dave
Location: Gainesville, FL (but often North Carolina)
Posts: 58
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« Reply #2 on: April 08, 2014, 06:37:54 AM » |
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I have an entrepreneurial background and just outfitted myself with a bikepacking setup, so I do have some feedback for you. The survey didn't submit properly so I'll write it here. I mean this completely constructively and respectfully.
It's great you're doing this research. Obviously, in order to proceed with this business, you'd need to be able to answer this big question: What substantially differentiates you from all the other sources of bikepacking gear--and why should we care?
I'm guessing you would respond with one of these two statements: 1. Mine would be a one-stop shop; or 2. Mine would have bikepacking experts on staff and therefore would have more credibility.
Honestly, I don't see how you are going to actually convince people of #2. The makers of bikepacking gear (such as Revelate) sell direct and they'll always have more cred than you. They've earned it through the rides, trips, time, trials and errors it took to envision and create the products in the first place. And the fact that I can get a great return policy and great customer service from one of the manufacturers or a LBS or even the other online sellers like bigbagshop.com means that buying gear is a low-risk decision, so knowledgeable sales staff isn't even as important as it might be otherwise. Sure, if you have a shop with staff who have done the Divide or AZT or whatever, then that won't hurt--but it won't substantially matter unless you have a relatively "big name" like Matthew Lee on staff making super specific recommendations to your customers.
As far as #1, I'm not sure that is realistic, either. I can already buy a full setup of bags from any of the places mentioned above. All of those already have great customer service and very similar prices, along with good information on gear, so I don't see your competitive advantage. When it comes to the clothing and camping gear, there are huge amounts of choices, and honestly most of us buy primarily based on price because there are so many options that already have good service, good info, etc. If I have a question about a piece of gear, I either call them up and ask them, or I look online at this website or another forum/site.
--The main "pain point" I've encountered with buying bikepacking gear is that sometimes I simply don't know whether the gear recommended on forums or in stores will actually keep me warm, dry, comfortable, etc. without being overly heavy or bulky. I don't know whether a piece of gear designed in Colorado will work well for me in Georgia. I don't know whether I need more warm shirts than the guy that won the Divide last year. Many people run into this situation and get all worked up about it, saying lots of "what if..." statements and generally worrying. But what people need to do is just scrape together some gear and then actually go on a bikepacking trip instead of sitting on the internet worrying about every detail and trying to buy their way out of any problems before those problems even occur. In this age of internet shopping, people just feel like they should be able to make 10,000 mouse clicks and then complete the Divide without any discomfort, which is obviously ridiculous. That "pain point" isn't real.
Then again, maybe it is real if people actually worry about it and actually will spend money as a result. If that were the case, I think the best way for you to have a "one-stop shop" and differentiate yourself might be to sell a few different complete bikepacking setups specifically marketed to different trails/locales/seasons. They should include pretty much everything--bags, shelter, camp gear, etc. That way, if a newbie wants to try a bikepacking trip and has some money to spend but not much time to devote to perfecting a setup (let alone field-testing it), then they can come to you and buy the kit that hypothetically matches their specific situation. You'd provide a level of simplicity nobody else does, and you'd address their pain point by comforting them that this kit is the "correct" starter kit for what they're actually doing. You wouldn't have experienced bikepackers as customers, but I don't think that is your realistic market, anyway.
Hopefully this is useful. Again, I am just trying to help, not to be negative. Good luck.
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