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Word of Mouth marketing: The Case of Brompton Bikes

Here’s a case of a product that has grown through word of mouth marketing: Brompton bikes.

Our family have become big users of Brompton bikes over the last ten years. We have 3, and a range of child seat options so that the 4 of us can head into old town Barcelona on a weekend.

The home fleet of bikes

I first came across Brompton when I was given one as a gift by a group of Entrepreneurs (thank you Forum Berlin!). At first, I thought “I’ve already got 2 bikes… who needs a folding bike?” Within a year… I had left my other bikes behind and I pretty much ride the Brompton both mid week and weekend.

Our Brompton bikes work well. They are good to ride (6 gears, good steering). They are easy to fold… and they fold up small and easy to handle (although heavy to carry any more than 50m… but not a problem as you just turn it back into a bike).

We had 2 Brompton bikes stolen last week. Annoying… to use a polite word. They were in the back of the car, in an underground parking.

I was looking at all the folding bike options over the last week (I ended up buying 2 new Bromptons to replace the stolen ones… after checking out all the other options).

Since google tracks everything… I now see lots of Brompton videos popping up in my YouTube feed. I loved this talk by the CEO of Brompton Bikes, Will Butler-Adams. He’s clearly not so interesting in being a nice person, but deeply interested in producing an excellent bicycle.

His marketing comparison: Gillette – 95% of what you are paying for is tennis players lifestyles and flashy billboards. That worked for years… because spending lots of money on making a great product was a waste in a world where TV advertising was the way new products and ideas got out to the wider market.

Brompton is growing now because of Powerful Word of Mouth marketing.

Brompton’s founder, Andrew Ritchie only focussed on making an excellent bike. He only worked with suppliers and distributors who cared about product quality. For years, this made it hard to grow their sales. Word of mouth was a slow growth tool in the 1980s, 1990s… but then came social media. Bit by bit, people who used a Brompton would recommend them… and sales grew bike by bike.

Today, Social media, blogs and vlogs allow for honest people to share honest reviews of good products.

This has me reflecting on how Vistage can be like Brompton… make sure our member experience is always excellent… and allow our members to be our best marketing (as they will be the best in knowing whether other CEOs share our 7 beliefs).

Where to buy a Brompton in Barcelona? Folding Bikes House. Great team (ask for Adrià!), great selection, great area to hang out while they service your bike.

3 responses to “Word of Mouth marketing: The Case of Brompton Bikes”

  1. disqus_xZyI1vDznJ Avatar
    disqus_xZyI1vDznJ

    Hi, we are new to Bromptons and wondering what child seat options you have had success with. We are looking for one for our 4 year old

    1. We used this one from 1 to 3 years https://www.thule.com/en-gb/child-bike-seats/front-mounted-child-bike-seats/thule-yepp-mini-_-12020101 Yepp, front mounted – also used the windscreen https://www.thule.com/en-gb/child-bike-seats/front-mounted-child-bike-seats/thule-yepp-mini-windscreen-_-12020906 as it can be pretty windy for a little one.

      Now that our daughter is older, we tend to use the standard Brompton kids seat – that is just a bar from my seat. Here’s an image of the one https://www.pinterest.es/pin/324188873146802148/ It is not particularly comfortable for the main rider… you have to cycle in an uncomfortable posture, and my daughter likes to change gears and hold my handlebars…

      Maybe a decent rear mounted seat for a 4 year old… but we are happy that our 4 year old has quite some stamina on her own bike, and the bike lanes near us in Barcelona are pretty safe for kids.

      1. disqus_xZyI1vDznJ Avatar
        disqus_xZyI1vDznJ

        Thanks Conor! Much appreciated. I think I will check out that bar. Here is New York, the bike lanes aren’t there yet for kids 🙂

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