Having no relationship to the moco but much experience with customer satisfaction in the luxury brands category both from the consumer and manufacturer side, I have to give these guys props for even wanting to enter the lions den. If they spent much time on this forum at all, they'e gotten both ears full of criticisms and complaints, much, but not all, deserved.
If this was the first time moco reps have attended one of these rallys, I hope they came away with enough value to support sending others in the future. Additional interaction between the CVO rider community and the mother ship can only be a good thing and they are more likely to meet real riders of the product at an event like this than through many online surveys, phone interviews, or focus groups.
Based on the quantity and average mileage of the bikes for sale on ebay & chopper exchange, most CVO owners don't put many miles on their bikes. The folks that attend CVO events would be the group of CVO owners that actually use, alter, and demand more from their bikes than just status and a nice paint job. Learning from this demographic could only help the moco.
From our position, we have to be willing to learn the limitations that the moco operates under, whether government induced like emissions restrictions, or economic, like the reality of a global demand downturn or union negotiations.
These bikes are premium products and we pay a premium price to own them so there is an expectation that the expereience will be a premium one as well. That is not always the case and I sincerely hope that the gentlemen in attendance were focused on gathering information to help the brand in the future as well as sharing what they can (realizing that there are restrictions on the sharing side) with a well organized community of owners.
Thanks to firedood for facilitating the interaction. I hope it is just the first of many!