AI Hits Black Friday, Amazon Tests 30-Minute Groceries & Walmart Adds Ads To Sparky | Fast Five
In this Fast Five episode, sponsored by the A&M Consumer and Retail Group, Mirakl, Ocampo Capital, Infios, and Quorso, Chris Walton and Anne Mezzenga break down the biggest retail stories from Black Friday 2025, including record-breaking online sales, AI's growing influence on shopping, and what it all means for the future of retail.
From ChatGPT's new shopping research tool to Walmart's bold move to monetize Sparky with ads, Chris and Anne debate where retailers should focus their AI investments. Plus, they tackle smart glasses' potential breakthrough year, Amazon's 30-minute delivery test, and whether the industry is moving too fast on agentic commerce.
🔑 Topics covered:
- Black Friday's $11.8 billion in online sales and what the numbers really mean (Source)
- ChatGPT introducing shopping research (Source)
- Walmart's smart play bringing ads to Sparky (Source)
- The reality check on smart glasses adoption (Source)
- Amazon's expensive 30-minute delivery experiment (Source)
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Music by hooksounds.com
#blackfriday #retailai #agenticcommerce #chatgpt #walmart #retailtech #omnitalk #smartretail #ecommerce #retailpodcast
00:00 - Untitled
00:28 - Unlocking New Revenue Streams in Retail
05:37 - Omnistar Award Announcement
07:54 - The Evolution of E-Commerce: Insights from Black Friday 2025
18:41 - Walmart's AI Shopping Engine and Ad Strategies
24:26 - The Future of Smart Glasses and Wearables
34:02 - Transition to Advent Calendars and Consumer Trends
35:16 - Holiday Cookies and Music Favorites
39:41 - Discussion on Smart Glasses and Their Use Cases
This episode of the OMNITALK Retail Fast 5 is brought to you by the A and M Consumer and Retail Group.
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Speaker ALearn more@ocampo capital.com hello, you are listening to Omnitalk's Retail Fast Five, ranked in the top 10% of all podcasts globally and currently the only retail podcast ranked in the top 100 of all business podcasts on Apple Podcasts.
Speaker AThe Retail Fast five is the podcast that we hope makes you feel a little smarter, but most importantly, a little happier each week too.
Speaker AAnd the Fast 5 is just one of the many great podcasts you can find from the Omnitalk Retail Podcast Network alongside our Retail Daily Minute which brings you a cure curated selection of the most important retail headlines every morning and our Retail Technology Spotlight series which goes deep each week on the latest retail technology trends.
Speaker AIt's December 3, 2025.
Speaker AI'm one of your hosts, Ann Mazinga.
Speaker BAnd I'm one of your other hosts, Chris Walton.
Speaker AAnd we are here once again to discuss all the top headlines from the past week making waves in the world of omnichannel retailing.
Speaker AChris before we get into the headlines, we were both planning last week to be out in stores for Black Friday.
Speaker AI have to Know, what was your trip like and what were one.
Speaker AWhat were some of the most memorable things that you saw during your shopping trip?
Speaker BOh, wow.
Speaker BYeah, I mean, I. I went.
Speaker BYeah, I went out to Southdale, the first indoor mall in the history of America, right down from our house.
Speaker BWent out there, checked it out, checked out the new luxury wing.
Speaker BThat was kind of cool to see.
Speaker BThey've done a nice job there.
Speaker BThe things that stood out to me and was.
Speaker BI was actually shocked at how much traffic there was.
Speaker BI mean, I think I've hit Southdale pretty regularly over the past few years, and it felt like it was busier than I remember it.
Speaker BAnd the.
Speaker BThe store that stood out to me was actually Sephora.
Speaker BSephora was just banging.
Speaker BLike, there were, like, lines throughout the store.
Speaker BLike, you could barely move in there.
Speaker BSo kudos to them.
Speaker BI hope that was reminiscent of what their store experience looked like throughout the country on Black Friday.
Speaker BBut from the.
Speaker BThe sample size of 1, it was a pretty.
Speaker BPretty telling experience for me.
Speaker BHow about you?
Speaker BWhat'd you notice?
Speaker AI was shocked at the Gap.
Speaker AI posted a video on LinkedIn.
Speaker AI have never seen a line that long ever in my life.
Speaker AI mean, it wrapped around the whole store and.
Speaker AAnd it was, I mean, easily the most traffic I've seen.
Speaker AAnd I was particularly interested, based on our conversation last week and after hearing Ella's remarks, too, about, like, I think I'm.
Speaker AAnd she was sending us pictures throughout the week.
Speaker AAnd, like, I've found a Gap thing.
Speaker AHere's like, I think everybody who I've talked to since that podcast was like, yeah, we were going back to Gap, and it certainly was apparent on Black Friday.
Speaker AI don't know if the deals were just too good to pass up or what, but.
Speaker ABut that place was insane.
Speaker AI could not believe it.
Speaker BYeah, I did stop through Banana, and Banana did not entice me, so.
Speaker BBut I did love seeing producer Ella's pictures of all her friends wearing Gap stuff.
Speaker BStuff and the Gap bag she had and all that.
Speaker BIt was great.
Speaker BIt was really funny.
Speaker BBut, yeah, Banana didn't entice me at all.
Speaker BAnd I didn't hit Old Navy.
Speaker BDid you hit Old Navy at all?
Speaker ANo, I didn't.
Speaker AI was at the outlets primarily, so there was a line, you know, in Old Navy as well.
Speaker ALots of traffic.
Speaker ABut actually, I was surprised.
Speaker AIt.
Speaker AI talked to some of the.
