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Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    Boulder
    Posts
    930
    wait, dex, is that your real hair?

    If so, AWESOME

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Seattle, WA
    Posts
    423
    Quote Originally Posted by Kimmyt View Post
    wait, dex, is that your real hair?
    Real hair, yes. Natural color, no.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Trondheim, Norway
    Posts
    1,469
    I once got respect in a bike shop just for walking in with my spd shoes aaaaand ... Impeach Bush bike socks. Had a long conversation with them about where to get the socks and how many they should stock. Also a conversation about exchanging my comfort bike for a flatbar road bike, now that I'd outdone myself by doing 42 miles of the Cindy on the "old grey mare" and was ready to move up to something real. Maybe I'm thick-skinned, but I didn't feel like they dissed me, and I was not only middle-aged, female and overweight, but actually came in on a big clunky comfortbike. So I guess some shops treat people right. Which I guess is why we come back and actually shop there.
    Half-marathon over. Sabbatical year over. It's back to "sacking shirt and oat cakes" as they say here.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    foothills of the Ozarks aka Tornado Alley
    Posts
    4,193
    Quote Originally Posted by Duck on Wheels View Post
    I once got respect in a bike shop just for walking in with my spd shoes aaaaand ... Impeach Bush bike socks.
    Around here it would be I Miss Bill socks.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Location
    the dry side
    Posts
    4,365
    Quote Originally Posted by Duck on Wheels View Post
    I once got respect in a bike shop just for walking in with my spd shoes aaaaand ... Impeach Bush bike socks.
    where did you get those?

    It's much more productive to have a nice chat with the manager than to walk out annoyed and never go back. While the chances are 50-50 that the manager will "get it", IMNSHO it's worth it to try and do a little gentle education.

    As a small business owner myself, I'd rather know where I've got room for improvement, or where my employees need to improve, than to have people go out and talk negatively about my business.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Colorado
    Posts
    326
    Wow, you ladies make me feel really lucky!

    From the moment I walked into my LBS they listened to what *I* wanted and treated me with respect. They always encourage (and teach) me to fix things myself.

    I first went in there a little over a year ago, my previous MTB had been stolen years before but it kind of turned me off on bikes, never fit well, heavy, chain always dropped. So I told the guy at the LBS that I wanted a hybrid (with the intent of taking it around town & on some easy trails). I was mostly looking to get used to riding a bike again before riding the "World's most dangerous road" in Bolivia. He told me that he would suggest a (similarly priced) MTB, because I could always put slicks on it if city riding was my thing, but it would increase the range of trails open to me. Then he went on: and you can always put racks and fenders on it if you want to start commuting on it...come in for our free maintenance class next week & learn to change a flat...they fit the bike to me really well & while I initially laughed at the commuting thing I was back there in a few months for the rack. And he was right about the versatility...I quickly became hooked on MTBing.

    Now I am planning my first long solo touring trip and they are *so* helpful. The mechanic is helping me learn how to repair the most likely things to break and they are full of good advice even suggesting products they don't carry in some cases over products they do. They are going to let me bring an old bike in to work on it in their shop (myself) so I can ask questions when I have them. (they have a workstand and tools set up for the public) Of course I buy almost all of my bike gear from them because I really love their supportive attitude & respect.

    So sorry that so many of you have been treated poorly by your LBSs, you'd think that they'd get out of the stone age sooner or later! I know the feeling though, I teach highly technical engineering courses & look a fair amount younger than I am; I get everything from skeptical looks to 'YOU are teaching THIS course?!?' Um, yea. Sometimes you just have to bite your tongue and show people that genitalia doesn't figure into intelligence or capability for abstract thought. But then again, those people are paying me! I'd have a hard time giving my LBS any business if they copped that sort of attitude.

    Anne

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Brisbane, QLD, Australia
    Posts
    529
    I've had a good experience and a bad experience all wrapped up into one when I was buying my roadie.

    I'd just been on a group ride on my very clunky hybrid. I'd had enough and BF and I decided it was time to start shopping for a Roadie.

    So we rocked up in our bike gear at a bike shop on the way back that was reknowned for stocking SUB bikes and Specialized. So we went in.

    I was served by a brilliant woman. She was a mountain bike enthusiast and after telling her what I was after she came took me through everything I wanted to know. When I was test riding stuff I gave her my feedback and she agreed with me based on her experience or explained what I was experiencing based on the spec sheet.

    She was a GREAT servicewoman and Bike shops need more sales people like her! (She was also the mechanic! ^_^ Too bad the store's half the way to ipswich which is too far to ride)

    BAD EXPERIENCE:
    While she was serving me the owner of the store could sense a sale and came over to add his two cents in. Based on the bikes I was leaning towards he told me That I'd probably be better off with the lower model "because it comes in pink" He just ASSUMED... Sure I loved pink. But I hated the 2006 model sub zero.1. I test road it and it wasn't that much of an improvement on what I was riding already.

    The woman serving me wasn't happy after this exchange. She thought I'd do better with the higher sub zero.pro model because I liked the ultegra and it was a lighter machine.

    moral of the story: There are some jerks out there. But there are also some really enthusiastic people who love their job and want to see you walk out of their store 100% happy with your purchases.
    @LIGHTSABE*R(::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

    Beginner Triathlete Log

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Madison, WI
    Posts
    65

    Talking

    Quote Originally Posted by onimity View Post
    Wow, you ladies make me feel really lucky!

    From the moment I walked into my LBS they listened to what *I* wanted and treated me with respect. They always encourage (and teach) me to fix things myself.

    I first went in there a little over a year ago, my previous MTB had been stolen years before but it kind of turned me off on bikes, never fit well, heavy, chain always dropped. So I told the guy at the LBS that I wanted a hybrid (with the intent of taking it around town & on some easy trails). I was mostly looking to get used to riding a bike again before riding the "World's most dangerous road" in Bolivia. He told me that he would suggest a (similarly priced) MTB, because I could always put slicks on it if city riding was my thing, but it would increase the range of trails open to me. Then he went on: and you can always put racks and fenders on it if you want to start commuting on it...come in for our free maintenance class next week & learn to change a flat...they fit the bike to me really well & while I initially laughed at the commuting thing I was back there in a few months for the rack. And he was right about the versatility...I quickly became hooked on MTBing.

    Now I am planning my first long solo touring trip and they are *so* helpful. The mechanic is helping me learn how to repair the most likely things to break and they are full of good advice even suggesting products they don't carry in some cases over products they do. They are going to let me bring an old bike in to work on it in their shop (myself) so I can ask questions when I have them. (they have a workstand and tools set up for the public) Of course I buy almost all of my bike gear from them because I really love their supportive attitude & respect.

    So sorry that so many of you have been treated poorly by your LBSs, you'd think that they'd get out of the stone age sooner or later! I know the feeling though, I teach highly technical engineering courses & look a fair amount younger than I am; I get everything from skeptical looks to 'YOU are teaching THIS course?!?' Um, yea. Sometimes you just have to bite your tongue and show people that genitalia doesn't figure into intelligence or capability for abstract thought. But then again, those people are paying me! I'd have a hard time giving my LBS any business if they copped that sort of attitude.

    Anne

    I live in Colorado...please share you LBS' name Pretty please, with sugar on top...don't make me beg...

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    foothills of the Ozarks aka Tornado Alley
    Posts
    4,193
    Badger Girl I like your avatar. What's your gsd's name?

    OK, I had a neat experience yesterday at our LBS. I was talking to the mechanic, telling him about my latest adventure on the bike when he asked,"Have you lost weight? You look different." I wanted to reach over the register and give him a hug.

 

 

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