You Just Go Faster: Cycling, Community and Commerce with Rapha's CCO
This episode of RetailCraft takes us inside premium cycling brand Rapha, our host Ian Jindal chats with Joel Natale, Chief Commercial Officer, at Rapha's London headquarters. Their conversation explores how this 20-year-old brand transformed cycling culture, built a powerful community, and continues to balance premium positioning with growth.
[00:00:00] Introduction to Rapha and Joel's Role
[00:01:00] "Changed The Sport": Rapha's Market Impact
[00:06:52] "More Than Just Shops": The Clubhouse Concept
[00:11:16] "Suffering Together": The Community Philosophy
[00:15:50] "The Rapha Cycling Club": 10 Years of RCC Membership
[00:18:23] "Product Longevity": Sustainability and Repairs
[00:23:57] "I Won't Be A Lifer": Joel's Cycling Industry Journey
[00:27:19] "Incredibly Lucky": From Brompton to Rapha
[00:30:37] "A Relentless Desire to Understand the Customer": Brand Leadership
[00:34:27] "You Just Go Faster": Rapha's Future Direction
Rapha's Origins and Market Position
Joel introduces Rapha as a 20-year-old cycling brand founded by Simon Mottram in 2004 that "really changed the sport" and how people engage with cycling. Rapha entered a market divided between established performance brands and cheaper, poorly fitting products, with Mottram's vision to create "a more discerning and thoughtful product brand" engaged with cycling culture.
Rapha revolutionized the industry with its bold pricing strategy, setting retail prices approximately three times the market average. This approach initially shocked consumers but transformed industry standards, with other brands taking nearly five years to realize they could also aim for premium price points.
Though the brand has expanded its range to serve diverse cyclists across price points and terrains, Rapha remains firmly positioned as a premium brand sitting "top halfway to the top" of the market.
Clubhouses: More Than Just Shops
One of Rapha's most distinctive innovations has been its clubhouses. These aren't simply retail spaces but community hubs where cyclists engage with the brand and each other. When Rapha introduced this concept around 2010-2012, cycling-focused cafés where riders could bring their bikes inside was revolutionary.
The clubhouses serve multiple purposes beyond retail. As Joel explains, "On a Sunday afternoon, you give people a space to watch races. On a Wednesday morning, you give them a space to go after they've trained." This community-building approach reflects Rapha's broader mission to grow the sport rather than just sell products.
Rapha strategically locates its clubhouses in major global cities and "culturally important cycling locations" such as Mallorca and Boulder, Colorado—choices that might not be obvious from pure data analysis but make sense for a brand deeply connected to cycling culture.
The Rapha Cycling Club (RCC)
The Rapha Cycling Club celebrates its 10th anniversary in 2024. Unlike conventional loyalty programs focused on discounts, RCC was built around creating an actual cycling club where "people might meet and ride together, race together."
RCC offers tangible benefits including half-price coffee at clubhouses, organized rides, bike hire, and access to exclusive club kit at more accessible price points. While Joel acknowledges that the club "peaked in COVID" and needs reinvigoration, he emphasizes that for many members—especially those living near clubhouses—the benefits and community connections remain valuable.
Sustainability and Product Longevity
Cycling inherently offers sustainability advantages as an environmentally friendly transportation option. Rapha's focus on high-quality products naturally aligns with sustainability principles, with Joel mentioning he still owns and uses a Rapha jersey from 2008—illustrating the brand's commitment to durability.
The company maintains repair services in the US, UK, and Europe, reflecting its commitment to product longevity. B
This episode of RetailCraft takes us inside premium cycling brand Rapha, our host Ian Jindal chats with Joel Natale, Chief Commercial Officer, at Rapha's London headquarters. Their conversation explores how this 20-year-old brand transformed cycling culture, built a powerful community, and continues to balance premium positioning with growth.
