It used to be that the trip to Target meant a cart, an aisle map and, very likely, a spontaneous impulse buy. Now the Minneapolis retailer wants to make that same sense of discovery available in a chat window — and it’s doing it inside ChatGPT. Target this week announced a beta launch of a ChatGPT app that lets people ask for ideas, build multi-item baskets (yes, whole carts), buy groceries and check out — all without leaving the conversational flow.
This is not a small experiment. Target describes the app as a “first-of-its-kind conversational, curated shopping experience,” built to let guests tag the Target app inside ChatGPT and say things like “help me plan a family holiday movie night.” The bot then answers with style-led suggestions (blankets, snacks, candles, slippers), helps shoppers assemble a basket, and completes the purchase using Drive Up, Order Pickup or shipping. Target says same-day delivery and Target Circle linking are coming soon.

Retailers have spent the last decade trying to compress discovery, inspiration and checkout into smaller, faster experiences — from social commerce to in-app checkout flows. What’s new here is the channel: instead of scrolling a product feed or poring through search results, this is shopping that starts with plain language. For shoppers who prefer to describe what they want in a sentence (“cozy movie night for four with kids aged 8–12”), an intelligent chat can surface combinations and finishing touches the user might not have found on their own. Target and OpenAI hope that natural language will reduce friction and increase basket size by turning inspiration into action faster.
It’s also part of a larger move by OpenAI to turn ChatGPT into a commerce platform. Over the last month, the company has rolled out retail integrations — from Shopify and Etsy merchants to partnerships with big chains — that let users complete purchases inside conversations. The Target deal slots neatly into that strategy: it gives OpenAI a major national retailer and gives Target another place to meet customers where many of them already spend time.
Target isn’t presenting this as a gimmick. The rollout builds on the retailer’s internal use of OpenAI tools: Target has been using ChatGPT Enterprise across teams for workflows like supply chain forecasting, store operations and digital personalization, the companies say. That internal adoption is part of the pitch — the same models helping employees will also help shape how the shopping experience behaves for guests.
Prat Vemana, Target’s EVP and chief information and product officer, framed the launch as a “meet customers where they are” play: the goal, he said, is to make interactions “feel as natural, helpful and inspiring as chatting with a friend.” OpenAI’s Fidji Simo, who leads the company’s applications business, emphasized the enterprise angle — that this is the kind of AI transformation happening inside big companies when they move fast and with intent.
The user experience: discovery first, checkout second
From Target’s examples, the experience is deliberately curation-forward: the chat suggests themed bundles and style directions rather than dumping search results. The logic reads like this: inspiration -> curation -> consolidated basket -> checkout. That flow is important — it’s where conversational interfaces can add value beyond search bars and filters by nudging shoppers toward complementary items they didn’t know they needed. Target says the app supports fresh food as well as general merchandise, and that shoppers will be able to choose fulfillment options that match their needs.
That said, conversational commerce still faces practical questions: how will the interface handle visual needs (fit, texture, color)? How does it present alternatives? And how well will conversational recommendations match real inventory and local store availability? Those details will shape whether the experience is a neat convenience or a genuinely better way to shop. Tech writers and analysts are watching early beta results closely.
Bigger picture: competition, trust and the fees question
Target’s move also nudges the broader commerce ecosystem. OpenAI is actively courting merchants and platform partners, and other big retailers are already testing similar integrations — Walmart, for example, announced its own ChatGPT shopping tie-up earlier as part of the same wave of deals. That competition will determine how much control platforms like ChatGPT get over the checkout experience — and whether marketplaces, payment rails and retailers share the economics.
Trust matters, too. Target cites a Harris Poll finding that nearly half of Gen Z would trust AI to help them make purchases — an important data point for any retailer banking on conversational recommendations. Still, consumers are rightly sceptical about accuracy, privacy and how recommendations are influenced by promotions or vendor deals. Target and OpenAI will need to be transparent about data use and how recommendations are generated if they want to move from novelty to habit.
What to watch when the beta lands
Target’s beta launches next week in time for the holiday surge, which is no accident: the holidays are when discovery and impulse combine with real urgency. Early metrics to watch will be conversion rates from conversational recommendations, average order value for multi-item baskets, and how often guests choose Drive Up or Pickup vs. shipping. On the retailer side, operations teams will also watch whether AI recommendations translate to manageable inventory patterns and smoother fulfillment.
For shoppers, the promise is simple: less friction between an idea and having everything you need showing up at your door or curbside. For Target and OpenAI, it’s a bet that the conversational layer can be the new front door to commerce — and that “shopping by chat” can scale beyond niche use cases into mainstream behavior. Whether customers like the experience and whether the economics make sense for retailers will be the story that unfolds over the next few months.
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