Harley Davidson Looking at Electric Bikes to Save the Day
Companies / Electric Cars Feb 27, 2019 - 05:09 PM GMTBy: Rodney_Johnson
  My father had a Harley in the mid-1980s,  which I would ride from time to time. It was an ’83 Sportster, and it leaked  oil, and the electrical system would cut off when you turned a corner.
My father had a Harley in the mid-1980s,  which I would ride from time to time. It was an ’83 Sportster, and it leaked  oil, and the electrical system would cut off when you turned a corner.
  Back then that was called “character.”  Today, we’d call it sloppy workmanship.
Insiders bought the company from  conglomerate AMF in the early 1980s, and by the end of the decade they’d  returned the storied brand to its historical place – a well-made American icon.

  
  Harley Davidson (NYSE: HOG) rode through  the 1990s and early 2000s like a company on a mission. It sold a zillion “hogs”  to aging professional Baby Boomers (like my father) who longed to connect with  some distant part of their DNA that called for rebellion.
  The Boomers were the right age, their  early 40s, and Harley had the right product.
  Then came 2006… 
  Note that I didn’t say, 2008 or 2009,  referring to the financial crisis. Harley’s problem came sooner.
  In 2006 the highest number of Boomers  reached the prime motorcycle-buying age of 45. Our research suggested that  Harley was going to struggle after that, which is exactly what happened.
  Since then, Harley has tried to move  mountains to regain its pace in selling motorcycles, but to no avail. In its  latest earnings report, Harley noted it sold fewer bikes in 2018 than it did in  2017, and expect to sell fewer again this year.
  But they have a plan. Harley will  introduce the LiveWire Electric Bike later this year, and two electric scooters  by 2022.
  Unfortunately, it won’t work… 
  Harley riders don’t come in  many shapes in sizes. Most are aging men. Yes, there are plenty of exceptions,  and Harley works hard on expanding its appeal to women and younger buyers. But  they’ve had limited success.
  The brand’s history speaks to rebellion,  power, and national pride. Those aren’t bad things, but they don’t exactly  scream “young, female, globalist, urban-dweller with a cat that attends the  Women’s March.” Again, those qualities aren’t inherently good or bad either,  they just don’t come to mind when someone says, “Harley.”
  Go ahead. Picture a Harley on the street  in your head. Who’s riding it?
  And then there’s the problem of the  motorcycles themselves…
  Most Harleys are big. The smallest  traditional bike is the Sportster 883, which displaces 883 cubic centimeters  (cc’s) and weighs 564 lbs.
  The newer Harley lineup of Street bikes  includes the modest Street 500, which displaces 500 cc’s and weighs a mere 492  pounds. Remember, these are the smallest, and the Street series has been  plagued by maintenance issues.
  You can get a new Honda CB300, which  displaces 281 cc’s and weighs 313 pounds, for a couple of thousand  dollars less than  the Street 500. For the Millennial crowd that’s carrying student loan debt and  isn’t interested in channeling Marlon Brando, James Dean, or their dad, that’s  a pretty good option.
  Now, about those electric bikes… 
  I’m a fan of the LiveWire. I followed the  press releases when Harley took the prototype on a national tour a few years  ago. Apparently, the company added a sound that makes the bike approximate a  jet engine turbine.
  Since Harleys are known for their roaring  exhaust, it makes sense that they would ensure the electric bike had a song of  its own. I’m not sure if the engine noise made it to the production bike, but  for the price tag, the motorcycle should come with a live band.
  Harley set the price at $30,000.
  For a motorcycle.
  With few moving parts.
  The thing is fueled by a souped-up version of your cell phone  battery. It has a “range” of 100 miles or so in urban driving. Highway miles  sap the batter faster.
  The thing looks cool, but it’s hard to say it’s worth it.
  I can see Millennials thinking the LiveWire is nifty, but then  surfing the net for less than five seconds and finding Zero Motorcycles, which  has been making electric bikes with zero emission for more than a decade.
  Zero offers a range of bikes, including the decked out ZF 14.4  with an additional power tank, which has a range of 200 miles in the city and  costs $16,900, or just over half of the new Harley.
  So, it costs half as much and goes twice as far. Hmm.
  Maybe the new city scooters due out in a couple of years will  save the company? I almost couldn’t write that because it sounds so  preposterous.
  The scooters, which Harley unveiled at the X Games in January,  look like someone took a Honda Ruckus (which are pretty awesome, as scooters  go) and made it boring. The scooters will be 49 cc’s, so they won’t require a  motorcycle license, but they will require that you surrender any sense of style  to get on one.
  OK. That’s a bit harsh. Perhaps Harley will tweak the design  before they offer the bikes for sale. I hope.
  There is a different path available  to Harley, but it’s difficult…
  During the late 1960s and 1970s, Harleys fell out of favor. The company  subsisted by selling fewer bikes and offering lots of branded items such as  shirts and lighters to keep the cash rolling in. They held on until the rising  generation aged into the sweet spot to buy their bikes. Maybe this could happen  again.
  As the Millennials age, they’ll eventually feel their rebellious  oats and want to strike out against The Man on the weekend even as they toil  away at professional jobs during the week. As long as Harley hasn’t hurt its  brand too much with offerings like the urban scooter, it could fit the bill.
  The payoff could be huge, since there are more Millennials than  there are Boomers. The trick will be remaining relevant long enough, with its  mystique intact, to take advantage of the opportunity.
  Such a strategy won’t make shareholders happy, but it would  allow Harley to maintain its well-deserved image as a quality American product.
Stay tuned.
Harry
Follow me on Twitter @HarryDentjr
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Harry studied economics in college in the ’70s, but found it vague and inconclusive. He became so disillusioned by the state of the profession that he turned his back on it. Instead, he threw himself into the burgeoning New Science of Finance, which married economic research and market research and encompassed identifying and studying demographic trends, business cycles, consumers’ purchasing power and many, many other trends that empowered him to forecast economic and market changes.
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