[00:00:00] Introduction to Rapha and Joel's Role
[00:01:00] "Changed The Sport": Rapha's Market Impact
[00:06:52] "More Than Just Shops": The Clubhouse Concept
[00:11:16] "Suffering Together": The Community Philosophy
[00:15:50] "The Rapha Cycling Club": 10 Years of RCC Membership
[00:18:23] "Product Longevity": Sustainability and Repairs
[00:23:57] "I Won't Be A Lifer": Joel's Cycling Industry Journey
[00:27:19] "Incredibly Lucky": From Brompton to Rapha
[00:30:37] "A Relentless Desire to Understand the Customer": Brand Leadership
[00:34:27] "You Just Go Faster": Rapha's Future Direction
Rapha's Origins and Market PositionJoel introduces Rapha as a 20-year-old cycling brand founded by Simon Mottram in 2004 that "really changed the sport" and how people engage with cycling. Rapha entered a market divided between established performance brands and cheaper, poorly fitting products, with Mottram's vision to create "a more discerning and thoughtful product brand" engaged with cycling culture.
Rapha revolutionized the industry with its bold pricing strategy, setting retail prices approximately three times the market average. This approach initially shocked consumers but transformed industry standards, with other brands taking nearly five years to realize they could also aim for premium price points.
Though the brand has expanded its range to serve diverse cyclists across price points and terrains, Rapha remains firmly positioned as a premium brand sitting "top halfway to the top" of the market.
Clubhouses: More Than Just ShopsOne of Rapha's most distinctive innovations has been its clubhouses. These aren't simply retail spaces but community hubs where cyclists engage with the brand and each other. When Rapha introduced this concept around 2010-2012, cycling-focused cafés where riders could bring their bikes inside was revolutionary.
The clubhouses serve multiple purposes beyond retail. As Joel explains, "On a Sunday afternoon, you give people a space to watch races. On a Wednesday morning, you give them a space to go after they've trained." This community-building approach reflects Rapha's broader mission to grow the sport rather than just sell products.
Rapha strategically locates its clubhouses in major global cities and "culturally important cycling locations" such as Mallorca and Boulder, Colorado—choices that might not be obvious from pure data analysis but make sense for a brand deeply connected to cycling culture.
The Rapha Cycling Club (RCC)The Rapha Cycling Club celebrates its 10th anniversary in 2024. Unlike conventional loyalty programs focused on discounts, RCC was built around creating an actual cycling club where "people might meet and ride together, race together."
RCC offers tangible benefits including half-price coffee at clubhouses, organized rides, bike hire, and access to exclusive club kit at more accessible price points. While Joel acknowledges that the club "peaked in COVID" and needs reinvigoration, he emphasizes that for many members—especially those living near clubhouses—the benefits and community connections remain valuable.
Sustainability and Product LongevityCycling inherently offers sustainability advantages as an environmentally friendly transportation option. Rapha's focus on high-quality products naturally aligns with sustainability principles, with Joel mentioning he still owns and uses a Rapha jersey from 2008—illustrating the brand's commitment to durability.
The company maintains repair services in the US, UK, and Europe, reflecting its commitment to product longevity. Beyond repairs, Rapha has expanded its sustainability efforts to include carbon emissions management and increased use of "environmentally preferred materials," while acknowledging the challenges specific to cycling apparel, which often uses multiple materials for performance requirements.
Industry Passion and Future DirectionJoel's career has been entirely within the cycling industry, beginning part-time at Evans Cycles while at university before joining their purchasing department after graduation. Despite initially thinking "I won't be a lifer," he's remained in the cycling business for 20 years.
Joel reflects on the special bonds formed in cycling retail: "When you do cycling retail, you make really close friends because you've already passed the bar of 'we're all cyclists'." Before joining Rapha, Joel worked at Brompton, describing himself as "incredibly lucky to work for both brands."
When asked about skills needed for success in brand-led businesses, Joel emphasizes "a relentless desire to understand the customer." He notes that while being passionate about your niche is essential, professionals also need to "be one step back" to avoid confusing personal preferences with broader customer needs.
The podcast concludes with Joel discussing Rapha's future under new CEO Fran Miller (sister of former professional cyclist David Millar), who recently joined from Belstaff. Rather than focusing on short-term fixes, they're taking a longer view: "We're going to look at a three to four year horizon to rebuild this place," supported by patient ownership that allows for long-term planning.
About Our GuestJoel Natale is Chief Commercial Officer at Rapha, overseeing product strategy, merchandising, supply chain, and e-commerce operations. His 20-year career in the cycling industry includes prior roles at Evans Cycles and Brompton, bringing both personal passion and professional expertise to his work at this premium global cycling brand.
