviews, press coverage, search rankings, a credible web presence. What’s striking is that AI systems themselves were trained on those same signals. The evidence that makes a brand credible to a careful human buyer is the same evidence that makes it credible to the machines. A recommendation opens the door. What brands have built before that moment determines whether anyone walks through it,” he added.

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"Will shoppers ever stop second-guessing AI recommendations? What will be the turning point, or necessary missing element, if so?"
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Nicholas Morine



Discussion Questions

Will shoppers ever stop second-guessing AI recommendations? What will be the turning point, or necessary missing element, if so?

How can brands or retailers best protect themselves against rising backlash against AI partnerships, while still participating in the ecosystem? Is mitigation even necessary, or will adoption solve this problem over time?

Poll

10 Comments
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Neil Saunders

The use of AI is growing rapidly. However, this does not signal that AI is trusted: there is a huge amount of skepticism around AI output. From our Pacsun research, even among youth consumers – who are very AI savvy – only 21.3% fully trust AI responses. The lesson for brands is that AI is an additional channel not a replacement channel – so brands need to ensure that other channels continue to pull their weight in terms of supporting consumer decision making. And this pattern is not likely to change in the future because consumers, by nature, use multiple touchpoints when shopping. Of course, it raises an interesting consideration because if trust isn’t present and doesn’t build, it puts a rather big hole in all of these forecasts saying that AI doing our shopping for us will predominate.

Last edited 2 hours ago by Neil Saunders
Doug Garnett

Trust must be earned. In no way has AI earned the trust of the most skilled practitioners of AI — much less consumers. That said, this behavior is the same everywhere. When ANYONE makes a brand recommendation I expect 98% of people will go out to verify it on their own — or at least to learn more about what they might be getting into.

Buyer beware is eternal advice and no company should believe it can take action which makes consumer wariness unnecessary. It can be reduced or helped with broader brand trust — but it will never be eliminated.

Craig Sundstrom
Craig Sundstrom

Even if this thing-which-really-hasn’t-had-a-chance-to-start-yet-so-how could-it-stop? exists, how, exactly, is it a problem?

Bob Amster

Over time, and as AI technology becomes more prevalent and more refined, users will question its recommendations less and go along with its recommendations more. It will take more time. By then, the discovery of a new brand recommendation will be like a treasure hunt.

Cathy Hotka
Cathy Hotka

AI can be quite helpful and efficient…but, for now, nothing beats customer feedback. I’ll always want to hear from a person who purchased the product.

Mark Ryski

Like Ronald Regan said about negotiations with the Soviet Union: “Trust, but verify,” and that sums up this study and where consumers are at today. It’s hard to say how long it will take but eventually trust will build and AI verification will wane. But for now, there’s so much evidence to show that AI messes up, the only prudent thing for any consumer to do it to verify AI results from secondary sources. That said, starting with AI search first is the better way to go, in my personal experience. 

John Lietsch
John Lietsch

I think the better question is what have we done to earn the trust of our consumers? Phrases like “caveat emptor” and “trust but verify” are prevalent because the profit motive often creates a gap between the interests of the seller and the buyer.

I agree with all my colleagues except for Bob. Sorry, Bob. I’m not convinced that it will ever change because the moment it does our temptation to use a trusted resource to skew recommendations will be too great. Or has that happened already?

Last edited 1 hour ago by John Lietsch
Georganne Bender
Georganne Bender

Who’s feeding the AI? Do you trust them? I don’t, especially knowing that brands pay to influence AI.

AI can point me in the right direction, but I will trust reviews left by customers over those machine-generated every time.

Tanya Thorson
Tanya Thorson

AI recommendations will keep growing, but shoppers are not outsourcing discernment. They are outsourcing the first pass. That is a very different thing.
What this study really shows is that AI has become a discovery layer, not a trust layer. The recommendation may narrow the field, but the shopper still goes looking for proof. That makes the post-AI moment more important, not less. Reviews, search presence, site experience, product detail, and brand consistency now carry even more weight because they have to validate what the machine surfaced.
For brands and retailers, the opportunity is not just to rank. It is to reinforce. If AI is the introduction, the rest of the ecosystem has to close the confidence gap fast. The brands that win will be the ones that make verification easy, credible, and consistent across every touchpoint.
AI can speed up consideration.It cannot shortcut trust.
Discovery is faster. Proof matters more.

