AI Store Manager
Page.app
An AI agent that runs the whole business behind a page: catalog, checkout, shipping, fulfillment. Not another page builder.
Founder of Page.app, defining the product and the agent architecture end to end.
Every AI page builder can make a page look good. None of them can run a business.
The product insight: small sellers do not need another design tool. They need what a capable operator does, someone who turns their material into something organized, sellable, and maintainable. So we prototyped an AI store manager, before agents were a standard product category. Describe what you want to sell and the system assembles the commercial object you actually need: shipping and inventory for a physical product, content delivery for an album, a one-tap drop for a single item. The page is just the surface it puts on top.
The output was operational, not decorative. Catalog, content, checkout, shipping, and seller workflows generated as one transaction-capable system, with the ongoing work, organizing products, preparing releases, talking to customers, handled in the same place. Categories that are usually separate SaaS products, treated as one operating system.
Most AI products take you eighty percent of the way and hand back the real work. Page.app was built around the other twenty, because that is where money moves.
It was also a position on agents in general. Intelligence is cheap now; the product question is where the agent is allowed to act. Giving one authority over a live store, with real inventory and real customers, forces the discipline most demos skip: constraints, inspectable decisions, reversible actions.
Gallery
- The product in one frame: the conversation on the left, the store it produced on the right.
- What the agent hands back: a storefront that can already take an order, not a mockup of one.
- The editor. You adjust the business in the same place you adjust the page: products, prices, and copy are one surface.
- Theming changes the whole visual system at once, so a store never looks like a template with your name on it.
- The escape hatch: the generated implementation is real code you can read and edit, not a black box.
- Every page you have generated, in one place. The agent manages a portfolio, not a one-off.
- Accounts and membership around the storefront: the unglamorous machinery that makes it a business.