-- Run time: 38 minutes
INFORMATION:
[ 🖥️ ]
Rapha - https://rapha.cc
[ 👨👧 ]
Joel Natale: https://www.linkedin.com/in/joel-natale/
Ian Jindal: www.linkedin.com/in/ianjindal/
[ 📷 ] (c) Ian Jindal / www.instagram.com/ianjindal
Multichannel retail, ecommerce and digital business - interviews, analysis and discussion with Ian Jindal and InternetRetailing
Okay then, so let's kick off. So, dear listener, welcome.
I was going to say welcome back to the studio, but we are today at Rafa HQ.
Some of you will now be shuddering with delight as Rafa customer addicts.
Some of you may find it a new brand, but either way, to demystify and give us
insight, it's a great pleasure to be here with Joel. So Joel,
Chief Commercial Officer of RAFA, welcome.
Tell us a bit about RAFA and a bit about your role as Chief Commercial Officer.
Yeah, so for anyone who doesn't know, RAFA is a 20-year-old this year cycling
brand started by Simon Mottram in 2004.
Sort of widely considered to have really changed the sport,
changed the way people engage with the sport
obviously a kind of glory time for british
cycling as well or certainly alongside that glory
of british cycling it's a global brand available all over the world with stores
or clubhouses as we call them several different countries yeah and then my role
as chief commercial officer i i'm very lucky to be able to work on some of the
product and product strategy,
I work with the merchandising and supply chain teams and then across the website
so digital product and e-commerce.
Great, well loads of avenues to go but first off let's try and anchor Rafa in the cycling landscape.
So with cycling it's such a broad brush because most people can cycle,
most people have cycled but.
Raffa sort of entered the market where cycling was moving from being bearded
old guys in cagoules doing tours and or drug-fueled Tour de France superhumans.
There was this moment where, for an urban affluent performance-focused cyclist,
this authentic brand came from nowhere and it really did change the face of cycling.
So if you were just landing today or you're a Gen Z-er getting interested in
cycling, where does the RAFA brand and offering sit in this broad cycling landscape?
Yeah, I mean, I think to answer that question, you kind of need to go back to the start as well.
And yeah, you've covered it in the sense of what the sport looked like,
but also in terms of what the market looked like at that time,
you had some very technical brands that were pushing forward with real performance
fabrics or fits or whatever. You go back to 2004.
I mean, nothing like where we are today.
But the brands existed, you know, and there were brands that had been around
already for a generation at that time.
And then beyond that, basically, everything was pretty cheap for the most part.
Polyfitting and all that sort of stuff. and Simon and Simon,
felt that there was a place for a more discerning and
more thoughtful product and brand
something that would tell the story that would engage in cycling
culture and he blew it away
by setting an rrp that was like three
times the average at the time yes it was
nuts you might remember i certainly remember the first time
you heard about how much a rafa jersey costs i remember
the conversations with my wife that started
ended with how much so you know i've lived
through that yeah right and then and in
that you know it probably took five years
for most of our brands to realize that they could sell all
that they should sell or aim to sell a product
that could be justified at those higher price points
and then yeah i mean.
Raf has been on a really long journey of like i
said you know it's changed the way people consume the
sport it's changed the stories that people paid attention
to and the depth and the detail and then over more recent
years the sport has you know continued to evolve
to a place where you've got you can
go to silver stone and spend a thousand pounds on a
pair of aero socks right you know the one end
of the really extreme of the sport and you've
got kind of very very stylish brands that
have maybe picked up from what learned
from what rafa did and trying to take that on in a in
their own way you've still got a kind of plethora
of kind of core brands and i think you know one of the areas that rafa's found
hard over recent years but was a probably a huge benefit through like the peak
covid time is rafa has you know rafa has extended its range to be able to cope
with a broader church of cyclists,
whether that's price point,
whether that's function, whether that's terrain.
Now, that works really well when the market's growing because it gives you lots
more spaces to get into a growing market.
Does have the risk of you standing for
something less defined at a point when
that market starts to contract and it doesn't
stop us still being a great and you know
and large brand at all but it definitely means that
your positioning is hard to explain all that
being said is probably a very long way of saying we're still
a premium brand you know like you're still from the
top or from halfway to the top
i would guess of like the the positioning
and we believe in the quality of our products and in the
main we're direct consuming that allows us to create great products for customers
and feedback very quickly to get iterated i mean it's interesting you know we've
we started talking about the customers one of the things that's always interested
me about the brand is that connection with the customer.