Speaker AOf the people working at the retailers, and a lot of them said, like, this is just typical Saturday traffic for us.
Speaker ALike, they didn't feel like they were, you know, like, at the regular malls they were like it wasn't as crazy.
Speaker AAnd I don't know if that was because deals have been so stretched out this year.
Speaker ALike you know, the Black Friday deals in store on Black Friday went through Monday in most cases.
Speaker ASo I think from from just the anecdotal responses that I got from some of the people working in the stores, they were like it, it was not as crazy as we thought it was going to be.
Speaker ASo we'll just have to keep watching the patterns I guess and see, I'm curious to compare this year to next year year too and see, yeah, see what happens.
Speaker BBut yeah, a lot of Black Friday and Cyber Day extensions too I'm seeing in my inbox as well.
Speaker BSo you never know.
Speaker BAnd the outlet malls are always a different beast too.
Speaker BThey're always a hard, hard comp too as well.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BAll right.
Speaker BAnd well, you know, this is the first podcast of the month so we have to hand out our Omnistar Award.
Speaker BAnd so for those new to the podcast, our Omnistar Award is the award we give out each month in partnership with CORE to recognize the top Omni Channel operators out there.
Speaker BNot the pundits, not the so called experts, but the real life retail operators making a difference in their retail organizations.
Speaker BCorso's AI copilot coaches retail leaders to optimize store performance at every level, transform retail operations from data overload into data powered.
Speaker BAnd this month's award, and I think, I think you should do the honors on this one and I think this one is in your wheelhouse so why don't you take it away.
Speaker AYeah, I'm really excited that we get to award Emily Arusha Hillakew.
Speaker AEmily is the SVP of Private Brand Innovation at Macy's and she's winning this month's award for the bold work that she has been doing especially over the course of the last few months.
Speaker AFrom the Christian Siriano Inc. Partnership for New York Fashion Week to her continued work with her team on really developing Macy's on 34th brand, Emily and her team are making the right strategic moves to source and design high quality, high fashion products for all of us, the masses, those who are still looking for good quality, good design in a product but don't want to spend a fortune.
Speaker AEmily and her team, they're working so closely with the rest of the operating team at Macy's to make sure that they can give us something to go to Macy's for.
Speaker AAnd Emily and team deserve all the kudos for this one.
Speaker ASo congratulations Emily, we're proud of you.
Speaker BYeah, Emily and I actually, believe it or not, Emily and I used to be senior buyers together back in our baby days at Target.
Speaker BShe was buying baby kids clothes and I was buying the baby gear and all that stuff too.
Speaker BSo it's good to see her get this recognition.
Speaker BCongrats, Emily.
Speaker BAll right, and in this week's Fast Five, we've got news on ChatGPT introducing shopping research.
Speaker BWalmart exploring bringing ads to its on site sparky AI shopping engine.
Speaker BNew claims that smart glasses are set for a banner year in 2026.
Speaker BAnd Amazon testing Amazon now a new 30 minute delivery service in Seattle and Philadelphia.
Speaker BBut we begin today with more thoughts and news on Black Friday overall and.
Speaker AAll right, headline number one, Black Friday saw a record $11.8 billion in online sales.
Speaker AAccording to Adobe Analytics, Black Friday online sales hit $11.8 billion, up 9.1% from last year, with mobile accounting for 55% of purchases and Buy now, pay later accounting for almost $800 million of the online spend.
Speaker AOther reporting services like MasterCard Spending Pulse corroborated these figures, noting a 10.4% growth in E commerce sales on Black Friday.
Speaker AAnd finally, also According to Adobe, AI driven traffic to US retail sites soared 805% compared to last year.
Speaker AChris, what are your big takeaways From Black Friday 2025 and what we just noted in these stats?
Speaker BOh, man, God, where to start?
Speaker BYou know, I've got a, I think a number of things stand out as I look at the statistics you just read as well as other research I did, you know, to prepare for today's show.
Speaker BI think, first of all, I'm not, I'm not surprised at all by the digital numbers.
Speaker BI mean, I can remember back when I was running E commerce for home furnishings back in 2013 and two between 2013 and 2016, I used to say to my team all the time, expect a 10 bump.
Speaker BLike you could take it to the bank.
Speaker BIt's going to happen.
Speaker BAnd I feel like I've said this on past shows when we've been talking about Black Friday as well.
Speaker BI think I've said it probably multiple times.
Speaker BSo the 10 bump's not surprising.
Speaker BBut it is surprising to see that that trajectory still is consistently happening year over year.
Speaker BSo that's number one.
Speaker BNumber two, the clubs, man, I don't know if you saw the data from Placer AI yesterday, but the clubs just crushed it.
Speaker BThe, the traffic numbers for Sam's Club up 9.7%.
Speaker BBJ's up 8.2%.
Speaker BCostco 7.7%.
Speaker BSo people are finding value in the clubs.
Speaker BLike, who would have ever thought clubs on Black Friday, like, that's kind of the last place I would want to be, you know, given, like, I don't even want to be there on a Saturday or Sunday.
Speaker BYou put the Black Friday traffic hell into it.
Speaker BNo way.
Speaker BNo, thank you.
Speaker BBut hey, I guess when you got to get those deals, then.
Speaker BThird, I still can't believe that mobile is only 50% of purchases.
Speaker BI mean, that still tells me that there's a ton of room to go on our mobile devices here over the next few years.
Speaker BLike 55%, 45% still happening away from a mobile device.
Speaker BI mean, it's just like, wow, okay.
Speaker BAnd then last but not least, and I think I might surprise people here, and I think I might even surprise you a little bit.
