JTR
Well-known member
no, I'm not saying anything of the kind, and you know nothing of me, nor I of you
Sorry if I misread you, took what you posted, to be your opinion. Which seemed echo the BS stereotype I've seen here a quite a few times.
no, I'm not saying anything of the kind, and you know nothing of me, nor I of you
Very simple, light weight, should be cheap because there's nothing to it. Might even have appeal to the millenial hipster crowd, but I'd need to see somebody with a well groomed beard, flannel shirt and sparkly 3/4 helmet sitting on it in front of a trendy coffee shop first before ruling on that. Kidding aside though, something like that could actually move out the door.Time for a Sportster Scrambler -
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HDs demographic is old, overweight, white men. Just because you're (maybe) not old doesn't exactly make you a whole new demographic that they can thrive off of!He aint wrong though
Their words and actions dont match.
They want young riders but keep releasing 20000 dollar bikes
Like the time i saw Ducati canadas President talk about how ducati wants to get new people into motorcycles and specifically ducati motorcycles, right before he unveiled a 22k bike at the toronto motorcycle show(this guy gets a big salary)
Apparently the Japanese are the only ones who understand economics, along with efficient production techniques
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Id love to get me a lowrider s or the new fatbob, but i aint got 23k of discretionary income to blow on a bike.
As many manufacturers and buyers keep striving for the impossible 'perfect bike' that does it all, HD is content to keep churning out bikes that do it none. Yes, I hate HD, it represents everything wrong with America.I respect those cruisers but the pricing and sizing of them makes them unattractive for what i do: commute, weekend trips on and 'off'road, so im looking for gas mileage, comfort, affordability and nimbleness... which they only have one of i guess?
BMW and Polaris sell more bikes in the US than Suzuki? Dunno about that.Honda sold around 17 million motorcycles worldwide in the 2016 fiscal year.
https://www.statista.com/statistics/267277/worldwide-motorcycle-sales-of-honda/
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didn't find much for worldwide motorcycle market share 2016 on a quick search. But the Indian and Asian markets are huge....big cruisers don't fit there that well.
Yeah, the HD brand is too powerful and valuable to go through a rethink. They'll need another brand they can use to flog bikes that appeal to the other half of the motorcycle world's split identity between cruisers, and bikes that actuall turn and go.So I just wondered if their approach will change with an entirely new approach or if they're pretty much stuck with the HD image and architecture they've cultivated over the last 80 years. If it's the later, I don't see them appealing to any of their stated targets.
Dont know how long harleys been around in Deutschland, but it may just be a relatively new phenomenon, we here in north america have been saturated with essentially the same product for 50 years or soI just came back from Germany visiting family and was surprised at how many Harley's I saw on the road. I have been there many many times and cannot remember a time seeing a single Harley. The beautiful weather we had there brought all the bikers out and there was a high percentage of HD's I would say. Now this is pure anecdotal, but it did not appear they were suffering and it certainly did not look like an old fat man riding the bike, all the riders I saw seemed to have a pretty hipster look going for them.
I just came back from Germany visiting family and was surprised at how many Harley's I saw on the road. I have been there many many times and cannot remember a time seeing a single Harley. The beautiful weather we had there brought all the bikers out and there was a high percentage of HD's I would say. Now this is pure anecdotal, but it did not appear they were suffering and it certainly did not look like an old fat man riding the bike, all the riders I saw seemed to have a pretty hipster look going for them.
But one wonders how long this approach can be sustained since it is still focused on aging riders. Also for Euro riders, how many times do they need to get passed by us old folks 2-up on adventure tourers before they realize that after the mystique fades, they're riding heavy bikes designed to go straight on roads with lots of curves. Still pretty entertaining to watch tho.
Can someone point me to the actual marketing strategy documents that indicate this? It would be a curious read. I was under the impression that they intended to make *desireable* bikes and profit by doing so, like any manufacturer. As for what cruisers riders think (Euro or otherwise), I'd guess many are enjoying the ride on a bike they think is cool. That's what I do. Not sure I've ever paid much attention to anyone passing me, other than for safety reasons. Beyond doing a bit of scraping in turns at legal speeds, cruisers seem to get along fine. Especially in the spring and fall. Too cold to ride fast then, some people tell me.
Sorry if I misread you, took what you posted, to be your opinion. Which seemed echo the BS stereotype I've seen here a quite a few times.
But one wonders how long this approach can be sustained since it is still focused on aging riders. Also for Euro riders, how many times do they need to get passed by us old folks 2-up on adventure tourers before they realize that after the mystique fades, they're riding heavy bikes designed to go straight on roads with lots of curves. Still pretty entertaining to watch tho.
As many manufacturers and buyers keep striving for the impossible 'perfect bike' that does it all, HD is content to keep churning out bikes that do it none. Yes, I hate HD, it represents everything wrong with America.