Brambor
Well-Known Member
BAM!
Also known as the only folks that actually know how good the bikes are.
Also known as the only folks that actually know how good the bikes are.
Let's not be too harsh on Stromer. I am sure they are hitting anticipated targets in certain regions, but their limited offerings and high price points, will, most likely, not produce the North American numbers necessary for profitable growth. BMC has a heritage of producing very high quality products and its easy to see that Stromer is striving for design and performance excellence rather than unit sales. My recommendation to Stromer is to focus on those territories that are e-bike mature and where bikes serve as primary transportation. Stromer does not have an adequate value proposition for North America. Perhaps in the next 5-10 years that will change. The news article makes it perfectly clear that Rhys does not want to sink a lot of money into Stromer and is willing to partner or sell. You can politic the response all you want but whenever a CEO seeks partnership or sale it is because financials are NOT working. Not working can mean many things including loss, insufficient return on the dollar, or a growth curve that is insufficient to satisfy shareholders. It could also be that BMC wants to focus its dollars in another direction. Stromer is a tough sell to the bike industry as they are niche products in an immature market. Perhaps an investor outside of the bike industry would take a chance but it does not seem plausible that Accel or Derby or Giant or Specialized or Trek would take them on. IMHO
I get your point re: North America not being a mature ebike market and I mostly agree with you, but there are a few places where I've seen quite a few Stromers on the streets. Places like San Francisco, Silicon Valley, Washington, D.C., and New York City might qualify as mature ebike cities. I went to New Wheel in San Francisco last weekend and they seem to have been selling quite a few Stromers. One chap brought his ST2 in for service while I was visiting the shop.
I'll go so far as to say the North American market is so small that, on the sale maturity curve, it has barely left the starting gate. I reiterate, for the umpteenth time that IBD/EBD retail is not the way to sell e-bikes in this country.
From Insg research:
"Growth of the Market by Country In recent years electric cars have received a great deal of press coverage, but globally electric bicycles outsell electric cars by a wide margin. About 112,000 electric cars were sold worldwide in 2013. By comparison something in the region of 40 million e-bicycles were sold worldwide in 2013. In China, there are more electric bikes than cars on the road. The global pattern for sales of e-bikes in 2013 has China in first place, at about 32 million, followed by Europe at 1.8 million, and Japan at 440,000. The U.S. had sales of an estimated 185,000 e-bikes. "
http://www.insg.org/\docs\INSG_Insight_23_Global_Ebike_Market.pdf
I'll go so far as to say the North American market is so small that, on the sale maturity curve, it has barely left the starting gate. I reiterate, for the umpteenth time that IBD/EBD retail is not the way to sell e-bikes in this country.
From Insg research:
"Growth of the Market by Country In recent years electric cars have received a great deal of press coverage, but globally electric bicycles outsell electric cars by a wide margin. About 112,000 electric cars were sold worldwide in 2013. By comparison something in the region of 40 million e-bicycles were sold worldwide in 2013. In China, there are more electric bikes than cars on the road. The global pattern for sales of e-bikes in 2013 has China in first place, at about 32 million, followed by Europe at 1.8 million, and Japan at 440,000. The U.S. had sales of an estimated 185,000 e-bikes. "
http://www.insg.org/\docs\INSG_Insight_23_Global_Ebike_Market.pdf
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myStromer AG now needs the next step: become bigger. For this, they are looking out for new money - or let's say venture capital. Thats it.
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This is not a short response.What is the way to sell e-bikes in this country?
This is not a short response.
In classic marketing 101 you need a problem, a solution, a value proposition, and motivation in order to create sales. None of these criteria exists for the populace at large with regards to e-bikes. So!!! How do you overcome this.
The strategy that is typically applied is to tell the customer that they have a problem (any definition of problem i.e. meaning the current state of being is dissatisfactory) and then get them to experience the solution. In all the years of sophisticated approaches to marketing nothing works better than experiential behavior. In lay terms, until you outline the problem over and over again, and get them to experience the solution, you will never create a sale in a nascent market. So, how do you do this.
a. You proactively take the problem and the solution to the customer (retail is reactive and waits for someone to walk in the door).
b. You get the customer to experience the solution for themselves.
c. You give them social and politic support for their purchase
In practical terms:
a. You call every health and wellness manager at every company you can and tell them that you have a solution that helps them accomplish their employee health and wellness goals.
b. You meet the health and wellness manager at their location and present them with a 10 minute presentation on e-bikes as a legitimate source of transportation for work commuting.
c. You get the manager to put a helmet on and take an e-bike for a ride around the parking lot.
