Maybe still too expensive and most people are peasants?!?!If Tariffs and Supply Chain issues are gonna make bikes super limited and too expensive for anyone, why is everything on sale and still not moving? Math ain’t mathing.
Yeah. The news peeps say overall spending is down because people are just too uncertain as to what is going to happen.I think most people are just sitting tight until we get some stability. Either 2029, or when the mushroom clouds settle.
The problem is the industry just keeps trying to find the next best thing to sell to the existing customer base over and over. There needs to be a way to draw in new people in so the market grows. Obviously this has been tough to do.I think the industry needs another reinvention like the move from 26 to 29 inch wheels. E- bikes were a start, but there is a huge chunk of the customer base that just had no interest in them. I think that smaller shifts like gravel bikes and other marketing based hype are causing people to shift what’s in their quiver rather than simply adding more bikes.
I will not be surprised at all to start seeing a bunch of 36 inch E bikes. I think 29 is the sweet spot for foot power, and sooner or later, someone’s gonna put the motors to work to make 36 inch wheels work for the masses.
Edit: I have no interest in an E bike or a 36 inch bike or a reinvention of the industry, that’s just where my mind lands as I look at what’s going on now
In a nutshell, bikes are really good right now and even if you have the money to spend there aren't compelling reasons to buy a new bike if your current bike is relatively modern
I will not be surprised at all to start seeing a bunch of 36 inch E bikes. I think 29 is the sweet spot for foot power, and sooner or later, someone’s gonna put the motors to work to make 36 inch wheels work for the masses.
Why skipping the 32" size? 36" if for the next-to-next reinvention...remember good old Sergey Bubka?I think the industry needs another reinvention like the move from 26 to 29 inch wheels. E- bikes were a start, but there is a huge chunk of the customer base that just had no interest in them. I think that smaller shifts like gravel bikes and other marketing based hype are causing people to shift what’s in their quiver rather than simply adding more bikes.
I will not be surprised at all to start seeing a bunch of 36 inch E bikes. I think 29 is the sweet spot for foot power, and sooner or later, someone’s gonna put the motors to work to make 36 inch wheels work for the masses.
Edit: I have no interest in an E bike or a 36 inch bike or a reinvention of the industry, that’s just where my mind lands as I look at what’s going on now
Why skipping the 32" size? 36" if for the next-to-next reinvention...remember good old Sergey Bubka?
Ah, forgot that...first step up to 36", then step down to 32" because it's a better fit and then again to 36" because that's really where it's at.......after multiple years of.... and millions of rider hours, the era of 36" wheels is coming to a close.
Riders WANT 32" rims, and we will be putting all of our resources into meeting rider needs.
The larger surface area of these rims make them perfect for our new hydraulic rim brakes integrated into the fork.
Our new hub standard reduces air resistance - which everyone knows increases geometrically with speed.
Our better riders will see the most gains, but the club and casual rider will see benefits too,
such as the all-new radial lacing standard.
it truly is a great time to be alive and velo....
That is sort of what Seth talks about. How do bike companies stay in business when the model of selling incrementally better bikes to existing customers is no longer viable because the incentive to upgrade is no longer there? Not that he has an answer, but that does seem to be the crux of the issue.The problem is the industry just keeps trying to find the next best thing to sell to the existing customer base over and over. There needs to be a way to draw in new people in so the market grows. Obviously this has been tough to do.
Seth Alvo has an interesting take on the current state of the bike industry. In a nutshell, bikes are really good right now and even if you have the money to spend there aren't compelling reasons to buy a new bike if your current bike is relatively modern (ignore the click-bait thumbnail...):
While I did buy a new e-bike last year, this is my situation with my other three mtn bikes being from 2019 and 2020. There's nothing wrong with them and replacing them isn't going to make my riding any more enjoyable.
I can see this, in reality, bikes are exactly the same. Or even peaked about 4-5 years ago and they’re doing such minor tweaks it’s not worth spending 10k or whatever. Sales are way down across the board on models that got basically no changes. Like who in actuality can feel the difference between and Epic EVO 7 and 8? I can’t and I do this for a living. Same with Stumpys or literally any bike on the market right now. We sat through a sales meeting to hype up the new Sram models and when I built them up they’re the most boring looking bikes ever. Not everyone, or anyone for that matter, wants a flat black 10k bike. At least try to make something look cool if you’re giving them a 1% increase in performance for 3k more than the previous model 🤷