# Field Sales AI Hits Hardware Aisles and Dealer Floors

> This week, AI tools built specifically for in-person sales moved from pilots to chain-wide rollouts: Ace Hardware's Hey ARMA went live across more than 2,300 stores, and Moto Morini deployed Ekho to pre-qualify motorcycle buyers before handing them to dealers. The same week, Salesforce, ServiceNow, and Allego shipped the orchestration releases that explain how these tools could scale without a multi-year IT cycle. The face-to-face seller finally has the AI co-pilot the desk-based knowledge worker has had for three years.

Content type: article
Source URL: https://www.agentpmt.com/articles/field-sales-ai-hits-hardware-aisles-and-dealer-floors
Markdown URL: https://www.agentpmt.com/articles/field-sales-ai-hits-hardware-aisles-and-dealer-floors?format=agent-md
Updated: 2026-05-07T12:23:06.253Z
Author: Stephanie Goodman
Tags: MCP, Multi-Agent Workflows, AI Agents In Business, DynamicMCP, Enterprise AI Implementation, News, Agent Orchestration

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# Inside the Week the Sales Floor Got Its AI Co-Pilot

Last week, an AI assistant called Hey ARMA went live on the handheld devices of more than 2,300 Ace Hardware stores. Associates can speak to it, type at it, or hand it a phone photo of a part. It answers in seconds — pulling specs, project guidance, promotions, and inventory across a typical store's twenty thousand SKUs. Ace built it with about seven engineers using third-party language models and the cooperative's own retail data. It is a small handheld tool that compresses search time so an associate can stay with the customer.

The same week, Moto Morini's U.S. site started routing motorcycle buyers through a conversational pre-qualifier built by Ekho. Salesforce's Agentforce Operations went generally available. ServiceNow opened its system of action to any external AI agent through a new MCP Server. Allego rolled out a sales platform with a mobile note-taker designed for field meetings. The cluster is the news: artificial intelligence for sales has moved out of the desk-bound knowledge worker's laptop and onto the [shoes-on-a-store-floor side of the business](https://www.agentpmt.com/industries/in-person-sales).

## Hey ARMA at Chain Scale

Ace Hardware is a hardware cooperative built around independently owned stores, each operating with what Mitchell Parton's Modern Retail reporting describes as "a couple of employees managing 20,000 to 25,000 items." That ratio is the operational reality that has constrained what an associate could do in the moment — answer about plumbing fittings while another customer asks about deck stain, while a third wants to know whether a saw blade fits a tool from a different brand. Hey ARMA is a tool built to that reality.

It runs inside the existing ARMA — Ace Retailer Mobile Assistant — handheld device. Voice, text, and image inputs land in the same workflow. It checks live inventory, surfaces the day's promotions (a feature Ace added after early store testing showed customers were asking about sale items), explains DIY projects, and recommends a part for a tool the customer didn't even buy at Ace.

Andy Enright, Ace's senior vice president of retail strategy and operations, has been explicit about why the company built it internally. In Modern Retail's coverage, Enright said: "We decided it would be best for a multitude of reasons to build it internally and go at our own pace and build and scale this further." A cooperative cannot mandate an enterprise rollout the way a corporate retailer can. Ace needed buy-in from independent owners, and that requires shipping something store associates actually use.

The build path is the part chains under a thousand stores should study. Roughly seven employees. Third-party LLMs underneath. Existing handheld hardware that associates already carry. About a year of work. That is the cheapest credible AI deployment shape any large physical retailer has on record this year, and the playbook Ace can defend at scale because it controls every piece of the build.

The result, by Enright's description in Digital Commerce 360, is that Hey ARMA "accelerates the onboarding and effectiveness of new associates and equips seasoned experts with faster answers on the floor." Expert consultant Michael Salvaggio, quoted in the same coverage, said new employees can perform at the level of ten-year veterans on their first day. That is a sales-effectiveness claim disguised as a training claim. The face-to-face seller has just had years of tribal knowledge collapsed into a voice prompt.

## The Dealer Floor Gets a Pre-Qualifier

A second segment of in-person sales got AI from a different direction this week. On May 4, Moto Morini Motorcycles launched an AI sales agent on MotoMoriniUSA.com, built by Ekho. Powersports Business reported the deployment on May 6. The agent does not sit at the dealer's elbow. It sits on the OEM site, where it qualifies riders before any handoff happens.

The qualifying conversation is where the design choice matters. The agent asks about riding style, experience level, and budget, then routes the conversation to the appropriate dealership for the X-Cape 1200, the X-Cape 700, or the Calibro 700. By the time a salesperson at a Moto Morini–affiliated dealership reads the inbound, it is no longer a name and an email address with a checkbox saying "I'm interested." It is an annotated transcript of a buyer who has already articulated what they want to ride, what they have ridden before, and what they can spend.

Chris McGee, COO of Moto Morini Motorcycles, made his comparison with what was already on the market direct: "We looked at a lot of options for handling online leads, and most of them amounted to little more than enhanced forms. Ekho was different." Read past the brand sentiment, and the structural point is what any dealer should care about. A pre-qualifier moves the cost of triage off the showroom and onto the OEM site. Whoever closes ends up with a shorter conversation and a better-leveraged use of expensive showroom time.

