Spend more on bicycle
advocacy, urges Trek
boss
10:00, Mar 28th 2007 by Carlton
Reid
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OfRiFylmiS0&mode=related&search=
Divert cash from marketing and
R&D to bicycle advocacy, John
Burke told industry leaders at the
Taiwan trade show. There's a
video of the presentation on YouTube. Burke has been
dubbed the 'Al Gore of the bike trade'
John Burke, president of Trek USA, has created a PowerPoint
presentation about why bike companies should increase their financial
support of bicycle advocates and political lobbying groups.
He first aired the talk at the National Bike Summit in Washington DC
two weeks ago. On Sunday it was also given to Taiwan's A-Team of
industry leaders and in a conference room at the the Taipei trade
show.
A 23-minute video of John Burke's talk by the BikeBiz editor has been
placed on YouTube. Burke's original PowerPoint presentation - no
audio or video images of Burke - has also been placed on YouTube
and both vids have been embedded on Quickrelease.tv.
Jonathan Maus of the Bike Portland blog was present at the first airing
of the talk and he headlined his coverage 'Is John Burke the Al Gore
of the bike trade?' This was a reference to Al Gore's slide show about
climate change, 'An Inconvenient Truth.' The slide show, seen all over
the world, was made into a movie, winning this year's Oscar for best
documentary.
Burke's presentation also focussed on the environment but majored on
what Burke knows best: the bike trade. His presentation was aimed at
encouraging bike companies to spend more money on cycle advocacy.
He called the bicycle "the perfect product at the perfect time." And
bike companies would sell more of them if there were more places for
folks to ride them.
"The number one way to grow the business – and to have an impact
on society, health, environment and congestion – is to create a
bicycle-friendly world," said Burke.
He revealed that for every $100 of sales, bike companies typically
spend $3.90 on marketing, $1.60 on R&D but just 10 cents on
advocacy.
"That doesn't make sense. As an industry we need to look at how we
spend money. Why do we spend the amount of money on marketing
and product and little on advocacy?"
He wants to "spur a debate in the industry" about "where we're
spending our money."