Speaker BI thought the growth in AI influenced shopping would be higher, 800% in basically what is year two to me seems really low.
Speaker BAnd to prove that out, I looked at some comparables and I thought this was interesting.
Speaker BSo you mentioned BNPL in your opening.
Speaker BSo I look back at a, I look back at a CFBP report, PB report, CFPB report, I should say.
Speaker BAnd they looked at the amount of loans that originated via BNPL versus from 2019 to 2021 and they saw a 970 increase over those three, over those years.
Speaker BSo like, I just feel like, I feel like based on where agentic AI is, an AI is in general and where it should be going, it feels like it should be moving faster.
Speaker BLike, it just feels like it should be moving faster to me.
Speaker BSo makes me wonder if we need to start slowing our role on shopping these platforms.
Speaker BAnd as I said last week as well, like, maybe we need to be a little more thoughtful and pragmatic and view these kind of engines as search amplifiers first and foremost, versus like connecting our business and all our apps to them, as we discussed last week.
Speaker BThat's kind of my, that's kind of my takeaway here from Black Friday.
Speaker AI, I think it makes sense to be thoughtful and pragmatic.
Speaker ABut I mean, I think the biggest headline for me was that AI agents were involved in 25% of purchases.
Speaker A25%.
Speaker AThat means like one in four people as they're shopping, whether they're on their desktop, on their mobile, like they were using an agent in some way, shape or form.
Speaker AAnd I think that shows tremendous room to grow.
Speaker AI mean, I looked back, I was curious because in my Mind it's really, this is like e commerce shopping to me.
Speaker ALike how do we start to see e commerce develop E commerce shopping?
Speaker AWhen it started back in 1998, that was like the first big year that e commerce shopping had for Black Friday for holiday sales.
Speaker AThey only saw a doubling in the amount of e Commerce shopping from 1998 to 1999.
Speaker AThat was all that they saw.
Speaker AAnd I think that we still can't even check out in these platforms yet.
Speaker ASo I would say like what we really should be looking at is the difference from this year to next year.
Speaker AI think this was the first year, this was our 1998.
Speaker AI think what we should be looking at is what we see in next year's growth.
Speaker AOnce you can start transacting, once ads are started to be placed in here, special offers are starting to be placed in here.
Speaker ABecause the number one thing that this services and why I think so, even 25% of people were using this is that it gives you price transparency.
Speaker AYou can very quickly look at, I want, I know I want to buy this toy for my kid or this gaming system.
Speaker AHere's all the places that it is here.
Speaker ALike we've never been able to do that independently outside of a retailer's website before as a consumer.
Speaker AAnd so I think that to me is where the real growth opportunity is going to be.
Speaker ASo I'll hold my judgment on that.
Speaker ABut that was the stat that really stood out to me was that the agents were already involved in 25% and where is that going to go next year?
Speaker BYeah, and I, I question how they're using agents in the definition of that too.
Speaker BBut you know, without knowing for sure, it's always tricky but, but you know, at the end of the day too, like I'd say like most, most e commerce happens via a search platform anyway.
Speaker BSo is that why we're seeing that is the question I would ask.
Speaker BBut to get to that, I think we got another headline where it's going to come up again.
Speaker BSo headline number two.
Speaker BChatGPT has introduced shopping research.
Speaker BAccording to a ChatGPT blog post, the new experience does the research for you to help find the right products.
Speaker BInstead of sifting through dozens of sites, you can just describe what you're looking for.
Speaker BFor example, you can say find the quietest cordless stick vacuum for a small apartment or something like I need a gift for my 4 year old niece who loves art and shopping.
Speaker BResearch builds a thoughtful guide to help you decide.
Speaker BSounds just like it was written by the company that did it.
Speaker BAnd how bullish are you on doing your shopping research via Chat GPT?
Speaker AI'm, I'm incredibly bullish.
Speaker AI don't know that I would say specifically Chat GPT.
Speaker AI think I would look more to Gemini, you know, the, the war between those twos.
Speaker ASanta Sam Altman or introduced his code Red yesterday because he's really wanting the team to get focused on less cash burn and staying competitive against Google.
Speaker AI, I think that this is giving us an opportunity to shop for things in ways that we wouldn't have before.
Speaker ASo are we using this for, you know, yes, you're going to use it for the big purchases.
Speaker ABut I also think that as more consumers care about the types of ingredients in their products, they care about where these products are sourced from and again, number one, they care about price and availability.
Speaker AI, we've never had this, this visibility before in a platform.
Speaker ASo I do think we could start to see people say like, I'm looking for a better for you snack for my kids.
Speaker AAnd these are the options.
Speaker AWhat are those things?
Speaker AWhat are the ingredients?
Speaker AList this out on a table for me because I think people are going to start using this tool as a way to even shop for things like essentials for groceries, for personal items.
Speaker ASo I, I do think that what ChatGPT has done here, what Gemini did with their latest, their third 3.0 release, I do think that this is going to provide greater value to how people are starting to shop for things, how they're doing price comparisons and how they get the exact product that they want because it's so simple and easy.
Speaker ABut I know I'm very bullish on it.
Speaker AWhere do you come down on this, Chris?
Speaker AAre you, are you positive towards this?
Speaker AI know you, you've been in the past, you've been pushing towards more on the, the retailer's website.
Speaker ASo how do you, how do you land on this?
Speaker BYeah, I mean, overall, I think it makes, it's a smart move by chatgpt100.
Speaker BI think that makes sense.
Speaker BBut again, I'm, I'm slowing my role on the importance of it overall because to me, like, I'm wondering, the big question I have is how many product searches are actually as research intensive as you're describing?
