> Agents that source quotes, negotiate prices, and get the best deals.
Didn't Alexa fail miserably with the "have AI buy something for me" theory?
There is a significant mental in allowing someone else make purchase decisions on my behalf:
- With a human, there is accountability.
- With deterministic software, there is reproducibility.
With an agent, you get neither.
FWIW - I am not anti-LLM. I work with them and build them full time.
This refers to B2B use cases that are live in production. Finding, contacting, and negotiating with vendors is a tedious process in many industries. In the time a human reaches out to 10 vendors, an agent reaches out to 100 or 1000. So it finds deals that a human would not have.
We are using AgentMail for sourcing quotes here at scale with various top shippers. It’s not about letting the agent act in fully deterministic ways, it’s about setting up the right guardrails. The agents can now do most of the job, but when there’s low confidence on their output, we have human in the loop systems to act fast. At least in competitive industries like logistics, if you don’t leverage these types of workflows, you’re getting very behind, which ultimately costs you more money than being off by some dollars or cents when giving a quote back.