Tag: UCP

  • Google UCP and SEO: How I’m Preparing for AI Commerce

    Google UCP and SEO: How I’m Preparing for AI Commerce

    Google's Universal Commerce Protocol changes the path from search to sale

    For as long as I’ve worked in search marketing, I’ve viewed the path to purchase as a simple sequence: search query → click → buy.

    I’ve approached SEO through much the same model, using organic traffic, impressions, and click-through rate (CTR) as the primary measures of success.

    Google’s Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP) tells me that this familiar path is changing. Google is evolving from a discovery engine into a transaction layer where searching and buying can happen inside the same experience.

    With the rise of “agentic commerce,” I’m seeing Google gain the ability to discover, evaluate, compare, and purchase products on a user’s behalf within AI-powered experiences such as AI Mode, Gemini, YouTube, and Gmail.

    I believe the SEO implications are substantial. Instead of optimizing only for clicks, I now need to think about optimizing for AI-assisted transactions. If a brand cannot communicate through UCP and the product data that supports it, it risks becoming invisible to the next generation of shoppers.

    Here’s how I understand UCP, why I think it will reshape digital marketing, and what I recommend doing now to prepare an SEO strategy for agentic commerce.

    UCP: The infrastructure behind AI transactions

    I think of UCP as an open-source, vendor-agnostic standard that supports the entire commerce lifecycle inside an AI interface. That lifecycle can extend from product discovery and cart creation through checkout, fulfillment, and post-purchase tracking.

    Google co-developed UCP with Shopify, Walmart, Target, Wayfair, Etsy, and other commerce leaders. From my perspective, it acts as a universal translator between AI shopping agents and the systems merchants use to operate their online stores.

    Google UCP - Pay with GPay

    The clearest analogy I can make is that UCP may become the ecommerce equivalent of HTTPS. HTTPS standardizes secure communication between browsers and servers; UCP standardizes how AI agents interact with online stores. Instead of building a custom one-to-one integration for every merchant, an AI agent can use a shared framework to browse inventory securely and complete purchases across many stores.

    How I see AI transactions flowing through UCP

    Imagine I ask AI Mode to “find and order a replacement water filter for a 2021 Samsung French-door fridge with the fastest shipping.” UCP can coordinate that transaction through a structured workflow.

    Capability publication

    First, I expect the merchant to publish the capabilities its store supports, including product search, live pricing, fulfillment options, and accepted payment methods. This gives the AI agent a clear picture of what it can request and complete.

    Three mobile screens show a Monos suitcase listing, Google Pay order review, and completed checkout through Google’s Universal Commerce Protocol.
    From product discovery to payment and confirmation, this mobile shopping sequence shows a Monos suitcase purchase completed with Google Pay through Google’s Universal Commerce Protocol.

    Handshake

    Next, the AI agent reads the merchant’s profile, compares those capabilities with its own, and establishes a secure path forward. I see this step as the point where the systems can align on details such as loyalty programs and supported digital wallets.

    Action execution

    Once the systems are aligned, the AI searches for the product, verifies real-time inventory, builds the cart, and uses the Agent Payments Protocol (AP2) to complete a secure, tokenized transaction.

    Human escalation

    If the transaction needs my input—perhaps to select a delivery window or confirm a shipping address—UCP can pause the process and prompt me. After I respond, control returns to the AI so it can finish the workflow.

    Dig deeper: How Google’s Universal Commerce Protocol could reshape search conversions


    Why I believe UCP matters for search and SEO

    I don’t see UCP as merely a technical update. I see it changing the way AI discovers, evaluates, and purchases products—and that makes it directly relevant to SEO.

    1. I’m shifting from click-throughs to buy-throughs

    In an agentic search environment, I can no longer treat website traffic as the only measure of business value. Features such as Universal Cart can let shoppers add products from multiple retailers to one Google cart and check out with Google Wallet, dramatically shortening the buying journey.

    A shopper may never visit my homepage, category page, or product detail page. That changes my SEO objective: I need to earn product selection within the AI recommendation layer so a search query can become a sale even when it generates no intermediate website visit.

    2. I’m planning for hyper-personalized queries

    I’m also rethinking keyword research. Shoppers are moving beyond broad searches such as “men’s running shoes” and using detailed, situational prompts like “Best running shoes for flat feet under $150 that can arrive by Friday.”

    To match a request that specific, I know a search engine needs more than polished on-page copy. It needs rich, structured, and queryable product attributes. UCP helps bridge that gap by giving AI agents a way to match merchant inventory with a shopper’s precise requirements.