Speaker BI don't think it's that many.
Speaker BOtherwise Amazon wouldn't have the hold on first product searches that it has.
Speaker BAnd in fact, to prove this point, I queried Claude competitor LLM platform on the number of searches that are actually transactional.
Speaker BAnd you know what the answer is, Ann?
Speaker BThe number of Searches that are actually transactional is 70%.
Speaker BOnly 30% on what site?
Speaker BOn 30% across the industry.
Speaker BAcross the industry.
Speaker B30% are research based.
Speaker BSo that tells me that, you know, how many people are really going to be doing this exhaustive research that, you know, we all glom onto.
Speaker BLike, I mean, I can even remember, I think we even had this conversation like when, when Walmart debuted their, their, their, their Sparky engine and they were like, use, using, like I'm playing the super bowl party.
Speaker BIt's like, yeah, okay fine, you can use that use case, but how many use cases are there really?
Speaker BLike that?
Speaker BAnd so that's the question I have.
Speaker BSo net net again, I'd be slowing down, slowing down if I'm an organization deciding where I'm placing my bets, being very thoughtful about which Pandora's boxes I want to be opening based on all these announcements that are coming out of ChatGPT and Google and everyone else.
Speaker AFair.
Speaker AYeah, I just, I think it's, I think it's being used for.
Speaker AI would, I know that's the cloud representation I would be again, following.
Speaker AI still think we're on the precipice of this.
Speaker AI think we need to follow like we need to gather more data before we can make any kind of true assessment as to how much people are going to be searching.
Speaker AI think it's still in its infancy.
Speaker AIt's only been around for, you know, two years.
Speaker AReally where it's reached mass adoption or three years, sorry.
Speaker AAnd I think we still have a lot more to come here.
Speaker AI still think that it's something that retailers need to be investing heavily in both on their site and off.
Speaker AYou know, I think there's no harm in, in getting your products more prepared, building content that will help your products show up easier and number one, making sure that you have price transparency, because that is going to be so, so important.
Speaker AAnd that's where I think we start coming into searches for the things, the kinds of things that you're talking about, Chris, that weren't happening before but might happen as budgets get tightened up.
Speaker AAll right, let's go to headline number three.
Speaker AWalmart is exploring bringing ads to Sparky, its new AI shopping agent.
Speaker AAccording to the Wall Street Journal, the world's largest retailer has quietly been exploring new ad formats with some advertisers, according to people familiar with the matter.
Speaker AOne ad type, dubbed quote, sponsored prompt, end quote, is a new type of ad that has been tested in Sparky, which the company added to its mobile app in June.
Speaker AThe new ad format Uses Sparky Conversations quote for brand engagement and personalized product recommendations.
Speaker AEnd quote.
Speaker AAccording to a Walmart sales presentation seen by the Wall Street Journal, users were served a sponsor prompt on Walmart.com and when they clicked the prompt, Sparky responded with an answer.
Speaker AA click to buy ad for the product appeared below.
Speaker ASparky's response according to people familiar with the matter.
Speaker AChris, are you pro or con?
Speaker AWalmart's test to bring ads to its AI shopping engine Sparky 100% Pro I.
Speaker BDon'T think I could be more pro on anything actually.
Speaker BAnd it goes back to what you said before because, and I said this last week too, the line I would be watching in my Monday morning meetings would be what traffic and volume is coming from from the chat GPT like platforms.
Speaker BBecause my hunch is it's pretty small and if anyone out there at the retailers can disprove that wants to send me a private message, please let me know.
Speaker BBut my hunch is it's probably not very big.
Speaker BSo I think like I've said before, this is exactly where retailers should be focusing their efforts creating a great generative AI search experience on their own sites.
Speaker BBecause we know generative AI searches convert higher already.
Speaker BSo advertisers are going to love this concept from Walmart and it also on Walmart's side, it's decidedly incremental margin for Walmart to an ad business that is already growing at a rate.
Speaker BThis is crazy.
Speaker BThe Walmart ad business is already growing at a rate of almost 100% per year according to a chart that was given in that article you just quoted.
Speaker BSo to me this is a smart move for three reasons.
Speaker BOne, you convert the traffic you have coming to your site at a better rate.
Speaker BNumber two, you get more ad dollars because of that.
Speaker BAnd three, the other thing you got to remember is watch the traffic flow from the GPT like platforms to decide if and when, if and when you actually need to connect with them.
Speaker BBecause I think that's the big $64,000 question for me.
Speaker AYeah, I agree.
Speaker AI mean this is kind of a no brainer to me.
Speaker AI think we're going to see just based on the burn rate of all of the agentic platforms right now.
Speaker ALike we're going to have to see somebody support the the tools that we're giving we're being offered for free right now as consumers.
Speaker ASo I think you have that coming into play.
Speaker AThen you also have like you're saying Chris, people that are used to asking questions now in a certain way for essential products, even and they are going to want to have a similar experience when they come to your website.
Speaker ASo I think it's, it's again, all, all the focus needs to be on how are you making your products as discoverable as, as possible and then how are you in the moment in a way that we've really never been able to do as retailers and brands before.
Speaker AHow are you further incentivizing them?
Speaker AThey've got confidence in their purchase.
Speaker ANow you're giving them an offer at the right place in the right time to actually pull the trigger on that.
Speaker AAnd it said in this article too that, you know, Walmart's still early on in this.
Speaker ASo I think you're right.
Speaker AWe're going to continue to see more and more.
Speaker AAn increase in the amount of revenue that Walmart's able to bring in.
Speaker ABut right now consumers using the Rufus Chatbot on Amazon are converting 60% more.