And so a lot of brands might come technology first.
You know, oh, I've got this new breathable fabric. What can I do with it?
Where there's always been this focus on, you could sort of imagine the Rafa
customer dressed in Rafa because you felt this visceral connection with them,
which you see, I think, in two ways. One is with the clubhouses.
You're not a direct-to-customer selling brand.
Customers in your store doing things so let's talk
about those in a second but i think there's also been
you know with this this customer connection
a level of fun and we're
cycling with you so whether it's doing the randonnets whether
it's you're sponsoring women cycling and
early pioneer there some of those nutty cycle across
america gravel rides all of that
allied to a lot of video work to bring that to life
so it seems to me as if you're you know your customer and
you're with them this lever engagement and also
they're with you in the stores so maybe just
pick up on this clubhouse idea like they're not your shops or
your clubhouse i want to be sarcastic and say
it's just a shop but it's not just a shop tell us about the clubhouse yeah i
mean i think the clubhouse again they're really amazing thing to go back to
because anyone who's into cycling these days is probably used to a cafe that
they can ride their bike into and that maybe has some cycling paraphernalia on the walls.
But in 2010, 11, 12, this was not the norm, right? This is a.
As with many things about cycling in cafes permanent right everyone
has always met whether it's cafe paradu in
christopher palace or whatever people have always met somewhere that's right
and and hung their bikes on the fence and gone
for a ride right that's that's off three double espresso
yeah right that's cycling immortal right like
always always happened but obviously this brand
was trying to bring that to a new generation of time
or make it more accessible make it
more useful like in sense of like how many places in soho
can you cycle and you're not
going to hang your bike on the fence anymore right so you so being
able to take it inside is suddenly a real
value add and we still see that lots of people will
have ridden around regius park and then they will come
to the clubhouse and have a coffee or maybe vice versa and
that's really been the logic of those stores
around the world and it's also the brand was never purely
about trying to sell product its purpose for
15 years was to try and grow the spore and that's how we're doing that you know
you get on a sunday afternoon you give people a space to watch races on a wednesday
morning give them a space to go after they've trained and as part of that the
theory is they will want to shop with you right and also they've got to wear their kit out somehow.
So they can buy some more yeah well and helping
people ride yeah you mentioned the rides that the brand has put
on for a long time and even before it kind of put
on rides more formally it would have appeared at people's
rides it did kind of guerrilla marketing at taps to
tour and this sort of stuff you know it was always
trying to engage with people doing the sport
because it wasn't it's a lifestyle sport like
it takes over your life i guess might be enough way of putting it
but but it is something that yeah
you can really engage with and so they were telling
these stories telling these links and really trying to
create a community as well and i think what was nice about that
is it was in retail uh we have a large number of uh of cyclists but some of
the one day events which would be teams of four where it was the slowest person's
time but counted not the fastest just these nice sort of community activities
but i mean thinking about your your clubhouses.
You know, I'd encourage everyone in the UK to visit your London one,
but I can remember visiting San Francisco and doing a free bike hire where I
was, I'd pre-booked obviously, but I was handed this enormously expensive bike.
To go riding for the day and the only difficulty was taking
my own pedals which was i never understood why but getting
those through customs into san francisco airport is
quite funny so you'd have the the riding but also
then taking that onto things like strava so the
community there's a very active rafa club on
on strava this idea that somehow the
interest and joint activity brings people together
oh yeah and i mean we track
the data of the number of people who join rides
in our various clubhouses around the world right it's
like it's yeah as you said i mean it's not
as specific as wearing out kit but it is the more
people ride the more they enjoy the sport the more
they'll tell their friends the more they'll believe in.
This brand the more they'll come back and it's been
really interesting we've obviously had fairly major change here
recently you know and we with fran our new ceo she's
brought in pros to come and talk to us and what's
fascinating when you listen to those pros is what they
tell you about what was important to them about being a pro and it's kind of
like suffering together yes one of the things they
walk away from the sport going that's
the thing that i remember the most you know and the connection
i made with someone so yes to what you mentioned about
the four-person ride and it's the time of
the slowest rider well what you go through on
that is that shared experience that you probably never
forget you mentioned to me earlier your ride in iceland
you know you don't you don't forget these things you forget them even less if
they're shared yes which is a big part of the community of the sport right and
that we can all go through that stuff and we all suffer david miller suffers
taylor gave your heart suffers and yeah your eyes suffer you know the famous.