Pending you motivate the manager to take the next step:
d. You put a bike on site (cafeteria or lunch room is preferred), e-mail blast the employees to tell them that -bike demos will be available in the parking lot for the week (2-3 days).
e. You park 4-6 e-bikes in the parking lots and conduct demo rides all day long
f. You offer the company and its employees two monetary incentives; 1.a fleet discount program for campus bikes, 2. a matching money incentive for companies to offer individual employees. i.e. If the company donates X to the purchase of an e-bike, the selling agent will match it.
g. Bikes are ordered and paid for by the company and/or employees thru an intranet site that lists the offerings, prices, accessories et. al.
h. Bikes are then shipped (in the box) directly to the company. Upon arrival a mobile tech sets up the bike and hand carries it to the employee.
Beyond the corporate sale, deploy kiosks at ferry landings, tube stops, local events, and anywhere there is a mass of people offering demo rides. In addition, call on local municipalities and deploy the same demo strategy to police offices and other government agencies (postal) as available.
The methods described above are based on a simple premise: If you can get someone to experience your product, your chance of sale will increase dramatically.
The downside to this strategy for the retailer is that there will be hundreds/thousands of e-bikes in the community.....and the retailer will have to suffer through the dramatic increase in attention and store traffic this will generate. When Apple decided to open its own retail stores, big box vendors complained big time. The next result is that Apple products at independent retailers skyrocketed.
Have I explained enough???
Have I explained enough???
Not sure I can answer this. I have no statistics. What I will say is that, for e-bikes to have sufficient grow, they must be sold to non-bikers whose primary interest is an alternative to the automobile for short range commuting. If you can argue successfully for e-bike commuting, the cost of an e-bike becomes a significant value proposition. If someone purchases an e-bike for recreational or exercise purposes, the bike will be perceived as an expensive purchase.You did it very well, thanks.
It sounds familiar, like the "corporate solutions" concept from myStromer AG. But I believe increasing the sales force/activities is the second step. First, you have to build a robust after sales service organisation - and you must be able to fulfill the demand in a reasonable timeframe. Unfortunately, Andy Rhis won't spend money for this. So, myStromer AG has to learn walk alone...
Other thing:
The typical european Stromer customer is...
- 45 years old
- has higher education
- has higher salary
- lives in urban/suburban
- has already a bicycle in use
- is is sporty and healthy
- has a sense for excellent industrial design
- likes to own high valuable objects
and use the Stromer either to commute of for leisure.
How would you describe the typical US Stromer customer?
How do you define "doing quite well." Most industry folks confuse distribution with sell-thru. I'm not talking about instantly doubling e-bike sales. I'm talking about increasing ebikes sales 100X. E-bike sales currently are for early adopters and bike enthusiasts. This is a tiny subset of the market I believe can benefit from an e-bike.The industry is selling 200,000-250,000 ebikes per year in the US, and the annual growth rate is ~15%. The US ebike market is more than half the size of Germany's! That's huge! Now, considering that Germany has a lower population, this does mean that the US is doing significantly less ebike sales per capita than Germany is doing, however, I don't think that's such an important detail, since compared to China, every country has terribly low ebike sales (Germany included).
IBD/EBD as a sales channel seems to be doing quite well in the US. It's complimented by the online sales and the crowdfunded channels that are growing, but having a variety of differentiated channels will help the industry grow. There's no one 'silver bullet' that will instantly cause US ebike sales to double YoY.
How do you define "doing quite well." Most industry folks confuse distribution with sell-thru. I'm not talking about instantly doubling e-bike sales. I'm talking about increasing ebikes sales 100X. E-bike sales currently are for early adopters and bike enthusiasts. This is a tiny subset of the market I believe can benefit from an e-bike.
I had an opportunity to talk to one of the largest bike dealers (many locations) in the SF Bay area that carries Specialized and Stromer. They were thrilled that they were moving 2-5 bikes a week. I couldn't help but laugh.
If you look at the size of this forum, you will note that it is very very tiny. Probably not a good measure of market characteristics.When you look out at the forum, no other manufacturer other than Specialized compares relative to the number of posts, threads etc than Stromer, relative to the number of bike offerings on the market. With all that concern for a brand it is highly improbable that it can just "go away". The owner will cut his losses and someone else will pick up on managing and running the company.
I sure would like to see worldwide marketshare in monetary and unit sales for the given manufacturers and by brand. If the number of posts and following on our forum is any indication of true ownership of the product, then you would think that a hitter such as Specialized would scoop them up and have a "tank like" offering.
Are there not any market share statistics in any of the bike retailer rags other than total number of units sold in a given year? To get the aggregate you have to have the individual sales right? It would be great to see a link to this information.
Agree that it takes a great amount of projecting from this small sample but the point is there is a demand and if this small forum does typify mainstream then someone else will make a run at it and give it life. A hope, a prayer, who knows. I still would like to see market share, that is the missing link and the rest is rhetoric. It takes share at some point.If you look at the size of this forum, you will note that it is very very tiny. Probably not a good measure of market characteristics.
Are there not any market share statistics in any of the bike retailer rags other than total number of units sold in a given year? To get the aggregate you have to have the individual sales right? It would be great to see a link to this information.