Why Marine Layer Thinks Agentic Commerce Is Just the New SEO

Why Marine Layer Thinks Agentic Commerce Is Just the New SEO

Michael Natenshon built Marine Layer starting from a single T-shirt he could not replace, spent a year and a half developing custom fabric from scratch, and then opened a pop-up shop purely to collect email addresses. That pop-up accidentally put Marine Layer on a retail path it never planned for, and today the brand operates more than 50 stores. On this episode of Brilliant Commerce, Bryan Mahoney sits down with Natenshon in person at Marine Layer's San Francisco office to unpack what 15-plus years of building an omnichannel apparel brand actually looks like from the inside.

Natenshon is direct about the constraints that shaped the business: limited capital forced disciplined decisions, and a deliberate pace of five to ten new stores per year built customer loyalty that faster-moving competitors could not replicate. He also shares how Marine Layer is currently approaching agentic commerce, including changes to product descriptions and review strategy, and why his team remains cautious about advertising inside AI chat tools despite the emerging opportunity.

Topics discussed:

- Pop-up retail as accidental customer acquisition strategy

- Why capital constraints produce better brand decisions

- Building 50-plus stores at a deliberate five to ten per year

- Omnichannel from day one and the inventory tradeoffs

- Founding partnership dynamics between complementary operators

- Agentic commerce as the new SEO

- Adapting product content for AI-driven discovery

- Skepticism around in-chat advertising models


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