Doesn't get any easier you just go faster.
Exactly. And there is a point where you have to have a few more muscles when you run out of gears.
So let's maybe just go back to the clubhouses because...
You know we've seen your lovely website we've seen the product but the clubhouses
are sort of quite different in the retail world these are popping up in a number
of cities so i've visited hong kong,
new york san francisco london i think a new one in paris no we haven't gone in paris why not.
Actually tell me where you put them and why yeah
well historically they've ended up so originally
they went into the brightest and
best cities in the world right it's really obvious london new york
tokyo la the list of places that you would just really naturally
put them then we can have a combination of
like obviously as a kind of e-commerce site you
can actually see where people are shopping your brand so
you can look at you could create a list of places based
off of like oh well that place is
performing really well right brand so maybe we should
look at that and but also beyond that
you have there's the combination of the two things
work together right when you put a store in a location we grow
our e-commerce sales so but actually we
also have a lot in like culturally important cycling locations
so there's one in palmer in mallorca we're in boulder in
colorado we're in places where you
might not if you were doing it on purely financial
grounds at least just looking at you did
your data analysis of how many people live in that area you're not
going to put it in mallorca but actually when you think about the.
People who go there with their bikes yes exactly it's very clear
and if you go back to bike hire bike hire suddenly makes even more sense
for rcc members in a place
like mallorca suddenly this whole thing starts to come
together and really the flywheel kicks off and
so there's a real combination of like the the
two in our in our portfolio of
stores and some will move some places have become cycling hubs
that weren't five years ago and yeah there's
paris on the map well of course it should be on the map there's zurich or
vienna or some other places would be
on the map and we're you know in traditional cycling
cities amsterdam copenhagen but we're not in oslo like
this and we don't all right well maybe
we should get our listener to volunteer on dates available to
come for the grand paris opening now we
talked about rcc membership it would be remiss of us to skip over that so as
erst one member 7611 the tell us a bit about where membership fits in so it's
a little bit more than give us your email we'll spam you every friday.
It's a paid membership scheme and in
return again there aren't many
benefits other than be able to buy even better kit
but maybe just tell me about how you see the membership scheme
and how it fits in overall how important it
is to the the commerce yeah so rcc raffa
cycling club launched in 2015 so it celebrates
its 10th anniversary next year and you
know i think it's an incredible example
of understanding the sport so most.
People would create a inverted
commerce loyalty scheme and this would be about
discounts or about access to product or
about you know special releases or
whatever and simon built something in the team built
something that was really grounded in cycling clubs
creating a true rafa cycling club a community where
people might meet and ride together race together it does
have specific benefits in the sense of you get
half price coffee if you go to a clubhouse you are
allowed to there's little rides put on for you you have
bike hire benefits that you talked about you get
free express delivery so it does have
like and club kit don't forget yeah access to club
kit which is priced in a way that you
don't get a discount on that but it's priced lower than obviously kits
you kind of you have like a full price offer which
is lower and yeah so it's kind of
we're definitely working on it's a 10 year old club and how do we improve the
proposition of the club and move it forward but i think it's also a tremendous
you know it's been a tremendous success it peaked in covid as did the brand and,
lots of other measures of cycling.
And so we are ardently aware that we need to kind of reinvigorate the club.
But at its core, it's probably got a pretty solid proposition for a lot of people.
I mean, if you live near a clubhouse, then it makes, you know,
half-price coffee and free express.
If you're riding regularly and you want to join RCC Rides, and you travel once
a year and you want to take, you want to pick up one of the amazing bikes that we allow you to hire.
It pays for itself. But I think for me, what's interesting is that re-anchoring of a membership.
It's all about doing if you participate and
you attend the clubhouse and all these
this is a physical real action it's
not just a loyalty scheme vouchers and
points so i think that working together is really important one
of the topic i wanted to pick up on before you loop back
to you sustainability so when
i remember being in a change room once and squeezing
myself into a garment there's a
sign on the wall saying that if through cycling
you lose weight the garment becomes too big then
you get 50% off the smaller size and I'm
still trying to get to a point where I
can take you up on that but next to it then there was you know
a pair of bibs with holes in because someone would come off and it
was like if you come off we'll fix it free or give you
a replace or something so there's always been this idea that you stand
behind the kit but the importance
of sustainable products has really
accelerated so i was at makers united in amsterdam
last year and alongside all
the premium brands there was raffa kit being expertly
fixed by people so maybe just tell us
how sustainability is getting woven
into the brand offering and how important
that is yeah i mean i think like you know
at its core cycling does something which not that.
