If you thought Alexa just played music, Amazon has bigger plans. During its Q2 earnings call, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy revealed the company is seriously considering ads inside Alexa+ conversations. Yes, ads. In your chats. With your AI assistant.
Jassy pitched it like this: as users start having “multi-turn conversations” with Alexa+, meaning longer, back-and-forth chats, there is potential to sneak in some helpful (read: revenue-generating) product suggestions. Think: “While you’re asking about healthy snacks, can I interest you in these vitamin gummies on sale?”
Of course, Amazon isn’t saying exactly how this would work yet. But Jassy’s message was clear: more AI chats equals more chances to sell you stuff. Alexa+ is Amazon’s upgraded, AI-powered assistant, its answer to ChatGPT, Google Gemini, and whatever Perplexity’s building. It is meant to be smarter, more conversational, and capable of “agentic behaviors” (basically, tasks that feel more human).
It has already rolled out to millions of users. Prime members get Alexa+ included, while others can shell out $20/month for access. And yes, Jassy hinted that a premium ad-free tier may eventually be a thing, because when it comes to monetizing AI, Amazon wants every possible lever.
Until now, Alexa ads were limited: a banner on your Echo Show here, a voice ad between songs there. But the idea of Alexa+ slipping sponsored content into casual convo? That’s uncharted territory. And one that has marketers drooling, and privacy advocates side-eyeing.
Even Jassy knows it is tricky. Alexa+ is still prone to “hallucinations,” which is a polite way of saying it sometimes makes stuff up. That’s not exactly ideal for recommending products. Imagine your AI assistant raving about a blender that doesn’t exist, not a great look for brand partnerships.
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But the potential payoff is big. Amazon’s ad revenue jumped 22% in Q2. And with Alexa+ users possibly chatting more than they ever did with classic Alexa, Jassy sees a juicy opportunity.
Amazon’s also spending like crazy to catch up in the AI race. Its capital expenditures hit $31.4 billion in Q2, up 90% from last year. A big chunk of that is going into developing custom AI chips and building data centers to power Alexa+ and other AI products.
And while AWS (Amazon’s cloud business) is still a beast, growing 18% this quarter, Amazon needs new revenue streams to pay for all those AI ambitions. Hence: ads in Alexa+. And more subscriptions. And maybe both.
Early feedback on Alexa+ has been… meh. Some features have been slow to ship, and the rollout hasn’t wowed critics. Plus, there’s the creep factor: chatting casually with your AI assistant, only to have it start pitching deodorant or dog treats based on your convo history.
And let’s not forget: generative AI collects a lot of data. If Amazon plans to monetize those insights through ads, users might start asking questions about where their words are going and who is profiting from them. When your AI assistant starts selling you stuff mid-convo, is it still a helper, or just a glorified ad rep? Amazon’s betting that we won’t mind. But if Alexa+ becomes a shopping mall with a voice, will people keep talking?