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AI Features Users Are Starting to Expect as Standard

Yellow Peach
written by Simon

Blogs

Not long ago, AI-powered features felt like a differentiator. A chatbot on a website. Personalised recommendations. Search that understood what you meant rather than exactly what you typed. These experiences were often positioned as innovation.

Today, something interesting is happening. Many of these capabilities are quietly becoming part of the baseline expectation for digital products. Users don’t necessarily ask whether AI is involved, but they do notice when an experience feels slower, less intuitive, or harder to use than the alternatives they interact with every day.

The shift isn’t really about AI. It’s about expectations.

Expectations Never Stand Still

We’ve seen this pattern before.

There was a time when mobile-friendly websites were a competitive advantage. The same was true for online account management, personalised experiences, and fast-loading websites.

Eventually those features stopped being impressive. They became expected.

AI appears to be following a similar path.

Much of this is being driven by the tools people use outside of work. Products like ChatGPT, Spotify, Netflix and Amazon have conditioned users to expect experiences that feel responsive, personalised, and capable of understanding intent. Whether they’re consciously thinking about AI or not, those expectations inevitably transfer elsewhere.

A website search that returns poor results now feels far more frustrating than it did a few years ago. Finding information buried across multiple pages feels less acceptable. Generic recommendations feel less useful.

The benchmark has changed.

Search Is Becoming the Clearest Example

Perhaps nowhere is this shift more obvious than search.

Historically, website search has often been disappointing. Users were expected to know the exact terminology being used by the organisation behind the platform. If they searched using slightly different language, they frequently struggled to find what they needed.

That’s becoming increasingly difficult to justify.

People have become accustomed to search experiences that understand context rather than simply matching keywords. They expect systems to interpret intent, surface relevant content, and help them reach an answer quickly.

For organisations with large content libraries, support centres, knowledge bases, or ecommerce catalogues, this is becoming one of the most noticeable gaps between older digital experiences and newer ones.

The expectation isn’t necessarily AI-powered search.

The expectation is simply that search works.

The Most Effective AI Is Often Invisible

One of the biggest misconceptions surrounding AI is that users want to interact with it directly.

In reality, many of the most successful implementations are almost invisible.

A customer might not realise that recommended content has been personalised. They may not know that search results are being intelligently ranked. They probably won’t notice that support tickets are being automatically categorised behind the scenes.

What they do notice is that the platform feels easier to use.

That’s where the real value often lies.

The organisations getting the most value from AI aren’t always the ones building the most ambitious features. More often, they’re using it to remove friction from existing journeys. Helping users find information faster. Making recommendations more relevant. Reducing repetitive tasks. Improving experiences that already exist.

The technology becomes secondary.

The outcome becomes the focus.

Avoiding the Trap of AI for AI’s Sake

Of course, not every platform needs an AI strategy attached to every feature.

As AI becomes more accessible, there’s a growing temptation to introduce it simply because competitors are doing the same. That can lead to unnecessary complexity, increased maintenance overhead, and experiences that feel less intuitive rather than more.

We’ve already started seeing examples where a well-structured website, clear navigation, and strong content architecture deliver far more value than a hastily deployed chatbot.

The goal shouldn’t be to add AI.

The goal should be to make things easier.

Sometimes AI is the answer. Sometimes improving the fundamentals is.

A New Baseline Is Emerging

The interesting thing about AI’s evolution is that, over time, it becomes less visible. Users stop thinking about the technology and start judging the experience instead.

That’s usually the point where a feature has moved from innovation to expectation. We’re not quite there yet, but we’re getting closer.

The organisations that benefit most won’t necessarily be those using the most AI. They’ll be the ones using it thoughtfully, solving genuine user problems, and creating experiences that feel intuitive, efficient, and effortless.

Because ultimately, users don’t care whether something is powered by AI.

They care whether it helps them achieve what they came to do.

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