Many sports can do which is you you know you can
if you're a conscious consumer be more environmentally
friendly cycling you can.
Play in golf assuming that you were going to drive
to that golf course yeah so it you can
you know it can do stuff which other sports
can't and then what that does is attracts lots
of people who care maybe more
about or at least care in equal
measure about their impacts as well as the
sport that they do you know and lots of people it's an adventurous
holiday pursue or a way of saving money to commute
or all those kind of things so that's kind of deep in the brand and then that
lines up really well with the quality which has kind of always been central
to the brand and so yeah I've got a jersey from 2008 which I could still pull
on and oh you're showing off yeah now I've got a.
The colors faded a bit and Simon did want software to replace it
but I thought it had too many memories exactly the memory is
important yeah but yeah so you certainly have
a situation where the kit has always really lasted
a long time and then yeah I
mean before sustainability we did repair so you know
before sustainability was a thing we were focused on high quality kit that would
last a long time and then combining that with repair and we have a pair of yeah
Chris rooms bib shorts that were repaired post tour to france and it's always
been a factor and it still is like we have repair sets in the us and the uk
and in europe the one you mentioned it i'm stan.
Where we will send people's kit to be repaired because this
is premium expensive kit and if uh you
know if a small stitch line comes loose then it's a
shame to exactly absolutely and then
yeah as we've gone on it's become more important
to obviously our own impact on
the environment be that through carbon emissions or
when you're brand like ours well you'll have you know fairly significant emissions
when it comes to logistics but actually
most of your emissions are probably further upstream so we you
know we look at our scope three carbon emissions
we try to work on how we can reduce those try to work with our
factories on what we can do we've had a big
push on what internally we call environmentally
preferred materials and to try and make them feature across as much of
the range as possible we release an
impact report annually so we are conscious of our impact and it's and for any
brand that's trying to sell product there's that kind of push pull of like you
need to try and sell enough of it to keep your business going and you don't
want people to buy so much of it that you are a mass polluter or all that sort of thing and.
I think cycling has some real challenges in the sense like just the materials
like they tend to be made out of multiple materials because you're looking for
stretch and fit and water resistance.
Also, that makes the material incredibly hard to recycle.
They're very expensive to produce. You've got chamois that are made out of foam.
You'd be amazed how much waste there is in this chamois.
So, we know what problems that if we go beyond...
Environmental imperatives we know what the problems are which
we need to try and solve yeah the whether they impact
the average consumer that's always the difficult bit but
we know they are part of our impact on the
planet good well the as you're
talking i was thinking about the the long stretch
of continual small improvements and how they
add up over time but also made me remember that
when we look at your cv you have
spent a lifetime dedicated to two-wheeled
retail so maybe just draw for
people who can't get their thumbs to linkedin just now your career from evans
brompton and now and now rafa what was the line 30 just say i'm only going to
work for bike companies whatever happens or was it accidental it's funny actually
because it was kind of the opposite.
So I, while I was studying, I worked in an Evans Cycles part-time.
I was actually very lucky.
Yeah, I was very lucky that like in my first week at, actually the first uni
that I went to and I left, but in my first week at first uni in the basement
of my halls opened an Evans Cycles, which is one that's now shot in Hoban.
And I got a job there and I'd been
a super keen cyclist all through my teens and i
worked at evans throughout four years at university and then
asked them if they had a better job because i didn't have any idea what
i wanted to do and and this is
because you initially started off studying philosophy of
course so no one can expect you to know what you want to do because
is that even a question well yeah exactly which
is why after a year i gave up philosophy because if you're still worrying about
the question after 12 months it's probably time to find something more practical
to do yes then i was studying physics and then yeah i was incredibly lucky really
that the job that they had was a job that i guess required numeracy that was
in the purchasing department and i did my last exam on the.
And then the point on will I commit to two wheels is I remember going to a show
and people saying to me after I'd been working there three months and they were
like, oh, you'll be a lifer now, you're a lifer now.
And they made it sound like it was something really bad. And I remember walking
away from that show thinking, I won't be a lifer. I won't be a lifer.