Speaker AAnd that's a great indication of what the possibility is for other retailers when you can capture them with the right deal at the right place at the right time.
Speaker ASo I, I think this is a hundred percent something that I'd be looking at as Walmart.
Speaker AIt feels additive, it doesn't feel intrusive like some of the other ads that I think we've been served up in, in previous years through traditional retail media.
Speaker ASo I love it.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BThe other point I would add in closing is like, you know, if Walmart and Amazon both now are basically the everything store based on their marketplaces and they have the ability to create these experiences on their site via their own agentic, you know, AI experiences, why do we even need chatbots and Google for commerce?
Speaker BLike that's the question I'd be asking, you know, why can't we bring, why can't we bring the customers directly into the fold?
Speaker BBecause, because Amazon previously was able to do that with just general product search.
Speaker BSo why can't they continue to do that?
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker BThat's, that's where I'm like, if, if I'm the retailers, I have more power here than I think we're realizing.
Speaker BAnd that's, that's my point.
Speaker AI would just say, I think the only difference is, is that you are using chatbots, you're using some of these other search platforms, agentix search platforms more often.
Speaker ALike it's part of your everyday life, it's not just for commerce.
Speaker ASo I do kind of think that that's where the difference is, is that I think we're dealing with something that's not just relevant to us when we're looking to, you know, do the seek and destroy, I need this thing mission.
Speaker AIt's, you know, you're asking it questions about, you know, what you should feed your kid and then where, you know, where the best gifts are and then you're going and saying, I need, I need great toilet paper that's better for the environment.
Speaker AWhere can I get that?
Speaker AAnd so I think that that's, that changes the dynamic a little bit based on just how we were looking previously at, you know, Walmart and Amazon going to search for your products, get it delivered as soon as possible.
Speaker BI don't know because like if you go back to history, like it was Google, Google was the search place for that and Amazon carved out a bit of it.
Speaker BSo like there's that dichotomy that already existed historically.
Speaker BSo yes, it might change a little bit, but I think, I just think the retailers have more power here than they, than they then, then we're probably leading to believe so.
Speaker BAll right, headline number four.
Speaker BAre smart glasses ready for a breakthrough year in 2026?
Speaker BAt least that is what a new McKinsey and business of fashion report is claiming.
Speaker BAnd wearables, the report says including smartwatches, rings, eyewear and bands are the fastest growing accessory category with growth of 8.3% per year since 2022.
Speaker BSet to continue at 9% annually up to 2028.
Speaker BConsumer adoption of smartwatches is also high with the category representing 35 to 40% of the watch market volume.
Speaker BWhile smart eyewear and smart rings represent less than 10% of their respected market volume.
Speaker BConsumers are expected to further embrace smart glasses in 2026 according to the report.
Speaker BFor example, Ray Bans Meta glasses were already the top selling product in 60% of Ray Ban's EMEA stores as of Q3 2020, 24.
Speaker BAnd this is also the put you on the spot question of the week from the A and M consumer and retail group and they want to know wearables brands here has been concentrated and generally dominated by technology brands like Apple, Garmin, Samsung in watches and Aura in rings.
Speaker BHowever, with glasses the branding model seems to be led by the fashion brand with a powered by technology sub brand.
Speaker BRay Ban Meta is the great example.
Speaker BWhat are the most important implications on the growth and profit opportunities for the fashion and technology brands based on this go to market choice?
Speaker BBetter you than me.
Speaker AWell, yeah, I mean I would say as a fashion retailer I'd be, I'd be looking at what I can do with my current resources and capabilities to support the wearable market and my current customers that are not into wearables.
Speaker ASo, you know, like, I thought the options that they mentioned in the business of fashion article made sense like accessories.
Speaker AAre you looking at engraving?
Speaker ABut things that you would do to your own products that you're just going to do to these, you know, these tech enabled products.
Speaker AAnd as a tech company, I would be leveraging my relationships with designers because I think the biggest thing to me that still stands in the way, I don't know that I agree that 2026 is going to be the year of the, of the smart glasses.
Speaker AI just, I think it's different than a watch or a ring that's a little more discreet.
Speaker AThese are something that you're putting on your face.
Speaker AThis is like your window to any, any person or, you know, thing that you're coming in contact with.
Speaker ASo as a tech company, I would say I don't see this reaching like mass adoption until a tech company has figured out how they can make their product as agile as possible so that I can put it into my existing frames the way that I could like put a blue light filter on my glasses.
Speaker ALike it's not something that is going to change how those glasses appear on my face.
Speaker AIt's really just like an add on that I can do that I can, I can do when I'm getting my, my glasses.
Speaker ASo I would say it's, it's something that I'm not, I'm not in.
Speaker AI don't agree with business of fashion here.
Speaker AI think that fashion retailers should tread very carefully with anything that they're doing outside of their current capabilities.
Speaker AAnd tech companies, you really got to work and try to make ends with the fashion retailers to get them to, to offer this to their consumers who are very finicky consumers typically, especially when it comes to eyewear.
Speaker ASo how do you make your product as agile as possible so that it can fit into the most types or shapes or styles of glasses?
Speaker ABut Chris, what about you?
Speaker AYou actually have the glasses.
Speaker BYeah, I know.
Speaker BI'm kind of like, thank God that that's the opinion you had on this one.
Speaker BBecause I didn't want to disagree on another headline.
Speaker BAnd, and you picked this headline.
Speaker BSo I was like not, I was not sure where you're gonna go with it.
Speaker BI'm just like saying thank God because there's two points I'd bring up.
Speaker BFirst is like the overall 2026 year, the smart glasses.