Nolan Wheeler
Nolan Wheeler

People tend to second guess anything that introduces a new brand, whether it comes from search, social, or AI. AI speeds up discovery, but people will still look for validation through reviews and other signals before making a decision.

10 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Neil Saunders

The use of AI is growing rapidly. However, this does not signal that AI is trusted: there is a huge amount of skepticism around AI output. From our Pacsun research, even among youth consumers – who are very AI savvy – only 21.3% fully trust AI responses. The lesson for brands is that AI is an additional channel not a replacement channel – so brands need to ensure that other channels continue to pull their weight in terms of supporting consumer decision making. And this pattern is not likely to change in the future because consumers, by nature, use multiple touchpoints when shopping. Of course, it raises an interesting consideration because if trust isn’t present and doesn’t build, it puts a rather big hole in all of these forecasts saying that AI doing our shopping for us will predominate.

Last edited 2 hours ago by Neil Saunders
Doug Garnett

Trust must be earned. In no way has AI earned the trust of the most skilled practitioners of AI — much less consumers. That said, this behavior is the same everywhere. When ANYONE makes a brand recommendation I expect 98% of people will go out to verify it on their own — or at least to learn more about what they might be getting into.

Buyer beware is eternal advice and no company should believe it can take action which makes consumer wariness unnecessary. It can be reduced or helped with broader brand trust — but it will never be eliminated.

Craig Sundstrom
Craig Sundstrom

Even if this thing-which-really-hasn’t-had-a-chance-to-start-yet-so-how could-it-stop? exists, how, exactly, is it a problem?

Bob Amster

Over time, and as AI technology becomes more prevalent and more refined, users will question its recommendations less and go along with its recommendations more. It will take more time. By then, the discovery of a new brand recommendation will be like a treasure hunt.

Cathy Hotka
Cathy Hotka

AI can be quite helpful and efficient…but, for now, nothing beats customer feedback. I’ll always want to hear from a person who purchased the product.

Mark Ryski

Like Ronald Regan said about negotiations with the Soviet Union: “Trust, but verify,” and that sums up this study and where consumers are at today. It’s hard to say how long it will take but eventually trust will build and AI verification will wane. But for now, there’s so much evidence to show that AI messes up, the only prudent thing for any consumer to do it to verify AI results from secondary sources. That said, starting with AI search first is the better way to go, in my personal experience. 

John Lietsch
John Lietsch

I think the better question is what have we done to earn the trust of our consumers? Phrases like “caveat emptor” and “trust but verify” are prevalent because the profit motive often creates a gap between the interests of the seller and the buyer.

I agree with all my colleagues except for Bob. Sorry, Bob. I’m not convinced that it will ever change because the moment it does our temptation to use a trusted resource to skew recommendations will be too great. Or has that happened already?

Last edited 1 hour ago by John Lietsch
Georganne Bender
Georganne Bender

Who’s feeding the AI? Do you trust them? I don’t, especially knowing that brands pay to influence AI.

AI can point me in the right direction, but I will trust reviews left by customers over those machine-generated every time.

Tanya Thorson
Tanya Thorson

AI recommendations will keep growing, but shoppers are not outsourcing discernment. They are outsourcing the first pass. That is a very different thing.
What this study really shows is that AI has become a discovery layer, not a trust layer. The recommendation may narrow the field, but the shopper still goes looking for proof. That makes the post-AI moment more important, not less. Reviews, search presence, site experience, product detail, and brand consistency now carry even more weight because they have to validate what the machine surfaced.
For brands and retailers, the opportunity is not just to rank. It is to reinforce. If AI is the introduction, the rest of the ecosystem has to close the confidence gap fast. The brands that win will be the ones that make verification easy, credible, and consistent across every touchpoint.
AI can speed up consideration.It cannot shortcut trust.
Discovery is faster. Proof matters more.

Nolan Wheeler
Nolan Wheeler

People tend to second guess anything that introduces a new brand, whether it comes from search, social, or AI. AI speeds up discovery, but people will still look for validation through reviews and other signals before making a decision.

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