20 years later. 20 years later, here I am.
But I think, you know, you mentioned how cycling brings together lots of people
who you know through retail.
But my amazing experience was like when you
do cycling retail you make really close
friends because you've already passed the bar of we're
all cyclists and then you can go to the people you have
that even deeper connection with and so it became
and i guess at heart i yes
we it costs some
energy and some environmental impact to produce but fundamentally what
we're doing used well has a positive impact on on the environment and on someone's
health and on the long term i mean i always enjoyed it right i've learned bikes
for it's i learned to ride and so yeah
those things combined that's very serendipitous but you started off in a,
a junior role, rose to the ranks, then moved to Brompton.
And we interviewed Brompton on the podcast back in January. We talked to the
US team in particular about Brompton Junction.
So that sort of clubby,
more than just a shop approach has a parallel with your clubhouses,
except it seems to be more about connecting the urban cyclists rather than,
you know, them being about performance and riding
together afterwards it's kind of a a similar but
different approach so to what extent would you
draw a comparison or difference between what are
basically two strong british brands led
by charismatic you know quality focused
leaders you know so that move from brompton
to rafa where was the difference where are the similarities
oh i mean it's i mean.
I've been incredibly lucky to work for both brands right and but
it is quite a double actually it's got to be said yeah there's a
few people i've dragged over since and a couple of people
who went the other way maybe to get away but it was very
interesting to what you mentioned charismatic so it was very interesting talking
to will bobber adams when i was leaving brompton.
And a conversation i was having with him i was like going from
a product with a real point of difference and
i you know Brompton for anyone is actually unique it's
it is the best right and as a business it's
mind-blowing because you go into a factory and tubes
come in one end and bikes like so the other yeah that
factory's in London and it's just can't comprehend
it and that and that's a whole that is a village creating these
bikes it's an amazing amazing place to work and
so lucky to have been able to work on that and some
really exciting stuff during my time there and then yeah you
move to a brand like rafa which it you know
it has a heart and soul which is different but you
have to be interested enough to figure that out
and otherwise if
you stood back and you just uh how much or whatever
it's cycling kit right and to
me that was i love this brand as
well i've been a customer of this brand for a long time they
definitely changed my relationship with
cycling and so the chance
to come here and try and help
try and get it to you know back to kind of the real peak of the market was easily
something that you know really excited me and at times you know it's scary and
challenging so let's let's look forward and let's look at that because, you know.
There's too much stuff in the world.
Not enough attention, not enough money.
So as you look to the future with a brand like Rafa, but there are others like it.
In terms of integrity, product history, and so on.
If you were hiring or talking to people who wanted to get into a similar brand-led
business, what are the important skills needed in order to,
get that balance between absolute integrity with no growth,
talking to the same people, and then the whole stuff, oh, we put one on every high street, you know,
PE-fueled explosion, which ultimately
leads to dilution and so on so somewhere in
that super happy but small to temporarily happy
what are the skills needed to navigate
and you know while you're thinking give you a chance you we've seen this
with great brands you know it's a sweaty
betting on the one hand you know owner founder
real points of difference how do these
brands grow so if you step out of yourself you're talking
to a young person arriving post philosophy physics
degree what are the characteristics that are
needed in order for the brand to get
and then maintain its place i think you know you particularly in an enthusiast
brand like this you've got to have a relentless desire to understand the customer
and i remember talking to simon in 2015 or something
and he was explaining to me you know i was at evans at the time and we were kind of comparing.
Experiences and saying how like evans at the time actually surprised people
how into cycling the head office was so you'd arrive and people would maybe
come with an image that evans was like a big box and they wouldn't really be
into cycling they would arrive and there'd be bikes everywhere,
people would be sat in the cycling kit and they'd be running at lunchtime and
you know it was really there were a lot of very very key and also last century
down in waterloo at the fw evans.
People actually made the bikes there and that
you know that was a real point of competitive difference
then yeah 100 yeah and they
yeah so 100 for evans yeah
and i think i mean actually and like if if i
step back slightly what i learned at evans was i
had a chip on my shoulder when i started there and then i had
this experience of like going to canada and working in a small store
that was like my dream kind of shop at a coffee shop in here it finished at
the door it was you know did everything but i kept turning people away because
we didn't have their products and this light bulb went off that was ah i'm not
an evan cycles customer but for its customers yes It's when cycles is amazing.
