1 minute read
Electrifying Growth
by Hetty Byrne
Ribble Valley E-Bikes, Dunsop Bridge Roger Wolstenholme
We were due to open the e-bike rental shop in Dunsop Bridge in early April, so we were already committed when the lockdown was announced. We had invested in bikes which then didn’t arrive, but we didn’t have any visitors anyway, because the whole country was in lockdown. “ the visitors and we also got a lot of online bookings via the website and social media. “Initially, we planned to operate as a seasonal bike rental business during the summer, but the relationships we established with British bike manufacturers like Volt and Raleigh during lockdown gave us the opportunity to start doing bike
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“Once we did get some sales as well, so after a bikes, we could have really busy summer, we opened, but we didn’t decided to stay open want to upset the into the autumn and community. At that point, winter. it would have been easy to give up, but actually we decided to really commit to it and spend the downtime scaling up the operation. “We’re doing children’s bikes now and tow-along trailers for smaller kids – so the whole family can enjoy a ride on very quiet roads and traffic-
“As the lockdown free tracks straight from continued, the season the shop. was getting shorter and shorter, but by June, we were getting ready to open and took on our first employee and started getting the shop ready. “Lockdown forced us to really commit and expand the business faster than we would otherwise have done. It means we are going to start this season
“We opened the doors in July and it took with a bigger fleet of hire bikes, more bikes off straight away. We made sure the signage in stock, better choice for customers and a and the forecourt would attract interest from greater determination to succeed.”