"Amazon Cuts Kindle Price to $259" is the USAToday headline.  This $40 whack is the second price cut this year. Sony is selling its ePocket for $199.  Of course Kindle is pushing that it has more content available and easier wireless access than Sony,- even internationally.  Expectations are for 3 million e-Readers to be sold in 2009 (about 1 million around the holidays.)  Obviously, if you aren't paying attention this is a big deal.  It is changing publishing (books, magazines and newspapers.)  But the impact goes far beyond publishing.

Simultaneously, The Wall Street Journal reports "Just a Touch Away, the Elusive Tablet PC."  According to this article, new devices are being tested that will allow you to do everything from classic PC applications to web interconnection to watch movies – or read books – on a keyboard-less new tablet.  Something that is a cross between an iPhone/iTouch (with a bigger screen) and a PC.  As iPhone users are learning (quickly) you don't need a keyboard or mouse to have an interface to your machine and the world. 

So what will be the future solution?  Will it be one of these, or yet something different?  I don't know.  Do you have a crystal ball?  But the answer to that question really doesn't matter to us today.  We don't need to know that sort of specific to begin growing our businesses.

Not being widget nuts, or platform forecasters, should not stop us from planning for a different sort of future and changing our approach today.  Scenarios for 2013 (you do have scenario plans for 2013, don't you?) should be planning on practically everybody having one of these devices.  And perhaps these devices being so cheap they could be included with sales of every major appliance (like a car, or refrigerator).  If that sounds silly, just look at how cheap a flash (or thumb) drive is now.  Remember when we thought floppy disks were expensive?  Now people exchange flash drives that have more capacity than a 2004 laptop without thinking about cost.   These made tapes, floppy drives, zip drives and a lot of other technology obsolete in a hurry. 

How can your business take advantage of this shift?  Can you replace paper manuals, maybe even user instructions with a tablet?  Or a tablet app?  Can you use an interactive device that grabs input from your appliance to do diagnostics, recommend maintenance, report on failures?  Would this help customers pop for the new frig – say if it helped lower electric bills?  Or could it encourage that new washer by helping set the cycles to lower water cost? Could you build it right into the console on a washer or dryer? Or could you encourage someone to buy a new car by telling them to forget about maintenance logs and just track the car's performance on a tablet?

If you provide content – are you planning for this?  Recently The Economist sent me an email (I've registered on their web site) telling me they were going to start charging for web content.  I've heard News Corp. properties, like the Wall Street Journal, intend to do the same.  I guess they haven't noticed the world is moving in a direction that makes such a plan – well, impossible.  In a recent Harris poll (reported on Silicon Alley Insider "People Won't Pay for News Online") 74% of web users said they'd simply switch sites before paying.  With one of these eReader/Tablets in hand, why would they ever pay for content when another provider is a finger streak away?  As access becomes easier and easier, the willingness to pay will go down and down.  Publishers had better start figuring out how to get paid a different way than subscriptions!

Now is about when executives like to say "so I want to know which format will win before I start doing this.  I only want to do this once."  That old cry for efficiency.  Unfortunately, while waiting for a winner to emerge, the waiter becomes the laggardThe early adopter, that recognizes the value provided to consumers, gets out there and starts using these innovations to drive better customer value.  And to capture more sales.  When you are part of making the market – like Apple in music – you gain huge advantages.  You don't have to know all the answers to compete.  You just have to be willing to Disrupt old notions and use White Space to experiment and learn.

I have drawers filled with obsolete electronics.  How many obsolete cell phones do you own?  How many big old monitors are you recycling to replace with flat screens?  Do you still have a fax machine? I have an old keyboard that used something called "sideband technology" to allow me to interact with people and get news and sports info years before the internet was popular – and before wireless internet was available.  Obsolete now, that device taught me how valuable the internet was going to be when Congress made it available for commercial use.  Fear of throwing away a few products or software – maybe a betamax machine or copy of visicalc – is no reason not to get into the market and learn! 

Markets are marvelous things.  As these articles discuss, nobody knows how we will be using technology in the future.  Not exactly.  It will be some combination of eReader – computer – music player – television – telephone.  But we do know the broad theme.  And if you want to get out of this recession, you can start playing to this market shift now.  You'll never grow if you sit on the sidelines watching and waiting.  Get in the market.  Participate.  Use this technology to create new solutions!  There are countless applications (as the expanding iPhone app base is proving.)  Want to get into the Rapids of growth?  You'll never succeed if you don't become part of the marketplace.  Nothing creates learning like doing!