So that knowledge of the customer.
Yeah, knowledge of the customer. And then when you come here and to go back
to the conversation I was referencing with Simon, he was sort of saying,
well, this brand Rafa needs to always be more cycling than his customers.
And I think at some point.
Probably became a ring around the neck because you
got to a point where the stories were so niche
because you were trying to continue you know they were
at like phd in 1950 cycling and
the reality is that most of the customers would have.
Been happy with something at a much lighter level than.
That so so there's an element of like how far.
Can you take that but there's certainly you'll only
create great products you'll only create a great experience because
in fundamentally it isn't about the product you'll only create a
great experience whether that's in the purchase journey whether that's in
riding it whether that's in the community whether that's in riding
or the coffee shop if you really get what
it is that people love about your niche
now i'm lucky this is my niche and this is
our sport and this is something that lots of people do
and i'm lucky to be able to do that i think
to be able to do it well that's why i referenced the
canadian story to be able to do well you do have to be a step one
step back because you know you might be
the customer you might need to think like a customer but you also need to challenge yourself
and check whether you are you still are the
customer yeah exactly and you won't always be
in because you'll have your own quirks and so you
need to be able to do both those things but if you don't
have the hunger and the interest then you're never
going to create anything amazing because you won't be
able to go to that depth that the
new to or even the experienced customer just
wouldn't have done and you have to you
have to be able to provide that surprise that reward
for the person who loves more great
well look time's nearly up even a
day job to get back to so thanks for taking the time but as
we uh sort of pack up anything you're thinking thank
god Ian's leaving because I can crack on with interesting project.
X or y what's exciting you as you you know
head off yeah I mean what a.
Time to be here really because Franz Fran Miller has
just joined us our new CEO from Bellstaff from Bellstaff
and previously time with team Ineos and team Sky so
cycling for him through obviously her brother was david miller
so she's oh i didn't know that yeah yeah
so she's got oh my god autograph time
needed so it's it's
incredible right and the brand's taken a
few punches over the last few years definitely but
also some of that's from lookalike brands who've learned from what you've done
and seen that power of you know the sort of upper end of cycling you know activity
yeah yeah yeah a hundred percent yeah and and did you keep innovating right
did you keep pushing on so they couldn't catch you,
So, it's a really exciting time. It's very early days in terms of what that
will mean for strategy, for product, for experience.
But that's what we're working on. We're working at a really high pace.
Anyone who's worked a friend seems to be fully aware of the pace that you end up going.
Um and so that means you know every day we're trying to answer kind of big decisions
about what we should be doing next or maybe spending the time to research and understand a bit more.
Yeah and then i mean it's you know bell staff was a for her you know it's an
incomparable brand it's 100 years old it's motorcycling it's but it's a very
comparable brand it's a british,
so i mean they are heritage i don't think we are heritage but we're but it's
also interesting i'm I'm just going to segue to their New York meatpacking store,
which was two years ago one of my top US store choices because they're this
amazing set of the store, this guy called Raphael, who would customize, age, repair.
It was this sort of tailoring concierge service, but in full sight of the customer,
conversation, Q&A, the whole thing.
It was both theater and real at
the same time so there was a time when you know belsoff was
really leaning into these are
important garments for people who love them yeah yeah exactly right and it's
like she gets she gets brands and she gets spirit and she's deep on the customer
right and so that's a great time to be here because we're not talking about
how we're going to eke out or of a point, a margin, all that sort of things.
Those things come, but they come when you do a great job. So.
Yeah, I mean, it might be all change and no change. We'll see, you know, like.
That sounds like you're volunteering to come back on another podcast next year
and tell us what happened. Yeah, maybe. Yeah, maybe.
I mean, actually, the conversations that we've had are over trying to look further
forward than that because I think so often in retail, it's easy.
The cycle. I've got to fix it next year. here, I've got 12 months to fix this
thing. We're very lucky.
We've got owners who have been very patient with this brand and,
you know, they want to get it right.
And so we're going to look three to four year strategy to rebuild this place.
So it might be, I'm a bit older and grayer the next time we speak, but yeah.
It's fine. This is why we don't do video podcasts because, you know,
for the listener, we're all handsome and young.
Well Joel on that note of happy youth and good looks thank you so much for taking
the time to join us today thank you very much Ian.