Your comment made me laugh!
Sam is well-known in the Ebike space and has been a dealer for a very long time. There is nothing wrong with googling but I wish you had done a bit more research.
He is a Bosch,Yamaha,Shimano,Brose certified dealer. In an era where people flaunt good online website but minimal inventory, he is a guy who carries a lot of bikes but not super internet-savvy.
Here is his store overview:
His store open house day that Court attended.
As you can see, he carries all kinds of brands and drive systems. Court even sought advice from him in this video.
R&M recently updated their website and dealers had to resign some paperwork. I am sure it's a glitch. Do you think they will ship him bikes without becoming a dealer?
BTW,
Yamaha has been making drive systems since 1990's. They have millions of units in the Asian market. You're right to think that way but the actual facts may be different.
Bosch came into the market in 2008 or something, 18 years after Yamaha came into the market. They have definitely captured the European market but that doesn't mean it is true all over the world.
There are literally millions Yamaha E-bikes in the Asian countries and we are largely oblivious to it.
https://www.yamaha-motor.co.jp/pas/lineup/
Their technological know-how is quite deep:
https://global.yamaha-motor.com/about/technology/electronic/005/
There is nothing wrong with having an opinion and we all suffer from confirmation bias and want to think we are making the most educated decision.
Happy researching....
Do you know how many Bosch and Yamaha units sold to date worldwide???
Do you know how many miles and 'failures per mile' on those units in the field, to date worldwide???
All the other stuff is more...blah...blah...blah…, opinions, sales pitches, etc. :
Ok, Sam carries inventory of Bosch, Yamaha, Shimano, Brose, R&M but does not market the full inventory on-line as he's not "internet savvy"; is that correct?
Is Sam openly stating to his other brands, that Yamaha is the best brand with the highest quality and lowest failures, unit for unit, compared all the other brands he carries?
In the video he talked about the famous Yamaha brand recognition (I've got many of their products btw) and stated "components of Yamaha are the most reliable of all the mid-drive motors in our store and we out sell all the other brands with Yamaha brands"
This video is a bit embarrassing if offered as proof of anything beyond personal opinions and a sales pitch for a new Yamaha bike by a Yamaha dealer.
Are we to believe he stocks every other brand in his store in the exact same quantities and prices and that his margins are the same for each brand so he never plays favorites and the customer purchases solely based on quality and failure rates???
Can he back up his reliability claims because he's operated in the Asian market for years gaining direct hands-on experience with Yamaha drives since the 1990's and has data to back it up?
In the video, Sam states he first became involved with Yamaha 3 years ago when he met with their reps and signed an NDA (non-disclosure agreement). By his own statement, he has 3 years officially selling Yamaha...how many units could one store sell in 3 years, not millions is it?
I suspect Sam is bound by the NDA he signed 3 years ago with Yamaha as with similar NDA's he's signed with the other brands.
Is he so confident he would risk legal action by playing brand favorites and/or openly disclosing damaging information on a brand he reps?
Don't think so...
Perhaps he's not entered into agreements with other brands?
In any business I'm aware of, a manufacturer would frown on a dealer openly underselling their brand over another and would cut ties with them, possibly seeking damages if substantiated.
Also, was the 1st Yamaha rep meeting and NDA, signed 3 years ago, only for the US market? (assuming he has prior Asian experience with Yamaha)
Now that Sam has openly stated that Yamaha is the best, will he be cutting all other mid-drive brands from his inventory? (To maintain a store image as a "quality only" dealer)
BTW: Court's a great guy and reports details well; he appears to endeavor to "not take sides" as I believe he derives his income from the community at large, not any 'one' company.
BRAND FACTS:
Yamaha founded Oct 12. 1887, Revenue $3,694,117,647.06 (2017)
Bosch founded Nov 15, 1886, Revenue $88,096,770,914.50 (2017)
By these standards...which is company is more successful and assuming made so, by selling quality products?
I believe most companies don't stay in business long by selling inferior products.
Bosch and Yamaha have their interests in many products and markets and both companies have resources to build to any quality spec they desire. It's assured with both of these long standing companies that the quality will reflect what ever market share they're targeting.
Just curious, your not a Yamaha dealer, employee, or rep are you?
The be clear, I'm sure you and Sam are great guys; I'm just getting old and I guess a bit too impatient when searching for unbiased metrics and getting what sounds like sales pitches instead.