Cruzbike-in-Germany
Member
Best Agers
Hi,
a few years ago, I here proposed idealistically that we should introduce the young (age 5 through 15) to recumbent riding.
My idea: if everybody would learn to ride a recumbent instead of an upright bike as a first bike, the market would completely change.
Well, now I think this was and is too big a target for even the whole recumbent community.
What is realistic - looking at the next 25 years?
Many people that grew up in the bike boom years (~1980-2000, the Shimano Age (?)) are now starting to get older ("Best Agers") and look for an non-hurting alternative for touring - to put it short, that is my story (I am 40 years now): I wanted the freedom of a leisure bike ride for as long as possible, but I just could not bear the "seat pain" on my "normal bike" anymore, and was ready to pay more for it.
Therefore my ideas / proposals:
1) Recumbents should solve the long-distance comfort issue of the upright bike, as they cannot compete as a "cheap / jump on jump off/ short distance / grandma grocery machines", so I agree to the many voices before, stating: seat quality is of importance
2) Cruzbike must not tell the customer "you have a problem", but get the message through to the middle class (the rich are too absorbed playing golf etc., the poor cannot afford recumbents) that "we offer the coolest of stuff" that solve all kinds of problems, like the following
3) Bike riders are vulnerable participants of traffic. Therefore in the bike ads / magazines they are shown as strong and powerful, hardened by riding the right bike. So the Cruzbike message should be similar, be something like that: "Vendetta empowers you to fully unleash your energy, be it 30 minutes or 48 hours". My proposal: replace the Youtube spot (What-What) by something reminding of the superiority-selling bike ads featuring good-looking people between 30 and 40 on fancy bikes - this appeals to the Best Agers. The Cruzbike race models are cool and ground breaking, and should be sold as such.
4) The touring models, in exchange, are not mentioned in ads, but refer in their descriptions to those "top of the line" models : "...The Sofrider features the ground-breaking MBB of the record-winning Cruzbike Vendetta...". And they should be presented more separated from the race models.
5) Somebody already mentioned Apple. I think the secret slogan of these guys is "it works and it makes you look good, buy it". Buying the Sofrider V3 as a demo model last year I had a few feelings of this kind. It came within 5 days to Germany (!), it looks stunningly good for a touring model, rides very well with crisp shifting and brakes and slick tires, and building it up was not a hassle. I would say: the more expensive a model is, the more of these "positive vibrations" it should offer from the start.
Greetings from Germany
Ernest
Hi,
a few years ago, I here proposed idealistically that we should introduce the young (age 5 through 15) to recumbent riding.
My idea: if everybody would learn to ride a recumbent instead of an upright bike as a first bike, the market would completely change.
Well, now I think this was and is too big a target for even the whole recumbent community.
What is realistic - looking at the next 25 years?
Many people that grew up in the bike boom years (~1980-2000, the Shimano Age (?)) are now starting to get older ("Best Agers") and look for an non-hurting alternative for touring - to put it short, that is my story (I am 40 years now): I wanted the freedom of a leisure bike ride for as long as possible, but I just could not bear the "seat pain" on my "normal bike" anymore, and was ready to pay more for it.
Therefore my ideas / proposals:
1) Recumbents should solve the long-distance comfort issue of the upright bike, as they cannot compete as a "cheap / jump on jump off/ short distance / grandma grocery machines", so I agree to the many voices before, stating: seat quality is of importance
2) Cruzbike must not tell the customer "you have a problem", but get the message through to the middle class (the rich are too absorbed playing golf etc., the poor cannot afford recumbents) that "we offer the coolest of stuff" that solve all kinds of problems, like the following
3) Bike riders are vulnerable participants of traffic. Therefore in the bike ads / magazines they are shown as strong and powerful, hardened by riding the right bike. So the Cruzbike message should be similar, be something like that: "Vendetta empowers you to fully unleash your energy, be it 30 minutes or 48 hours". My proposal: replace the Youtube spot (What-What) by something reminding of the superiority-selling bike ads featuring good-looking people between 30 and 40 on fancy bikes - this appeals to the Best Agers. The Cruzbike race models are cool and ground breaking, and should be sold as such.
4) The touring models, in exchange, are not mentioned in ads, but refer in their descriptions to those "top of the line" models : "...The Sofrider features the ground-breaking MBB of the record-winning Cruzbike Vendetta...". And they should be presented more separated from the race models.
5) Somebody already mentioned Apple. I think the secret slogan of these guys is "it works and it makes you look good, buy it". Buying the Sofrider V3 as a demo model last year I had a few feelings of this kind. It came within 5 days to Germany (!), it looks stunningly good for a touring model, rides very well with crisp shifting and brakes and slick tires, and building it up was not a hassle. I would say: the more expensive a model is, the more of these "positive vibrations" it should offer from the start.
Greetings from Germany
Ernest