Why online shopping feels like a chore in 2025

While online shopping remains undeniably convenient, many are beginning to wonder: Is it still fun?

According to a new study from Criteo, 75% of consumers now see online shopping as purely “functional.” For a growing number of shoppers—particularly younger ones fueling the revival of America’s shopping malls and returning to physical stores—the excitement of browsing online has started to fade.

Nearly 80% of online shoppers described the experience as lonely. There’s no one in the fitting room to hype you up, no sales associate offering styles you wouldn’t normally pick for yourself. Just endless scrolling, decision fatigue, and return labels.

Often, it starts with tapping on an Instagram ad and ends with an Apple Pay purchase destined to sit in your closet with the tags still on, quietly outlasting the return window. As a result, 29% of shoppers now view online shopping as a chore. More than a third say they miss the joy of discovering something unexpected in a store.

Another 78% report feeling overwhelmed by the sheer number of options online. If you’ve ever browsed Temu, Shein, or TikTok Shop—with their flashy, chaotic interfaces and algorithm-fed feeds of “crazy low prices”—you’ll likely relate. Only about half of consumers find online shopping to be relaxing or enjoyable.

“Today, we no longer ‘go shopping’—we are always shopping—but that hasn’t made the experience more exciting. Instead, online retail has become a functional necessity, optimized for speed but stripped of surprise and spontaneity,” says Marc Fischli, Criteo’s executive managing director. “Our research shows that consumers crave the thrill of the unexpected, yet too often, discovery is being left to chance. Brands that don’t reinject joy into the shopping journey risk fading into the background of a transactional, forgettable experience.”

AI could help personalize the online experience and recreate that feeling of stumbling upon something special. In fact, 43% of online shoppers said they wouldn’t mind if retailers used their data to create more personalized experiences.

Until then, the doomscrolling continues in search of that elusive dopamine hit.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91325935/why-online-shopping-feels-like-a-chore-in-2025?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Creado 3mo | 1 may 2025, 6:10:02


Inicia sesión para agregar comentarios

Otros mensajes en este grupo.

Perplexity’s bid to buy Chrome is likely more stunt than strategy

The AI search startup Perplexity has tendered an unsolicited offer to

12 ago 2025, 23:40:04 | Fast company - tech
Musk to sue Apple for featuring OpenAI over X, Grok in the App Store’s top apps

Billionaire SpaceX, Tesla and X owner Elon Musk says he plans to sue

12 ago 2025, 19:10:04 | Fast company - tech
Companies explore their own stablecoins under new law, but hurdles remain

Financial companies from Bank of America to Fiserv are preparing to launch their own dollar-backed crypto tokens now that a new U.S. law has established the first-ever rules for

12 ago 2025, 19:10:03 | Fast company - tech
Mel Robbins’s secrets to helping your kids achieve ‘phone-life balance’

Feel like you’re constantly yelling at your kids to get off their phones? Wondering how to rein in their

12 ago 2025, 12:10:04 | Fast company - tech
Teachers are warming up to using AI in classrooms

Generative AI platforms have sent shock waves

12 ago 2025, 9:40:09 | Fast company - tech
Social media users and health experts raise fresh concerns around kratom-containing drinks like Feel Free

A “feel good” herbal supplement is facing backlash online after a number of social media users shared their stories of addiction and terrifying health effects. 

Feel Free is sold at

11 ago 2025, 19:50:04 | Fast company - tech