    3. I expect less checkout friction

    I continue to see cart abandonment as a major ecommerce challenge, especially when shoppers encounter long forms, broken checkout flows, or unexpected shipping costs. Because UCP can work with secure digital wallets and automatically pass verified user data, I expect it to eliminate many of those friction points.

    Glowing blue streams of people converge on a search bar and digital portal, symbolizing SEO traffic, AI visibility, and customer acquisition.
    As AI reshapes search, every glowing path to discovery carries commercial value—turning SEO investment into a conversation about pipeline, risk, and customer acquisition costs.

    For high-intent, urgent, or repeat purchases, I believe merchants that support UCP may capture more conversions than competitors that send every shopper to a separate checkout experience.

    4. I can retain brand control and customer ownership

    One detail I consider especially important is that the merchant remains the Merchant of Record when a transaction takes place through UCP. I can still control pricing, fulfillment, and return policies while retaining the customer relationship and first-party data. UCP provides the transactional infrastructure without replacing the merchant’s role.

    Dig deeper: Winning the AI decision layer: From AI discovery to agentic commerce

    How I recommend preparing a brand for UCP

    If I limit an SEO strategy to blog articles and meta descriptions, I overlook the technical infrastructure that powers AI commerce. To make products eligible for UCP-powered experiences, I recommend focusing on the following priorities.

    I would optimize the Merchant Center feed

    I no longer view Google Merchant Center (GMC) as a tool used only for Shopping ads. I see it becoming a primary source of product information for AI discovery, which makes feed quality central to both visibility and transaction eligibility.

    • Enable the native_commerce attribute: To opt into UCP-powered checkouts, I would add the native_commerce attribute to the product feed. Google recommends using supplemental feeds to apply it at the product level without changing the primary feed.
    • Map product identifiers: I would make sure every product ID in the GMC feed maps one-to-one with the corresponding ID in the internal checkout API. If the identifiers differ, I would use the merchant_item_id attribute to align them.
    • Complete policy data: I would keep returns, shipping, and customer-support information complete and current. Clear policy data gives an AI agent the details it needs to evaluate a merchant confidently.

    I would align structured data with the product feed

    Because AI search depends on consistent information, I would keep the Product, Offer, and Review schema on the website synchronized with the Merchant Center feed. If the price, availability, identifiers, or other details conflict, validation problems could make a product ineligible for AI-powered checkout.

    I would prepare for conversational attributes

    As Google introduces semantic attributes designed for conversational AI search, I would prepare inventory and product-information systems to supply richer answers. In particular, I would prioritize:

    • Real-time inventory availability.
    • Direct answers to product FAQs, such as “Is this jacket machine washable?”
    • Detailed compatibility information, including accessory pairings, sizing guides, and model-specific replacements.

    I would treat these details as more than feed enhancements. They are the signals that help an AI agent decide whether a product satisfies a nuanced request involving price, fit, compatibility, delivery speed, or another real-world constraint.

    Beyond clicks: The next SEO opportunity I see

    To me, the Universal Commerce Protocol reflects a broader transformation in search. It expands the role of SEO beyond generating traffic and brings product data, inventory systems, checkout infrastructure, and conversion readiness into the search conversation.

    By prioritizing structured product data, reliable commerce information, and readiness for agentic transactions, I can position a brand to capture demand at the exact moment a shopper expresses intent.

    I don’t believe the future of search will be only about getting found. Increasingly, it will be about making sure the products I represent can be evaluated, selected, and bought.


    Inspired by this post on Search Engine Land.


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  • How Gemini Intelligence Will Reshape Search and Commerce

    How Gemini Intelligence Will Reshape Search and Commerce

    Google brings AI to Android — here's what it means for search

    I see Google’s unveiling of Gemini Intelligence at the May 12 Android Show as a significant step toward an agent-powered future. Announced alongside a new laptop called the Googlebook, Gemini Intelligence is designed as an underlying layer that works across the Android operating system on laptops, phones, watches, and glasses.

    The Googlebook makes that vision tangible to me. Built from the ground up around an AI agent, it can understand what is on the screen and act on it. I could point to a date in an email and have the agent schedule a meeting, or select furniture in an app and see how those pieces might look in my living room.

    I believe this ability to complete tasks without requiring someone to open a webpage will fundamentally change how people search, discover information, and conduct commerce. Here is how I expect that shift to affect the search industry.

    What the shift to an agentic operating system means

    Until now, I have viewed search as a familiar sequence: someone has a question or intent, enters it into a search engine, receives a list of links, and chooses one. Earning a prominent position on that list was the prize, and much of the SEO industry was built around winning that click.

