Canadian retailers continue to face mounting operational pressure in 2026 as consumer spending remains cautious, operating costs remain elevated, and lean head office teams are increasingly expected to execute faster across more channels and platforms. At the same time, many businesses are moving beyond experimenting with artificial intelligence and are now looking for ways to integrate automation directly into day-to-day retail operations.
That shift is creating growing demand for firms capable of implementing AI tools across marketing, customer engagement, reporting, and back-office functions in practical and measurable ways.
Canadian growth advisory firm Tropoly says it recently surpassed 1,000 live automations operating across businesses in Canada and the United States, a milestone that reflects how quickly retailers and consumer-facing companies are adopting AI-driven workflows at scale.
The figure includes automations spanning CRM workflows, marketing operations, reporting systems, customer lifecycle management, finance functions, and administrative processes. According to the company, more than half of the automations were built within the past year as retailers accelerated operational AI adoption.
“The conversation has changed significantly over the last 12 months,” said Tropoly Partner Mark Funston. “Businesses are no longer asking whether they should invest in automation. They’re asking which operational bottlenecks they should solve first.”
Tropoly develops and manages its automation infrastructure through Tropoly OS, the company’s internal AI integration and process automation practice. The firm works with businesses across retail, consumer services, and other sectors where efficiency and execution speed have become increasingly important amid margin pressure and rising costs.
Retailers Move Beyond AI Pilot Projects
Across the retail sector, artificial intelligence initiatives are increasingly moving beyond pilot projects and limited experimentation. Retailers are now seeking systems that can integrate directly into existing operations while improving speed, visibility, and efficiency across departments.
For many businesses, the priority has shifted toward automating repetitive workflows while allowing internal teams to focus on higher-value decision-making and customer-facing strategy.
Funston said many retailers are looking for practical AI applications that can support day-to-day operations without requiring major internal restructuring.
“The businesses moving fastest right now are the ones focusing on operational use cases instead of treating AI as a standalone experiment,” he said.

Customer Lifecycle Automation Becoming a Priority
One of the busiest areas for automation development has been customer lifecycle management, particularly among multi-location retailers seeking faster ways to respond to customer behaviour and purchasing signals.
Funston said many retailers are replacing manual CRM segmentation and campaign workflows with automated systems capable of triggering loyalty offers, re-engagement campaigns, lead routing, and post-purchase communication in near real time.
In one recent engagement, Tropoly worked with a multi-location consumer-facing business to automate customer re-engagement campaigns that previously required several days of manual segmentation and reporting work each month. According to the company, the automation reduced campaign turnaround times significantly while improving consistency across locations.
“Lifecycle automation is often where retailers see the fastest return,” Funston said. “The speed of response matters, especially when customer expectations are changing quickly and marketing teams are already stretched.”
For retailers operating across multiple markets or store networks, centralized customer data has become increasingly important as businesses attempt to coordinate marketing activity more efficiently between locations and channels.
The company says many of these systems are designed to reduce delays caused by disconnected customer databases and manual workflows, areas that continue to create friction for retail organizations.
Retail Marketing Teams Face Growing Content Demands
Marketing and content operations have also emerged as a major focus area for automation investment.
Retailers today are producing significantly more digital content across social media, e-commerce, email marketing, paid media, and regional campaigns than they were only a few years ago. According to Tropoly, the approval, reporting, adaptation, and quality assurance processes surrounding that content have become increasingly resource intensive for internal teams.
The company says its recent work in this category has included automated reporting systems, campaign QA workflows, regional content adaptation, and AI-assisted asset generation processes.
“A year ago, most businesses were asking whether AI could help generate a caption or a product description,” Funston said. “Now the discussion is about how AI can support larger workflows while people remain focused on strategy, approvals, and brand direction.”
Funston added that retailers are increasingly looking for systems that allow smaller internal marketing teams to manage growing volumes of content across multiple platforms and geographic markets.

Back-Office Automation Gains Momentum
Beyond marketing functions, retailers are also using automation to reduce administrative workload inside finance and operational departments.
Tropoly says it has developed systems for invoice processing, supplier onboarding, KPI reporting, reconciliation work, and data aggregation across disconnected software platforms.
For many organizations, particularly those operating with leaner teams, automation projects in finance and operations are becoming a way to recover staff capacity without significantly increasing headcount.
“The behind-the-scenes work is often where businesses recover the most time,” Funston said. “When repetitive reporting and reconciliation tasks become automated, teams can spend more time analyzing information instead of manually compiling it.”
Retailers continue to face pressure to improve efficiency while maintaining service levels and controlling costs, particularly as many organizations continue navigating cautious consumer spending patterns in Canada and the United States.
AI Integration Becomes a Long-Term Retail Strategy
Industry-wide, retailers have increasingly shifted their focus from testing AI tools to embedding automation into existing systems and workflows. Businesses are looking for practical applications that improve efficiency, visibility, and responsiveness rather than standalone experimental tools.
Tropoly says demand has been strongest among companies seeking tighter integration between customer data, marketing systems, reporting infrastructure, and operational decision-making.
The company’s leadership team includes Managing Partner Neel Singh, Partner of Brand Strategy and Creative Brady Dahmer, and Ruby Sandhu, who leads Client Operations and Ecosystem Growth.
Earlier this month, Tropoly also hosted its Nexus Forum event alongside Web Summit Vancouver, bringing together operators, investors, and business leaders focused on AI adoption and operational growth strategies.
Funston said the next phase of AI implementation for many businesses will involve improving visibility between systems that already exist within organizations, rather than simply adding more tools.
“You can build sophisticated automations, but leadership teams still need visibility into what those systems are doing and how they’re impacting the business,” he said. “That operational clarity is becoming just as important as the automation itself.”
Founded in Canada, Tropoly works with mid-market and enterprise businesses across North America on AI integration, scalable systems, growth strategy, and managed marketing operations.












