Quo vadis HD?
CVO, sry, CEO

Matt Levatich speaks about big changes in the next years to come with Harley Davidson.
Reid Wilson, Director of Marketing for Indian Motorcycle too stated, that in the near future many things are stirred up ( see
http://www.motorcycle.com/features/mo-interview-reid-wilson-director-of-marketing-for-indian-motorcycle.html ) - he already stated somewhere else, that Indian will be gone from the heavy cruiser segment in the next five years.
And whether I like it or not, I understand, that you – as an enterprise – have to be innovative and ahead competing companies. You also have to consider changing markets and changing – or better: tightening – restrictions on the worldwide market. Therefore you have to create and run an evolving model range. And, the CEO´s noble task: your enterprise has – first – to survive, then grow, flourish and prosper. So far, so good. This one part including evolution, model range etc., works, OK: more or less.
What I do not understand – especially with HD – for I don´t have any experiences with Indian yet, is, that the most powerful marketing instrument to secure the present, prepare and cover the company´s back in the future is definitely not used: The satisfied and happy customer. I can bring in here my personal example only: I bought a FLHXSE in early 2016. I was totally happy then. The reason why I purchased it was the Harley promise, that I can do lovely and long tours (“consuming heavy loads of tarmac”), get relaxed from the first mile on and have pure joy in my free time. To be honest: the relaxing thing worked – for some short time. From the beginning on I had complaints bout the front section, that still are not fixed – don´t wanna go into details, cause what I want to say is this:
From my POV – OK, it´s a far away one in Europe – big companies, and yes, HD in my eyes is a big shot – are very far away from customer needs: this means distance, commitment, response and service. From my point of view in this field a whole war could be won. New model range, fully agree, but that´s building a shiny penthouse, while the cellar still is under (heavy) construction – in order to save and secure the latter! And yes, that evolutions are not bulletproof from the first second on, is quite understandable – that a friend of mine, in mid season with a blown M8 and an already booked tour didn´t even get a rental for, is not understandable, and even less acceptable.
“… there’s only a certain amount of investment available in a company” as Wilson states in the mentioned Interview. Well, if you don´t leave a certain part of the budget for CR and LIVE IT, it´s getting hard. Budget in this context I understand not only as money in the first hand: It´s more about taking your customers seriously, believing them and truly and hearty supporting them. Just to wear the famous “Glad you´re here”-button won´t do the trick. I remember last time I joined the big Harley-meet at the Faaker See in Austria (one of the biggest on the European continent), when Willie G. was present, marketing machinery running at the limiter “meet Willie G. – Mr. Harley Davidson!” etc. – but Willie G. was as strictly shielded from the people as the POTUS always is. My impression: they didn´t fear fans would run him over – It was pretty disciplined there – the big danger was that somebody could TALK to him. This the “having the ear to the market, to the customer”? What keeps e.g. Matt Levatich from visiting his dealership? When on tour in Europe, why can´t he visit several (not one or two!) dealers (and yes: in several countries, one continent at a time) and talk to his customers – takes time and Dollars, yes, yes but that pays off in the end. Many of his time consuming actions to “lead better” his MOCO (… and satisfying his shareholders) all have little effort if he forgets who is paying for his products. This would build and glue a community of advertising – cause satisfied – customers. And on that base the floors and penthouse could be built – think about sustainability!
I miss that now, I don´t see this to come and I´m a lil bit sad that this CR thing is so ignored. In the end Companies waste so much fuel by running at full throttle with the brake chute deployed.
And the customer? He still buys an idea, an aurora borealis, a fictional world, a functional image, a galaxy of emotion – that loses 10 Grand and even more expectations when driven out of the showroom …welcome to reality, CEOs.
I just had to let this out,
regards, Gerhard.
Sry for my English, I´m no native speaker …