Speaker BI'm selling that hard.
Speaker BLike it sounds like you are too like, like, you're right.
Speaker BI have the meta glasses, the Ray Bans, and they're a novelty.
Speaker BLike, they're awkward.
Speaker BYou're filming people.
Speaker BYou have to have a real specific use case to even wear them.
Speaker BI don't wear them hardly at all.
Speaker BAnd so.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BAnd they've kind of just sat on the shelf collecting dust.
Speaker BAnd so, so I agree, like, while the style and the tech can improve, and I may, it might make me wear them more.
Speaker BBut it's a big if because it's different than a watch.
Speaker BLike, a watch has biometric benefits too.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BLike, so that's something you have to think about.
Speaker BAnd then I think it's still hard to improve upon the overall utility of the smartphone experience itself, you know, which is just on demand to give you all the search information you need.
Speaker BYou can put your camera up to it, you can take a video the same way you can with your glasses.
Speaker BSo, like, I just don't, I just don't know.
Speaker BBut the other point of this is I'm selling it hard for the fashion brands.
Speaker BTo the fashion brands.
Speaker BI wouldn't be touching this.
Speaker BIt's not your core competency.
Speaker BCompetency.
Speaker BIt's not your core competency.
Speaker BYou're trying, you're, you're tying yourself into a tech company, which history has shown tech companies can behave like vultures.
Speaker BSo at some point, you're going to be left holding the bag on either a big markdown on product that's not going to sell because you haven't hit it right from a fashion standpoint, or you're going to have the threat of the tech company departing, doing business with you and leaving you again on the lurch.
Speaker BSo, like, I just, yeah, I just, I just don't, I wouldn't be touching this in any way, shape or form.
Speaker BI think it's a, it's a salacious headline made to generate clicks and interest in the topic for, you know, the people that put it out, in my opinion.
Speaker AAgreed.
Speaker AAll right, let's move on to headline number five.
Speaker AAmazon is testing new Amazon Now 30 minute delivery service in Seattle and Philadelphia.
Speaker AAccording to Geekwire, the new service is available inside the existing Amazon shopping app and website.
Speaker ACustomers in eligible neighborhoods can look for a 30 minute delivery option in the navigation bar, browse a curated catalog, track orders in real time and tip their drivers.
Speaker APrime members can pay discounted delivery fees starting at 3.99 per order, compared with 1399 for non prime customers with a $1.99 small basket fee on orders under $15.
Speaker BSmall basket fees.
Speaker BNo, I don't like those ads.
Speaker BSmall basket fees.
Speaker ANo.
Speaker AThe announcement comes on the heels of reporting by Geekwire last week that revealed Amazon was building out a new rapid delivery hub at a former Amazon Fresh pickup site in Seattle's Ballard neighborhood.
Speaker AI have to note too, I had a listener send me a picture this past weekend from the Amazon Fresh.
Speaker AWhat was the Amazon Fresh store in one of the suburbs here in Minneapolis.
Speaker AIt's now a lava land jumping in place, so these buildings are having to be repurposed for all kinds of things.
Speaker AIn this case, it is now being used as this rapid delivery hub.
Speaker AChris, should retailers take notice of Amazon's new 30 minute grocery delivery test?
Speaker BWow.
Speaker BYeah, I think notice.
Speaker BYes, yes.
Speaker BAnd Ann, was that, I'm curious, was that, was that, that was like a purported Amazon Fresh site too, not like a live Amazon Fresh site, Right?
Speaker ACorrect.
Speaker AYeah, we didn't ever have any open in Minnesota.
Speaker ABut yes, the, the, the building that was built and had been, had been given city approval to open an Amazon.
Speaker BTheory was going to be coming to Amazon Fresh.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo for me, I think notice, yes, I would be paying attention to it, but I think, I still think the play here is kind of limiting and it may even be, this actually may be even more of a defensive move from Amazon rather than an offensive move.
Speaker BAnd because the reason I say that in researching my, my article on Whole Foods and Amazon.
Speaker BThat I wrote recently in my weekly ramblings, I was struck by one statistic like I didn't know this.
Speaker BI mean, and I think the Wall Street Journal, we might have even talked about it the week we did the story.
Speaker BBut Amazon's share in groceries since the Whole Foods, when it took over whole foods was 4%.
Speaker BAmazon share in grocery is still 4%.
Speaker BAnd that's despite having the tailwind of the entire Amazon e commerce infrastructure behind its back.
Speaker BSo, you know, does this play into the quick need of people needing their milk with the electronics?
Speaker BYeah, I guess it does.
Speaker BBut how many people really need that as we've talked about it?
Speaker BAnd if I'm Walmart or another grocer, you know, I can offer this same service via Instacart or doordash.
Speaker BRight now I can go the micro fulfillment route down the road like Amazon's trying to do as well.
Speaker BSo I'm not sure if I'm them.
Speaker BI'm really all that scared by it, which is why it feels more reactive to, to me than anything and a need to do it move from Amazon more than anything else.
Speaker AYeah, I, it's, it's just still so expensive to me.
Speaker ALike prime members paying discounted delivery fees at, for 399 an order.
Speaker ALike after two orders, I could get a doordash, like subscription, monthly subscription.
Speaker AAnd I have access to all of the other things like food and 30 minute delivery.
Speaker AAnd like, it just, it, I'm still, I'm still not.
Speaker AThat part is not making sense to me, especially during a pilot.
Speaker ALike, I'm curious if they're even going to get enough people to participate in this at those prices to get real data that will help support whether or not this is something that they're going to want to do.
Speaker ASo I, I, and I just, I would say, you know, pressure testing this demand.
