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Thursday, October 23, 2025

New to Copier Sales: What is this ‘CPC’ Thing?


In 
Game of Thrones, the Stark words were simple: “Winter is Coming.” Unlike the proud mottos of other houses, theirs was a warning. Winters went on for years, comfort never lasts and hardship always returns. 
Our winter is the death of the copier. 

The End of SaaS: When Curiosity Becomes the Platform


Ray may be right about new CRM entrants like DX1 and Noetics are on the same path as Forza - but he, and the rest of the world, are missing the really BIG point.


By Celeste Dame 

A quiet experiment inside OpenAi just made every CRM, ERP, and SaaS platform, and those who argue for or against one or another, 

irrelevant. 

The next revolution belongs to the questions we ask, not the software we buy.

Prolog:

In every industry, the same story plays out. Vendors promise the next platform will fix what the last one broke. But a quiet revolution inside OpenAi has already rendered that cycle meaningless. What began as a tool to study customer tickets has become the clearest proof yet that the age of SaaS is ending. The Research Assistant, developed by OpenAi, shows what happens when every business owner can speak directly to their data. It doesn’t need reports or analysts. It listens, reasons, and answers in real time. All that is required is curiosity. 

And it exists today, right now.

The business owner who once waited on consultants and dashboards now simply asks a question and receives insight, instantly. The Research Assistant demonstrates a future where curiosity replaces code and reasoning replaces reporting. 

This article was inspired by Ray’s latest podcast, which raises fair concerns about the latest ERPs but misses the larger point. The world no longer needs CRMs, companies like CEO Juice, or the cottage industry of pundits and consultants decoding data that has been machinated by legacy SaaS. The debate over which platform will save us is meaningless. The system itself no longer matters, only the intelligence behind it.

Wednesday, October 22, 2025

The Last Tail: How Robots Replace the Copier Model


by Mason Bright

For fifty years, the office technology channel has lived on the same rhythm. Quote. Lease. Deliver. Service. Renew. Every copier in the field carried a tail that fed technicians, back offices, and sales commissions. Dealers built their culture on that cadence. But the math no longer works. Print volumes fall. Leasing cycles stretch. Technicians retire faster than replacements arrive.

At the Post Walters webcast this fall, that reality met its replacement. The conversation that began as a routine check-in became a turning point. It confirmed what a handful of dealers already suspected: the next service tail will not come from pages. 

CricketsUS exists to make that future familiar enough to act on. The idea is not to romanticize robots, but to make them ordinary, to make them as practical and serviceable as a copier once was.

It will come from robots.

CricketsUS was built to make that possible. Its mission is simple enough to print on a T-shirt: We bring robots to the channel, and the channel to robots. The idea sounds bold until you realize how similar the mechanics already are. Robots need the same things copiers needed: installation, networking, firmware updates, service contracts, and local technicians who show up. The difference is movement. Instead of paper through rollers, you have payloads on wheels.

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

The Dealer Network That Taught Robots to Work


by Mason Bright

By the time most industries notice their decline, the ground has already shifted. The copier channel is lucky. It still has time to steer. At the Post Walters webcast, that steering began in public view.

The conversation pulled together the full spectrum of experience. Art Post and Greg Walters spoke for the bridge-builders. Kevin Frey represented the technical architects. Ed McLaughlin and Chip Miceli carried the institutional memory. The topic was robotics, but the subtext was survival. Could the copier channel, with all its trucks, techs, and tenacity, become the distribution and service backbone for an entirely new class of machines?

CricketsUS exists to answer that question with action. The coalition now represents the most coordinated effort yet to convert copier and IT dealers into robotic resellers, local partners who can sell, lease, install, and service autonomous machines in the same way they once handled MFPs.

Sunday, October 19, 2025

Robots to the Channel, Channel to Robots


By Mason Bright

The numbers do not lie. Print volumes fall each quarter. Managed IT helped but never replaced pages. Water and VoIP filled some gaps. Production print flared, then flattened. Dealers keep diversifying, but the mix still leans 65 percent A3 and A4. Service tails shrink. Technicians age out. Recruiting stalls. The question hangs in every service bay and boardroom: what replaces the copier as the hardware that keeps the channel alive?

CricketsUS exists to answer that question. Our mission fits on a single line: we bring robots to the channel, and the channel to robots.

That means giving copier and IT dealers a bridge into the emerging world of service robotics, autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) and humanoids that move, learn, and generate recurring service revenue. It also means showing robotic manufacturers how to reach real customers through the field-service networks you already run.

Friday, October 17, 2025

Are We Experiencing a Convergence or ‘The’ Convergence? 2025 Version

By Greg Walters

In 2013 I wrote about convergence as a meeting of formerly distinct domains. Now, in 2025, that framing feels quaint. The question has shifted: we no longer approach convergence. 

We live it.

Contact Me

Greg Walters, Incorporated
greg@grwalters.com
262.370.4193