One Company’s Effort to Make an AI-Ready Catalog of Everything We Buy

Published
Score
14

Why it matters

Eko, a Brooklyn-based company, opened a massive "capture factory" warehouse in Bentonville, Arkansas, to produce high-quality, AI-ready digital product files for millions of retail items like vitamin bottles, strollers, and appliances. Hand models, food stylists, and teams photograph and document products from every angle using studio-style stages, taking 10 minutes for simple items or half a day for complex ones like refrigerators; Eko owns the resulting "Eko files" and leases them to brands and retailers for accurate AI chatbot shopping.[2][3][6]

Key players include Eko (founded by Yoni Bloch, with Ben Kaufman as president overseeing Bentonville operations), Walmart (investor of over $300 million since 2018 and key partner), and retailers seeking AI-optimized listings. The 70,000-square-foot facility, larger than two football fields, began operations in 2025 after announcement in May 2025, creating hundreds of jobs and processing up to 750,000 items annually with sensors and AI workflows.[2][4][6][8]

This builds on e-commerce's shift to AI agents (e.g., Google's Gemini, ChatGPT) requiring machine-readable product data for searches and recommendations, amid poor legacy listings; AI catalog enrichment boosts conversions 10-30% and could add $7.5 billion in Amazon GMV by 2025. Eko's factory addresses data quality for agentic commerce, reducing returns and accelerating listings.[1][2][5]

Newsworthy on April 4, 2026, due to WSJ coverage highlighting Eko's scaling as AI shopping surges, positioning it as infrastructure for future retail amid competition from Amazon's Project Starfish and Shopify's categorizations.[1][2][3][5]

Sources

mail

Get notified about new Artificial Intelligence developments

Primary sources. No fluff. Straight to your inbox.

See more entries tagged Artificial Intelligence.