Speaker ASure, it makes sense.
Speaker AI think it is a defensive move.
Speaker ABut I, I don't know.
Speaker AI think Amazon, you still have a product issue.
Speaker ALike if I'm going to Doordash or Instacart, I'm getting products that are of a greater quality from my regional grocer that I trust that I have a relationship with.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AAnd so I still think like, are you going to hit it when they, when that thing arrives?
Speaker AAnd I paid, you know, $20 now with all the, the small basket fees and the whatever, am I going to be satisfied with the product that arrives?
Speaker AI, I still don't know the answer to that question.
Speaker ASo that for me is the biggest, the biggest challenge here.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAll right, Chris, let's go to the lightning round.
Speaker AQuestion number one.
Speaker AAdvent calendars are the hot trend from specialty retailers this holiday.
Speaker AEveryone from skims to acne fishing lures to Bridgman's ice cream are offering them to customers.
Speaker AWhat brand would you like to have an advent calendar from?
Speaker BOh, and this, this just reminds me that I missed the Nike drop today.
Speaker BThe PSG Jordans.
Speaker BI didn't get those today.
Speaker BDarn it.
Speaker BOh, man.
Speaker BFor me, I want 28 days of Nikes and it'd be one hell of an expensive calendar.
Speaker BBut, but I, I would love that.
Speaker AThat'd be, I mean, the skims calendar.
Speaker AI think the skims calendar is like in the three hundreds or something.
Speaker AIt's like one pair of underwear per day or something.
Speaker AI mean, there's no price limit on these advent calendars, Chris.
Speaker ASo I think if you really wanted your Nike one, it's like possible.
Speaker BYeah, I guess you could build up to demand too.
Speaker BAll right.
Speaker BBloomberg reported this week that people are tiring of quote slop bowls, AKA those pick your own ingredients, pile the top rice or greens for lunch and instead are opting more for sandwiches.
Speaker BI'm curious.
Speaker BAnd are you two getting put off by the prices?
Speaker BBecause I know you are quite the salad fan and the slop bowl fan.
Speaker BHonestly, whenever we travel.
Speaker AOh, I still love it all the time.
Speaker AI mean, the prices are getting to be ridiculous.
Speaker ABut that's.
Speaker AThat's not a reason.
Speaker AI still think I'm investing in putting the best quality food in my body.
Speaker AAnd you can change all the ingredients.
Speaker ALike, I don't know.
Speaker BYou need the roughage, too, right?
Speaker BAnd you need the roughage.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AEspecially when you're traveling.
Speaker AEspecially when you're traveling.
Speaker AAll right, Chris, number three White House decorators used 120 pounds of gingerbread as part of its holiday decor this season.
Speaker AWhere does gingerbread rank in your order of holiday cookies?
Speaker BOh, man.
Speaker B£120.
Speaker BThat's insane.
Speaker AI know.
Speaker BGod, it's like an entire person of gingerbread.
Speaker BAnyway, I'd say gingerbread is pretty high for me, I think.
Speaker BBut I think if I was to do a rank order, like my top three, I'd go the Mexican tea cookie, because that's big.
Speaker BWhere I grew up in Arizona.
Speaker BAnd then I'd go butter cookies with some green and red spritzing.
Speaker BAnd then I'd go gingerbread.
Speaker AYeah, okay.
Speaker AWhat's a.
Speaker AWhat is a Mexican tea cookie?
Speaker ALike, what is.
Speaker BOh, you got to look it up.
Speaker BYou got to look it up.
Speaker BIt's like a. I don't even know how to explain it.
Speaker BIt's good, though.
Speaker BIt's good like a.
Speaker AIs that like the tea cake?
Speaker ALike the balls.
Speaker AThe shortbread balls wrapped in powdered sugar?
Speaker AOh, I thought that was a Russian delicacy.
Speaker AWe always called them a Russian tea cake.
Speaker BOh, I have no idea.
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker BWe'll have to do some research.
Speaker BBut I looked it up, and I made sure I was, like, thinking the right thing.
Speaker BSo I don't know if I explained the ingredients right, though.
Speaker BI have no idea, because I'm not Mr. Walton Gourmet.
Speaker BAll right, last one.
Speaker BMariah Carey's 1994 All I Want for Christmas is you anthem is the undisputed queen of holiday earnings.
Speaker BDid you know that according to the Economist, the song has generated more than $60 million in royalties thus far?
Speaker BWhere does the song, however, rank on your holiday playlist?
Speaker BYou're the.
Speaker BYou're the playlist.
Speaker AIt's top three for sure.
Speaker AI mean, really, it's probably my number one.
Speaker AI mean, it gets you that drop hits and you're like, oh, yeah, it brings me back.
Speaker AIt was one of my first CDs that I ever got back in the 80s, early 90s, I guess.
Speaker ABut, oh, still, I.
Speaker AIf I could still have that CD in my possession, I absolutely wouldn't.
Speaker AI played every holiday.
Speaker AStill played on Spotify every year, as many times as possible.
Speaker AI love it.
Speaker BYou'd go number one?
Speaker BYou go number one?
Speaker ASure.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker BWow.
Speaker AI think everybody knows that song, and it's so great.
Speaker AIt's like, wow, hits that high note.
Speaker AI mean, come on, Mariah.
Speaker BAll right, yeah.
Speaker BSee, I'd go.
Speaker BI'd go like George Michael.
Speaker BI'd go Kylie Minogue.
Speaker BI might even go a little Bing Crosby in there, you know?
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker BYou go number one?
Speaker ANo.
Speaker BInteresting.
Speaker BI didn't expect you to see that at all.
