The Lectric was a good beginner eBike, but I would go next time with a non-folding, non-fat tire, 27.5" tire eBike. I find the 20" fat tires great for traction on snow or sand, but I honestly have no use for either as I'm on asphalt or hard dirt 99.5% of the time. Nor do I fold the bike 99% of the time. The 2 things I thought I needed (fat tires and folding) turns out that I really don't. And frankly any folding bike costs more to manufacture than a non-folding bike. Why does that matter..?...because costs are cut elsewhere (drive train, brakes, suspension) to make up for the ability to fold. There are so many choices now in the non-folding arena, I also rarely shift the bike because its really not necessary on a powerful hub drive eBike (unless you are running up and down large hills which I don't.
I'm leaning toward a belt driven, single speed, Class 3, hub driven eBike with the 27.5" tires. It would literally be maintenance free except for the brakes...yet powerful enough so shifting is not needed and the larger diameter tires would be agile, yet roll over bumps easier than a 20" (ts plain old physics). The Ride 1 Up Roadster with the small frame @ $1045 sounds perfect for my next bike.
My second option is to purchase a good Walmart mountain bike (like the new $398 Mongoose Ledge or the $298 Ardor...Kev Central loves these new bikes...one is full front and rear suspension, the other a hard tail). Then buy a rear hub 1000 watt eBike conversion kit for $500 and make my own eBike for around $800-$900. The downside of this option is still having a derailleur and gears but for the savings, I could live with that.