    Gemini Intelligence starts from a very different assumption. Search intent still exists, but an AI agent can handle the steps between the request and the outcome. It can read pages, complete forms, and increasingly finish the entire task. Instead of visiting a website myself, I may have an agent visit and use it on my behalf.

    When I look for an early example, Chrome Auto Browse stands out. Launched in January and built on Gemini 3, it can manage multistep tasks such as researching flights, filling out forms, scheduling appointments, and managing subscriptions. It then pauses for approval before making a purchase.

    That efficiency gives me a clear reason to believe ecommerce will continue moving toward agentic AI.

    A 2025 preprint supports this view. Researchers evaluated the declared-tools approach across online shopping, authentication, and content management. They found that giving an agent pre-structured interaction data reduced processing requirements by 67.6% and lowered costs by 34% to 63% compared with parsing a complete HTML document. Task success declined only slightly, from 98.8% with the traditional method to 97.9%.

    The architecture behind Gemini Intelligence

    To me, the architecture is as important as the interface. AI agents naturally favor websites they can interact with cleanly and efficiently, and Gemini Intelligence can only deliver on its promise if those agents can perform tasks reliably.

    I see two protocols as central to making that possible. WebMCP turns a website’s actions into callable tools, while the Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP) allows an agent to complete a sale. Together, they enable an agent to finish a task without requiring a person to load and navigate the underlying webpage.

    Glowing blue streams of people converge on a search bar and digital portal, symbolizing SEO traffic, AI visibility, and customer acquisition.
    As AI reshapes search, every glowing path to discovery carries commercial value—turning SEO investment into a conversation about pipeline, risk, and customer acquisition costs.

    WebMCP

    I think of WebMCP as a labeled menu for AI agents. The API allows a website to declare functions as structured tools an agent can call, including searching inventory, beginning checkout, or submitting a support request.

    Google co-developed WebMCP with Microsoft. An origin trial is live in Chrome 149, Firefox has committed to the third quarter of 2026, and Safari is expected to follow in the fourth quarter.

    Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP)

    I see UCP as the transactional counterpart to WebMCP. It gives AI agents a shared language for discovering products, building a cart, completing checkout, and managing orders without requiring someone to visit the merchant’s website.

    Google also offers a consumer-facing layer called Universal Cart. It can collect items as I move across Search, Gemini, YouTube, and Gmail, creating a more connected shopping experience across Google’s products.

    The range of companies behind UCP shows me how seriously the industry is taking this shift. Google, Shopify, Walmart, Target, Etsy, Wayfair, PayPal, and Stripe co-developed the protocol, which launched in January.


    How I would prepare for agentic AI

    My main takeaway is that websites are rapidly evolving from destinations into backends—from places people actively visit into systems agents quietly use. As the operating system becomes a search and action layer, I no longer think ranking is the only question that matters. I also need to ask whether an agent can actually use the site.

    To prepare, I would begin by auditing the site’s most valuable actions, whether that means submitting a lead form, completing a booking flow, or reaching checkout. I would determine whether an agent could complete each action reliably and check the site’s Lighthouse Agentic Browsing score much as I would review Core Web Vitals. The goal is to understand whether an agent can use the site, not merely read it.

    If I ran an ecommerce business, I would confirm whether the checkout process is accessible through UCP or ACP. I would also continue investing in retrieval and visibility because an agent still needs to find and trust the business before it can act on anyone’s behalf.

    Dig deeper: Are we ready for the agentic web?


    Inspired by this post on Search Engine Land.


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  • Google’s UCP Checkout Revolutionizes Search Shopping

    Google’s UCP Checkout Revolutionizes Search Shopping

    I find it fascinating that Google’s Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP), which was initially limited to AI Mode, is now expanding into regular search results. It’s not just a fleeting trend; some retailers have already begun integrating this technology into their listing pages, making our online shopping experience even more intuitive.

    Earlier this year, Google rolled out UCP for AI-agents to facilitate direct purchases from search results. It first launched exclusively within Google’s AI Mode but now, we’re seeing it implemented in Google’s main search results for retailers who support UCP.

    Discovering what the UCP checkout looks like was made easier thanks to a post by Brodie Clark. He shared a screenshot showing how Wayfair’s listings on Google Search now feature a UCP-powered ‘Buy’ button. This button is a game-changer because it allows purchases directly from Google’s interface without navigating to Wayfair’s website.

    The UCP protocol is paving the way for seamless transactions by establishing a common language for AI agents and commerce systems. No longer do we have to worry about bespoke integrations across different platforms.

