BikeCrave Manifesto

by jeffbean on May 30, 2009

I don’t want to monetize BikeCrave.

Seriously. No auto-reply DMs from me. No email spam. No ad sales. No affiliate links. I’m building the site with my own money. I’ve developed it with a blizzard of ideas, plus feedback from cyclists around the world.

No monetization? Are you nuts?

Hardly.

What I’d like BikeCrave to do is simple: Spread bike mojo. Coax a laugh. Help someone. Make people think. Maybe even be thankful.

There’s a back story.

I don’t routinely share this piece of personal info online. My wife is a cancer survivor. She’s been in remission going on 6 years. And believe me, I try to remember every day I’m alive to be thankful. The big “C” changes everything – even when you’re not the one wearing the scarlet letter. I will always wear a yellow bracelet.

Now it’s time to try and give back, to honor others who can’t (or couldn’t) pedal like I can – or pedal like you can. We’re fortunate. When I did the Ride for the Roses in 2003 and 2004 in Austin, Texas, I never witnessed such profound human bravery and compassion. I’m puny by comparison. Giving back. Tough concept to grasp? For some in today’s difficult world, maybe so. Pedal on, we must.

On a ride after work this evening, I chatted with a very fit guy. We met up on the bike path. He wanted to hammer it. I wanted recovery in the small ring. Yet we still had something in common. It’s how rides can go. All that’s required are two people, four wheels, and a conversation. Things were splendid.

But when I mentioned BikeCrave with excitement, the rider had questions. He was instantly skeptical. Rather than see a few altruistic possibilities, he saw barriers, and motives. “How will people find your website? Won’t people be skeptical that you’re trying to make money? What’s in it for you? There’s got to be something in it for you.”

The guy was an old-time salesman, so I dismissed much of what he said with a smile. He’ll never understand the Web and why people can connect without ever having met – if only out of passion for something. For him, maybe the day is primarily about money. I’m glad I’m not in sales.

Answers

My answers to him were very easy: “They’ll find BikeCrave through their friends and other cyclists. They can scour the site’s source code for affiliate links or Google AdWords, and they’ll find none. Purpose”

Every day, I happily work at a publicly held software company, helping position products and services for people who will pay more than half a billion dollars for them this fiscal year. I’m lucky. I’m not rich. Never will be. Not a goal.

The only money I want to see mentioned in the same sentence with BikeCrave are donations going to worthy causes. Donations that people decide to make privately on the basis of a “Penny per mile” concept – in the privacy of their own lives. Donations that happen (maybe) because they provide people a bit more purpose in this world. You know, thinking of others. Trying to help out. BikeCrave is not my career. Social media is not my calling. Having a huge number of “Followers” on Twitter doesn’t interest me. BikeCrave is my way to give back and tap into my athletic passion and zest for life.

If someday BikeCrave enables me with the opportunity to set up a local bike touring company in San Diego, I suppose I’d be lucky. But if that touring company also helped those less fortunate, I might just say I’d be the luckiest man in the world.

Seriously.

Related posts:

  1. Two-wheeled manifesto I’ve always liked the Cluetrain Manifesto. There’s something pure about taking a fearless stand that’s good for the soul. Really stick it out there. No flinching. No need to explain. Challenge status quo. Straight-on. Be a contrarian with a purpose. Communicate with deep conviction. I’ve been dreaming of a two-wheeled...
  2. Limited edition BikeCrave caps Do you read the BikeCrave blog? Love to ride? Or just hang out and exude a bike vibe? Well, you’re in luck. I’ve had a limited quantity of custom embroidered BikeCrave caps made for purchase. They are $25, which includes shipping. The skinny: Made in USA (individually sewn) by the...
  3. If I could change the world If I could change the world, we’d smile at least 10 times a day. If I could change the world, every compliment would be genuinely pure. If I could change the world, we’d listen more. If I could change the world, we’d talk less. If I could change the world,...
  4. The human race Today’s official. For the next few months, we no longer “save” daylight in what has been a great cycling year. For some, things transition to the indoor trainer or spin class. For others, saddle time will be limited to weekends and holidays away from the office, quarterly earnings and EBITDA....
  5. Post-ride buzz It’s something people who don’t ride bikes will ever understand: the post-ride buzz. Nice and natural. Healthy. Satisfying. A renewable energy source. Environmental. We feel the buzz without sensing it. We crave it without knowing it. It’s our yin and yang, ebb and flow, goodness and virtue. The post-ride buzz...

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

Allen Jones October 19, 2009 at 08:32

I had one more thought on this Jeff as I was riding on Saturday. Maybe you should call this the Cyclist’s Code rather than manifesto. Think this could be more in keeping with the tenor and intent of what you are doing here.

jeffbean November 29, 2009 at 00:12

Hi Allen, good idea. Code like code of ethics, code of conduct. Hope all is good in VT!

Leave a Comment

Previous post:

Next post: