Tuesday, January 19, 2016

making the payments doesn't make you a rider
















Thanks to an unprecedented marketing plan, Harley Davidson sells more bikes in the US of A than anyone else.  A marketing plan so rich and deep, so simple yet so successful that they market it through college courses.  And in a few words, it works.  They sell an image of what they think a biker wants to be, and many have fallen into it.  And because of their sales success, it has forced their product to become better also.  Whoever thought you would find ABS on a Harley, let alone Brembo brakes?  Harleys that handle?  Reliable?  Women riding them?  And yet they sell them with no discounts to those waiting in line to get them.  Any product would love to have the sales success Harley has, congrats to them.  What a move, especially from a company that 30 years ago approached the Federal Government to put a tax on any imported bike over 700 cc’s, because no one was buying?  But they came through when they needed to, and I find their comeback incredible, and worth emulating.
Almost 100 years ago Alfred P. Sloan, the architect of General Motors made two outstanding quotes.  “You can sell an old man a young man’s car, but you cannot sell a young man an old man’s car.”  Very true.  And then “General Motors is not in the business of making cars, it is in the business of making money.”  And their history speaks for  itself, until the 1980’s, about the same time Harley started their comeback.  They found you can sell a biker looking bike to anyone, but not anyone would buy a bike without an image.  Bad is good, good translates to profits, and t shirt sales.  Of which they sell more of than some motorcycle manufacturers do bikes.  Which gave rise to the slogan “$20,000 and 20 miles do not make you a biker.”  Leathers, a V-twin, your wife wearing clothes two sizes too small, and having decal of the Bar and Shield on your pickup do not make you a biker.  Yet many fall under the illusion, and today when someone who doesn’t ride hears you do, the instantly think Harley. 
Yet why are their so many 1 or 2 year old Harleys sitting in the used line of Japanese stores?  Did Harley get them in, or back after years out, but couldn’t keep them?  When the HD means hundred dollars translated into thousands, did they go elsewhere?  Did they find that performance can and reliability can cost less?  Did they learn that riding is more than an image, more than a life style, but it is fun?  And the fun only ends when you do?  Can heritage only take you so far, we’ll see what happens to Indian in a few years.  Triumph learned the lesson, and builds more than Bonnevilles.  Some like to ride, to some it is all about the image, to others they never get it.  The $20k biker is alive and well, at least for 20 miles or until all his friends have seen his new ride.  Then it is back to his SUV after his wife complains about helmet head, or she can’t text while riding.  A $20k lesson on life.  While the rest of us ride, because we want to.  Real bikers will never be trendy, stylish, or fit in with an SUV/mini-van dominated world.  Rebels to the end, long after the 200 mile test has left many a new Harley, or Triumph, or Indian, Ducati, Guzzi, or Honda for sale.  Helmet and leathers included.
Those of us who are real bikers, can spot the image conscious non-riders.  Works with Christians too.  Lately too many I know are going through a crisis, and fail at the altar of Christ.  But never leave.  When offered a choice by Jesus, Peter answered “where else will we go?”  He and his fellow disciples had been with him and seen the miracles.  The great teachings.  But they had also seen themselves scared and embarrassed by things he had said.  They had and would suffer insults, threats, and even death by serving him, by being a Christian.  Just by being seen with him could lead to jail or death.  Yet when offered a choice, to go or to stay, they made the right decision, they chose Jesus.  They could not deny his words had given them hope, and eased their fears.  His wisdom was like no other, and his ways backed up his words.  Peter states “we have believed and come to know.”  Believing led to seeing.  They weren’t like the image conscious biker who spent $20k to fit in, when it rained, they rode.  Wife’s air a mess, buy her a comb.  When the road called we answered, and riding became intertwined in our lives.  We didn’t quit when it broke down, bad weather didn’t keep us inside, and our image became our character, instead of the other way around.  We ride.  And Peter saw the difference when Jesus came into a life.  His included.
Life has, is, or will throw things at you that you cannot understand.  We will someday, or for weeks walk through the valley of the shadow of death.  But we know Jesus is with us.  He is no poser, his words are truth, and we choose to stick with him despite the situations.  We know that heaven lies ahead, and that our true testimonies are based on what he has done in our lives when nothing else could or would.  We find that like the disciples, we have contemplated something or someone else.  We may have even strayed, but in our hearts always knew it was all about Jesus.  And given the final choice, no matter the situation that led to our pity party, we choose Jesus.  For we really have no other choice.  There is no SUV alternate to life after riding with him.  You smell the air, feel the road, and see things through his eyes, and suddenly it all makes sense.  And just like the t-shirt says, “if I had to explain it, you wouldn’t understand.”  Yet some cannot explain, so it is not up to us to understand, but to trust. 
Some ride for a season, some to be seen.  Real bikers are in it for life.  We have checked out the alternatives and found no other way we rather get on down the road.  And Jesus is the same in my life, and others who believe.  We have been given the choice, and we chose Jesus.  We aren’t in it for image or acceptance, we are in it for love.  It goes way beyond understanding, way beyond words.  Like God told me, “how can you describe an infinite God using finite words?  To finite minds?”  It takes the spirit to change, then nurture and grow us.  We will have tough times, but he will carry us through.  There will be days we take the car and wish we had ridden.  All our decisions will not be right, but the one to choose Jesus will lead to forgiveness.  And mercy, which can only be found after you screw up.  If you have found your life in the line of used lives after a few rides, it is not Jesus who changed, it was your decision.  One he never forced you into, so lean on Peter’s response.  “We have found you have the words of eternal life.  We have come to believe you are the Holy One of God.”   Can you say the same?
Satan has some wonderful marketing tools to keep you from Jesus.  But they are just that, tools that pale when compared to truth.  Some day you will be asked who is Jesus?  Peter knew when he answered “thou art the Christ.”  Don’t let $20k take you to find out if you are a biker.  The real ones can see through you.  We can tell by your hairdo after a ride, or your attitude to cold weather.  Works with Jesus too, he knows and we can tell where you are with Christ.  Forgiveness is the difference.  Jesus forgives, your bank note won’t.  You keep paying until it is paid off or you sell the bike.  Rather consider wisdom from above before buying into an image.  Just because you can make the payments doesn’t make you a rider.  Jesus paid it all, and considering the alternative, there is no other choice to make.  “They are weak, but he is strong.  Yes Jesus loves me...the Bible tells me so.”  If a child can get it, what are you waiting for?  Why aren’t you riding?
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25bikr.blogspot.com