    ```json
{
  "alt": "Google search results for striped bed sheet set, featuring various sheet options and prices.",
  "caption": "Exploring online options for striped bed sheet sets? Check out this search showcasing a variety of styles and prices to suit every bedroom decor.",
  "description": "This image shows a Google search result page for 'striped bed sheet set'. Various bed sheets including options from Wayfair, IKEA, and Eddie Bauer are displayed, with prices ranging from $15.99 to $239.00. A highlighted product is the 100% Cotton Sateen Striped Sheet Set from Wayfair in black. The image also features browser and interface elements like search tabs and filters, ideal for navigating online shopping efficiently. Keywords: striped bed sheets, Google search, online shopping, sheet set prices."
}
```

    Collaboratively developed with big names like Shopify, Etsy, Wayfair, and Target, UCP aligns with existing standards, such as Agent2Agent and Agent Payments Protocols, creating a more cohesive digital commerce space.

    What really excites me is the potential for profit growth for retailers who embrace this technology. Although Wayfair might miss out on direct site traffic for specific searches, their affiliation with Google through UCP can still result in conversions.

    While it’s clear that not everyone will bypass the traditional shopping journey, as many of us still prefer exploring products on the retailer’s site, the option to ‘Buy’ directly adds a layer of convenience. It’s definitely something worth monitoring as its prevalence in search results increases.


    Inspired by this post on Search Engine Land.


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  • Discover Google’s New Universal Commerce Protocol Guide!

    Discover Google’s New Universal Commerce Protocol Guide!

    I’m thrilled to share that Google has launched a groundbreaking onboarding guide for its Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP). This new system marks a significant shift towards integrating seamless checkout experiences directly within search. It’s a game-changer for advertisers and merchants alike.

    Google is setting the stage for what they call ‘agentic commerce,’ where I can see purchases happening right in the AI-driven search moments. It’s all about making the buying process smoother and more intuitive for users like me.

    What’s happening. Google has unveiled a detailed onboarding guide for the Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP) in Merchant Center. This guide shows merchants how to integrate with UCP, which allows checkout directly from product listings in AI Mode and Gemini. I find this incredibly useful in streamlining my customer journey.

    The big picture. With AI search evolving into transaction facilitation, Google aims to keep users like me engaged by embedding shopping and checkout into conversational experiences. It’s all about keeping us within their ecosystem.

    How it works. Before jumping in, merchants need to complete a technical integration and submit an interest form. After getting approval, they can access onboarding tools in Google Merchant Center. This includes a testing sandbox, identity linking, and checkout APIs — tools that I find essential for successful integration.

    Why we care. Google’s move of aligning search closer to transactions means that I, as a user, might complete my purchases directly inside AI interactions rather than visiting separate websites. This could redefine how we measure, attribute, and optimize our advertising performance. Early adopters of the Universal Commerce Protocol could gain a competitive advantage as shopping becomes more integrated into AI tools like Gemini.

    Zoom in. The protocol acts as an open standard, connecting product data, user identity, and payment flows. I’m excited about making seamless purchases without any redirection to external sites.

    What to watch: The rollout is gradual and currently limited to the U.S. I should keep an eye out for a dedicated UCP integration tab appearing in Merchant Center accounts in the coming months.

    Bottom line. If widely adopted, the Universal Commerce Protocol could transform online shopping, making search a complete, AI-powered checkout experience. I hope to see this fully integrated soon.

    Dig deeper. To find out more about onboarding to the Universal Commerce Protocol, check out this guide in Merchant Center.


    Inspired by this post on Search Engine Land.


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  • How Google’s Universal Commerce Protocol Transforms Search

    How Google’s Universal Commerce Protocol Transforms Search

    When I learned about Google’s latest protocol, I realized how significant this new development could be for those of us in ecommerce. Google’s Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP) is here to revolutionize how purchases are made within the Gemini and AI search environments. It allows users to make purchases without ever leaving Google’s interfaces, which changes the game for search conversions.

    As Google introduces AI Overviews, AI Mode in Search, and the Gemini ecosystem, a new challenge presents itself: how do users get answers and complete purchases seamlessly within Google’s spaces? That’s where UCP comes in, currently in its beta phase.

    UCP is a tool designed to help brands reach customers directly within the Gemini or Language Learning Model (LLM) environments. It allows consumers to finalize transactions, earning reward points, and completing checkouts, all within the LLM. Imagine telling Gemini, “Find me a highly rated, waterproof hiking boot in size 10 under $200 and buy it,” and watching as UCP makes that transaction happen smoothly.

    At its heart, UCP standardizes the communication between consumer AI interfaces and merchant checkout systems. Although Google’s developer documentation might mention terms like “Model Context Protocol (MCP)” and “Agent2Agent (A2A) interoperability,” the process is actually user-friendly:

    ```json
{
  "alt": "Smartphone screen displaying a message asking for a carry-on suitcase suggestion, with a Google logo above.",
  "caption": "Seeking the perfect carry-on? This smartphone screen shows a traveler typing a request for a lightweight suitcase recommendation.",
  "description": "This image shows a smartphone with a message on the screen seeking advice on finding a lightweight, sturdy carry-on suitcase suitable for a long weekend. The message includes a requirement for easy laptop access. The Google logo is visible at the top, indicating possible use of a Google service. The image demonstrates practicality and ease in using mobile technology for travel planning."
}
```