Speaker AIt's fun.
Speaker AIt's a great song.
Speaker AI love it.
Speaker AKeep going.
Speaker AI hope Mariah is set for life.
Speaker AIt sounds like she is with $60 million in royalties, but sounds like it's.
Speaker BOne hell of an annuity for her.
Speaker BMy God.
Speaker BAll right, Ella, producer Ella, come on in.
Speaker BI have no idea which way you're gonna go this week on which headline won the show.
Speaker CI feel like it could be a drum roll.
Speaker CNow, Chris, the headline that won this week was the Smart glasses Wave.
Speaker CThis was really intriguing.
Speaker CI will agree with both of you for all the reasons you stated, which might shock some of you given my demographic and my consumer lens.
Speaker BSo, okay, so I want to make.
Speaker BSo this is good to know.
Speaker BThis is why we bring you on the show at the end of.
Speaker BThe end of every podcast.
Speaker BBecause, like, like what I was worried about.
Speaker BAnd when we were doing our take on it, I was weird.
Speaker BWe're going to get like the.
Speaker BGet off your law and old folks take here from Ella.
Speaker BBut we did it.
Speaker BSo, like, the younger generation is kind of like, yeah, I'm not buying this either.
Speaker BLike, I'm not buying this.
Speaker CI'm just curious what I would use them for besides content creation.
Speaker CLike the.
Speaker CThe hands free photo video makes complete sense, but all the other gadgets scare me a lot.
Speaker CIt's really intimidating and I wonder how much of a learning curve that is.
Speaker CI think I know around five people who have these and they're all photographers, so they use them for, like, bts, behind the scenes taking video photo bottom.
Speaker BTo create content.
Speaker BI haven't used them for that.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BOh, go ahead.
Speaker BAnd it's a utility.
Speaker AIt's a utility purchase.
Speaker ALike, I think that this is something that makes sense the way that you would buy a tool for, you know, like, if you're.
Speaker AIf you travel a lot, like, it'd be nice to have the glasses to.
Speaker ATo translate things while you're through a city into the language that makes sense.
Speaker AThey're looking at a menu.
Speaker ABut I don't.
Speaker AI don't see these as something that you're wearing all the time.
Speaker AIt's like reading glasses where, like, I'm pulling them out for a specific thing.
Speaker AI carry them around with me.
Speaker ABut unless you.
Speaker AYou have all these very specific use cases, I just.
Speaker AI don't see people reaching out and spending, you know, several hundred dollars on a pair of these.
Speaker BThat's an interesting take, though, too, because it makes me wonder if it's like the iPad versus the iPhone thing.
Speaker BLike, you know, like, you know, iPads were really popular for a while, and then you only use them for really specific use cases.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd, you know, and a lot of times those collect dust too.
Speaker BI mean, mine does.
Speaker BBut, you know, maybe.
Speaker BMaybe there is some, like, thing there down the road where there is, like, these specific use cases that all emerge.
Speaker BWho knows?
Speaker CAnd to your point, Ann, I think the fashion comes first, at least in my opinion.
Speaker CAnd with my round head shape, these glasses would not look good on me.
Speaker CI would not be wearing these every day.
Speaker CSo it would have to be a very case by case basis.
Speaker APlus, you look like everybody else.
Speaker AThere's only so many styles.
Speaker ALike, do you want to wear the same thing?
Speaker ALike, you love glasses.
Speaker AElla, you have tons of pairs of glasses.
Speaker ACan you imagine just one?
Speaker CNo, not at all.
Speaker CLike, I literally have mine sitting right here, and they're very long, lanky for people listening at home.
Speaker CBut I look at my Apple watch that I do wear often, and you can replace the band.
Speaker CYou know, you have options.
Speaker AIf the.
Speaker CThe lens itself could be replaceable, maybe I'd be more curious.
Speaker CBut I also think there's something to note about the safety factor too, because we have no idea.
Speaker CWearing these glasses 24 7.
Speaker CI think we mentioned Amazon, that headline with them wearing them, and like, is this gonna be a lawsuit?
Speaker ALike, is it?
Speaker CI don't know, is it gonna be safe for me down the road?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CSo very interesting headline.
Speaker BAll right.
Speaker BHappy birthday today to Julianne Moore, Amanda Seyfried, and to the man who was once told not to.
Speaker BAnna.
Speaker BAppreciate this.
Speaker BWeise the Juice, the incomparable and still underappreciated Brendan Fraser producer.
Speaker BElla, do you even get that reference?
Speaker BWheeze the Juice?
Speaker BDo you know what that is?
Speaker CNo, not one bit.
Speaker BAll right?
Speaker BWhen you have nothing to do this weekend, watch the classic film Encino man, all right?
Speaker BAnd remember, if you could only read or listen to one one retail blog in the business, Make It Omnitok the only retail media outlet run by two former executives from a current top 10 US retailer.
Speaker BOur Fast Five podcast is the quickest, fastest rundown of all the week's top news and our daily newsletter, the Retail Daily Minute, tells you all you need to know each day to stay on top of your game as a retail executive and also regularly features special content that is exclusive to us and that Ann and I take pride in doing just for you.
Speaker BThanks as always for listening and please remember to like and leave us a review wherever you happen to leave.
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Speaker BYou can pause today by simply going to YouTube.com omnitalkretail Today's podcast was of course produced by Ella Sirjord, so until next week, on behalf of all of us at Omnitalk Retail, as always, be careful out there.
Speaker BAnd one programming note, be sure to catch next week episode because our friends from the A and M Consumer and Retail Group will be on to hand out this year's 2025 Retail Awards.