Manage product listings
Ecommerce operators juggle inventory monitoring, product listing optimization, pricing adjustments, competitor tracking, and order fulfillment coordination. A single out of stock SKU on a best seller costs revenue. A product description that does not match the search terms buyers use costs visibility. A pricing gap against a competitor costs conversion. Each of these problems is solvable individually, but managing all of them manually across a catalog of hundreds or thousands of SKUs is where teams fall behind.
How the eCommerce works
The agent operates across the core operational areas that determine store performance. It monitors inventory levels and triggers reorder alerts before stockouts occur. It audits product listings for SEO gaps, missing attributes, and inconsistent formatting. It tracks competitor pricing for overlapping SKUs and flags opportunities to adjust.
Operational coverage:
- Inventory monitoring: tracks stock levels against sales velocity and triggers alerts at configurable thresholds
- Listing optimization: audits titles, descriptions, and attributes for keyword coverage and completeness
- Competitor price tracking: monitors pricing for matched products across specified competitor storefronts
- Catalog hygiene: identifies missing images, duplicate listings, incorrect categorization, and attribute gaps
Why you need the eCommerce
Direct to consumer brands and marketplace sellers managing mid size catalogs (100 to 10,000 SKUs) will benefit from automated monitoring. The agent is particularly useful for teams without dedicated catalog managers or pricing analysts. Stores with fewer than 50 SKUs can manage these tasks in spreadsheets. For subscription revenue management rather than product catalog operations, the Subscription Management Agent handles recurring billing workflows.
How the eCommerce compares
The Ecommerce Agent focuses on product catalog operations: inventory, listings, pricing, and merchandising. The Subscription Management Agent handles recurring revenue mechanics: billing cycles, plan changes, and payment failures. One manages the storefront; the other manages ongoing customer billing. Businesses with both one time purchases and subscriptions may use both agents.