    UCP leverages your existing Google Merchant Center shopping feeds. It ensures you remain the merchant of record, thus preserving your customer relationships and data. Plus, by integrating checkout within Google’s AI ecosystem, it minimizes cart abandonment and boosts conversions.

    Explore further: How Google’s Universal Commerce Protocol changes ecommerce SEO

    Implementing UCP involves enhancing your shopping feed management and staying updated on best practices. Google’s guidelines suggest focusing on feed data hygiene, conveying trust signals, and upgrading your technical infrastructure.

    ```json
{
  "alt": "The CapmatchOne logo with a gradient circle and bold text.",
  "caption": "Discover innovation with the CapmatchOne logo, featuring sleek typography and a modern gradient circle.",
  "description": "The CapmatchOne logo features bold, modern typography coupled with a gradient circle, symbolizing connection and innovation. The sleek design conveys a sense of progress and creativity. This image can be used for branding or promotional purposes, appealing to audiences interested in innovative solutions and forward-thinking designs."
}
```

    To excel in this new system, it’s crucial to detail your product listings accurately and ensure comprehensive descriptions. Trust and convenience become paramount as AI-driven decisions heighten consumer’s purchasing confidence. Providing data on free shipping, return policies, and reliable pricing can make a difference.

    Finally, preparing for UCP means keeping pace with technological updates and future tools. Venture into Google’s pilot programs and explore features like Business Agents or Direct Offers to stay ahead in this evolving landscape.

    The evolution of search into a transactional engine within LLMs is undeniable. UCP offers a clearer path from search discovery to purchase conversion, and it’s up to us to adapt and thrive in this shift by ensuring our product data is impeccable.


    Inspired by this post on Search Engine Land.


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  • Unlock Google’s Universal Commerce Protocol for Seamless AI Checkout

    Unlock Google’s Universal Commerce Protocol for Seamless AI Checkout

    I came across an interesting update from Google, which released a new help page that explains its Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP). This guidance provides merchants with detailed directions on how checkout processes work across Google’s platforms, powered by AI-driven enhancements.

    Why It Matters. Google’s documentation illuminates how UCP and its associated checkout feature enable a native “Buy” button, which takes the transaction straight onto Google’s surfaces while still letting merchants stay as the seller of record. To leverage this feature, merchants need to implement the native_commerce attribute in the Merchant Center.

    Transactions flow through stored Google Wallet credentials, and payment processors are required to support Google Pay tokens. This seamless integration is designed to enhance the user experience.

    The Value for Merchants. Initially part of Google’s push for agentic shopping, UCP was later confirmed as a live feature in Merchant Center, promising to streamline the path from product discovery to purchase. By embedding checkout directly on Google surfaces, it could potentially uplift conversion rates, particularly in AI-enhanced experiences like Gemini and AI Mode.

    Additionally, the new documentation provides clarity on what’s needed for implementation, aiding merchants to adjust their feeds and payment systems to perfectly align with Google’s evolving commerce ecosystem driven by AI.

    The Larger Context. By centralizing the checkout process while maintaining merchants’ positions as the sellers of record, Google is making it easier for shoppers navigating AI-powered commerce. This strategic move by Google also tightens its grip over the transaction layer.

    Key Takeaway. With this fresh documentation, the concept of UCP transitions to an actionable playbook, marking a significant step for AI-driven, on-Google checkout as an integral element of Google’s commerce approach.

    Initial Discovery. This helpful document first came to light thanks to Hana Kobzova, founder of PPC News Feed.

    Further Reading. For a deeper dive, explore the full details about the Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP) and UCP-powered checkout on Google.


    Inspired by this post on Search Engine Land.


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