A new purchasing journey is reshaping enterprise retail: a consumer opens their AI shopping agent, describes what they want, sets a price range, and lets it shop. The agent compares options across dozens of brands, selects the best match, and initiates checkout—all without the customer ever visiting a product page, opening an email, or thinking about which loyalty programs they belong to. For brands that have spent years and millions building loyalty programs, this is a quiet emergency.
Merkle's proprietary consumer research, presented at Shoptalk 2026, shows that regular AI shopping tool usage nearly doubled in just three months from 15% to 26%. Even more telling, seventy-four percent of Millennials are already using AI to shop, and AI tools now rank as the fourth most influential recommendation source for purchase decisions. In fact, Merkle's 2030 forecast puts 25% of digital commerce moving through discrete AI applications, or roughly $2 trillion in revenue.
The infrastructure for this shift already exists. What's less understood is what it means for loyalty, and what brands need to do right now to stay ahead.
Throughout our series on Universal Commerce Platform (UCP)—covering enterprise implications, product catalogs, content architecture, and EMEA responses—one theme keeps surfacing: the brands that prepare now will be the ones agents recommend later.
This article focuses on the UCP capability that ties everything together: Identity Linking.
Until recently, one of the biggest problems with autonomous agent shopping was identity: brands had no way to know who the agent was shopping for. Without that, loyalty programs were effectively invisible. Agents shopped as anonymous guests, and all the personalization, tier benefits, and relationship context brands had built went unused.
UCP's Identity Linking capability, released in the March 2026 spec update, solves this directly. It enables platforms, including Google's AI Mode, the Gemini app, or any future agentic surface, to obtain authorization to act on behalf of a specific user on your brand's systems, using the OAuth 2.0 Authorization Code flow.
When a consumer adds their loyalty account to their digital wallet and links their loyalty account to their shopping agent, your commerce platform is able to receive a secure token. From that point, the agent can browse your catalog, build a cart, and initiate checkout. This is not as an anonymous guest, but as a fully identified member with their loyalty tier, available rewards, and full relationship context intact.
And the data implications go further. First-party data extends to agentic surfaces, meaning linked accounts generate behavioral data within an authenticated, consent-based relationship. In a post-cookie world, that's not just a loyalty win; it's a new first-party data channel.
The shift to agentic commerce rewrites the rules of loyalty. Under the legacy model, brands control the experience: customers visit your site, browse products, earn points, receive personalized offers, and redeem rewards. Engagement metrics, like app opens, email clicks, promotion engagement, and reward redemption, drive optimization.
Under a UCP-enabled model, that control transfers to the consumer and the AI acting on their behalf. Customers hand their preferences to an AI agent, which shops across all retailers and completes the purchase. The customer may never see your brand touchpoints.
That requires a shift in loyalty design and measurement. Agents optimize selections based on quantifiable value, seamless reward application, and preference alignment. Standard loyalty KPIs won't survive this transition. Success must be redefined around agent recommendation rate, share of wallet, and member retention.
UCP requires brands to provide an account creation flow for new users, which means the moment an agent encounters your brand for the first time, there's a built-in path to loyalty enrollment. Here's where to start:
The loyalty programs that thrive in agentic commerce won't be the ones with the most points. They'll be the ones agents trust, recognize, and recommend.
The organizations that win will design their programs for two audiences simultaneously: the human member and their AI agent. That requires rethinking your loyalty architecture, data strategy, value proposition, and success metrics, often all at once.
Merkle is actively working with enterprise commerce and loyalty leaders to build agent-ready loyalty ecosystems, from OAuth readiness assessments and UCP integration planning to loyalty value proposition audits and agentic KPI frameworks. We've already invested in UCP-native tooling, including readiness infrastructure and catalog enrichment, to ensure product data meets the requirements for agentic surfaces and identity linking. If your organization is navigating this shift, we'd welcome the conversation.
This article is part of Merkle's UCP series. Read the other installments here: [Enterprise Implications] · [Product Catalogs] · [Content Architecture] · [EMEA Responses]