The Moto Morini deployment is small — three models, one OEM, one launch week — but the pattern is portable. [Auto dealers](https://www.agentpmt.com/industries/automotive-dealerships), RV dealers, boat dealers, and capital-equipment dealers share the same shape: a high-consideration purchase, expensive in-person time, and a flood of inbound web inquiries that mostly aren't real buyers. Anyone selling vehicles or equipment from a showroom in 2026 should be asking whether their lead pipeline has a pre-qualification layer in front of the sales team. If it doesn't, a competitor's will.

## Why It Could Ship This Week

The retail-floor and dealer-floor launches did not happen in isolation. The same week, the orchestration releases that let these tools reach scale without a custom integration team for every retailer landed in three pieces.

Salesforce made Agentforce Operations generally available on April 29. VentureBeat's coverage on May 1 emphasized the deterministic design — Agentforce Operations routes specialized agents through a defined task structure rather than letting an agent decide its own next step. Auto-sync to Data Cloud and Salesforce Flow triggers, including Field Service workflows, enter Beta in May. That last detail is the connection point any field sales platform vendor cares about: a retailer's floor app or a dealer's pre-qualifier can now hand off to a Field Service workflow without anyone hand-rolling the integration. Field sales enablement vendors who tried to ship this connection two years ago had to write the integration themselves and rewrite it every time the underlying SaaS schema changed.

ServiceNow's announcement at Knowledge 2026 on May 5 came at the same problem from the other direction. Action Fabric, plus a generally available MCP Server, opens the ServiceNow AI Platform to any external AI agent — Claude, Copilot, or a customer's own — through the [Model Context Protocol](https://www.agentpmt.com/articles/the-evolution-of-mcp-standardization-and-dynamic-connection). Anthropic is named as the launch design partner via Claude Cowork. The point is structural: if your tool publishes to MCP, any agent can call it, and it inherits ServiceNow's identity, permission scoping, and audit trail. That is the architectural pattern that lowered the cost of building Hey ARMA, and the same pattern that makes [Ekho-style vertical agents portable across dealers](https://www.agentpmt.com/articles/dynamic-mcp-the-hub-and-spoke-solution-to-ai-agent-tool-sprawl).

Allego rolled out Allego 9 the same day at its Sales Success Summit. The component list includes a Mobile Note Taker for in-meeting capture, Field Meeting AI, AI Deal Alerts, Roleplay AI for coaching, and an MCP API Server. CEO Yuchun Lee framed it as embedding AI directly into existing flow of work without forcing salespeople to become "expert AI prompt engineers." That is a quieter way of conceding the same thing Hey ARMA and Ekho both concede: tools built for desk workers don't survive contact with a sales floor or a customer-facing meeting unless they accept the operating reality of the role — handheld, voice or photo input, one-handed use, intermittent connectivity. The sales floor cannot pause to write a prompt.

AgentPMT operates in this same architectural space for a different audience. The [drag-and-drop workflow builder](https://www.agentpmt.com/agent-workflow-skills-builder) and [Dynamic MCP marketplace](https://www.agentpmt.com/dynamic-mcp) are the same bet — tools served on demand to agents, governed access, cross-platform portability across hosted agents like Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, and Gemini — pointed at SMB operators, creators, and embedded use cases rather than enterprise IT. The kind of focused vertical agent Ekho built for Moto Morini is the shape an operator can configure on AgentPMT and [embed on a brand or dealer site](https://www.agentpmt.com/embeddable-ai) without a year-long internal build.

## What's Next on the Floor

The week's launches matter because they extend artificial intelligence into a role the desk-based wave never reached. [Field sales automation](https://www.agentpmt.com/articles/from-tools-to-workflows-the-composition-layer-nobody-warned-you-about) has been a vendor pitch for years. Field sales AI was, until this spring, mostly slideware. Field sales workflows that survive on a handheld with intermittent connectivity and a customer two feet away are the actual deliverable of this week's deployments.

The open issues worth watching are about which segments come next. Door-to-door reps, residential services teams, B2B field sales in industrial wholesale, and outside sales in adjacent verticals all share the same operating shape — face-to-face selling on a handheld, intermittent connectivity, customer in front of you, expert knowledge needed in seconds. The orchestration releases that landed this week are now generally available to whoever wants to ship the next deployment. What repeats next will set the default: Ace's internal build, or the platform shape that AgentPMT and others enable for chains and dealer networks under a thousand locations. The sales floor and the dealer floor have their first plausible AI co-pilots. The next ninety days will show which pattern repeats.

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## Sources

-   How Ace Hardware built its employee AI assistant — Modern Retail
-   How Ace Hardware built its employee AI assistant — Digiday
-   Ace Hardware debuts Hey ARMA, its new AI assistant for in-store help — Digital Commerce 360
-   Moto Morini deploys AI sales agent to boost dealer leads — Powersports Business
-   Salesforce launches Agentforce Operations to fix the workflows breaking enterprise AI — VentureBeat
-   ServiceNow opens its full system of action to every AI Agent in the enterprise — ServiceNow Newsroom
-   Allego Introduces Allego 9 to Connect AI Directly to Revenue Execution — SalesTechStar