From Influence to Intelligence: The Rise of AI-Driven Creator Commerce

As retail navigates macroeconomic headwinds, platform disruption, and increasingly cautious consumer spending, a new dynamic is emerging: creators are evolving into strategic commercial collaborators, not just storytellers. Supercharged by artificial intelligence (AI), creators are rewriting the rules of affiliate and brand partnerships, becoming leaner, smarter and more resilient in the process.
In 2025, AI isn’t just a toolkit, it’s a catalyst. And retail leaders are being called to act.
From Content Creators to Commerce Architects
The distinctions between influencer, affiliate, and entrepreneur have blurred. Today’s creators don’t just amplify messages; they optimize product selection, automate audience engagement, and increasingly drive revenue like performance marketers. According to our recent Creator Lightning Survey, 59 percent of creators now use AI to streamline their workflows and improve monetization strategies.
Of those surveyed, 43 percent said AI helps streamline creative processes, while 34 percent use AI to automate engagement, and 23 percent rely on it to curate products and analyze audience data. These are clear indicators that creators are applying AI as an engine for commercial strategy, not just content production.
And they’re doing it out of necessity. A majority of full-time creators — who made up 80 percent of respondents — report a decline in consumer spending on affiliate-linked products.
Efficiency in an Era of Economic Uncertainty
Economic pressures aren’t just felt by creators; they’re endemic across marketing functions. According to recent Gartner research, 59 percent of CMOs report they have insufficient budget to execute their strategy. With marketing budgets flatlining at 7.7 percent of company revenue — down from pre-2020 norms — marketers are under pressure to “do more with less.”
That sentiment is echoed across the creator economy. Shrinking brand deals, reduced commissions, and platform volatility are forcing creators to adopt AI not as a novelty, but as a survival mechanism. They're tapping into AI to make sharper decisions — e.g., prioritizing products that convert, aligning with seasonal trends, and adjusting campaigns in real time based on data.
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Discovery Gets Smarter, Sales Get Faster
AI is also revolutionizing one of the most time-consuming aspects of creator commerce: product discovery. With so many SKUs on platforms like Amazon.com, TikTok Shop, and Shopify, creators are overwhelmed by options. Smart AI recommendation engines — trained on commission rates, product trends, and audience behavior — are enabling creators to curate with confidence and reduce friction in the sales cycle.
This approach doesn’t just save time, it closes the gap between content and commerce, making product decisions more data-driven, more profitable, more efficient, and more aligned with evolving consumer preferences.
What Retail Leaders Need to Do Now
Retail leaders must rethink their approach to creator partnerships. It’s no longer about scale or visibility; it’s about enabling smarter, performance-led collaboration. In a landscape where AI is supercharging both creator capabilities and competition, the brands that break through will be those that empower creators to act like growth marketers.
According to a 2025 Digiday+ Research survey, creator marketing budgets continue to fragment as the influencer landscape grows more complex, with a significant year-over-year increase in active creators across key categories. While total budgets are rising, the average brand spend per creator is declining. This dynamic is intensifying pressure on creators to deliver measurable return on investment. Much like CMOs allocating media budgets, creators are now vetting brand opportunities through the lens of conversion performance, commission potential, and data transparency.
What’s emerging is a new set of expectations — and retailers need to meet them. The “marketplace” for creators isn’t just TikTok or Instagram anymore. It includes every micro-environment they operate in, from AI-powered storefronts to affiliate hubs. If your products aren’t easily discoverable, filterable by price, or paired with reviews and real-time deals, they’re not just overlooked, they’re effectively invisible.
This demand for discoverability is more than a UX issue — it’s a growth imperative. Creators consistently ask for better visibility into product discounts, price sorting, and access to reviews. These aren’t just nice-to-haves; they're critical signals that determine what gets promoted. If your catalog isn’t structured for search, selection and performance, you're not showing up in the spaces where commerce is actually happening.
To fully unlock the potential of AI-powered creator commerce, retail leaders should:
- Support creator enablement — not just access. It’s no longer enough to run a large affiliate program. Creators need the tools, training and transparency to drive results. Those that offer AI-powered product discovery, campaign insights, and audience fit data will earn repeat partnerships in a crowded field.
- Rethink affiliate infrastructure for performance parity. As platforms like TikTok Shop and Instagram Shopping continue to merge content and commerce, creators are favoring models that reward outcomes, not just impressions. Retailers should prioritize dynamic commissions, real-time attribution, and seamless linking to minimize friction and maximize conversion.
- Make your product ecosystem discoverable. Creators act like informed consumers — and expect the same of the brands they partner with. That means enabling intuitive search, showcasing real-time promotions, highlighting best-sellers, and ensuring reviews are visible. AI is only as good as the data it pulls from. If your ecosystem isn’t optimized, you’re not even in the consideration set.
- Share the data that drives decisions. Today’s creators want access to performance data, from SKU-level insights to shopper behavior trends. Offering this transparency not only builds trust, it positions your brand as a strategic ally, not just a commission source.
The economics of creator commerce are shifting. Affiliate commissions are now one of the most transparent levers for brands to measure ROI, and creators are aligning with programs that prioritize performance. AI is accelerating their ability to compare, assess and act. The brands that win will be the ones that match that intelligence with infrastructure.
Finally, a recent World Federation of Advertisers report confirms this trajectory: 54 percent of multinational brands plan to increase their influencer marketing investment in 2025, with many deepening reliance on agencies to navigate the evolving creator economy. This signals a broader move toward long-term partnerships, structured measurement, and more strategic creator engagement.
As this ecosystem matures, the mandate for retailers is clear: meet creators where they operate, speak in performance terms, and build the systems that help them drive growth.
Resilience Through Intelligence
Despite continued economic pressures, creators aren’t slowing down — they’re adapting. By embedding AI into their workflows, they’re becoming more autonomous, efficient and results-oriented.
Retailers that understand this evolution will unlock a new class of creator partners — those who think like growth marketers, not just content producers. And in a year when margin pressure is high and attention is scarce, that kind of intelligence may be the best asset a brand can align with.
Brian Klais is CEO and founder of URLgenius, a mobile deep linking platform designed for marketers.

Brian Klais, Founder and CEO, URLgenius
Brian Klais is a distinguished entrepreneur, creator economy evangelist, and award-winning mobile strategist renowned for founding URLgenius, the premier, patent-protected global app-linking platform that empowers marketers and creators of all sizes to create fluid app-to-app linking experiences to enhance engagement, conversions, and affiliate commissions. Favored by leading content creators, agencies, and brands worldwide, URLgenius reduces friction for the end user when linking to apps and websites from social media and digital and traditional advertising.
Prior to URLgenius, Klais helped pioneer SaaS SEO technology for retail and media brands, making it easier for millions of consumers to find relevant products via search engines. He launched the first retail platform for mobile SEO as the GM at Covario (now iProspect and RioSEO). Before, Brian Klais was a Senior Partner at SEO agency Netconcepts, where he led the firm's award-winning SaaS SEO platform to acquisition by Covario.
Brian Klais’ visionary leadership and innovation across the mobile marketing space have cemented his reputation as an award-winning strategist. Follow all of his insightful thought leadership across the digital marketing landscape on LinkedIn for a glimpse into the future of mobile marketing and beyond.