While autonomous driving and electric vehicles have dominated the conversation in the traditional transportation field over the past decade, there is little question that the e-bike market is hot and surging. Some forecast the global e-bike market to reach $38.6 billion by 2025, up from the $21.1 billion that the market generated in 2018 (a CAGR of 9.01%). This growth has a caused an e-bike "gold rush" with dozens of players, including many legacy bike brands and new startups, entering the space. On popular crowdfunding sites like Kickstarter and Indiegogo, 130-plus e-bike startup companies currently have funding campaigns underway. As a basis for comparison, just 14 major global corporations produce the bulk of automobiles worldwide under more than 60 brands.
You can download the paper by clicking on the logo below:
Table Of Contents
- Executive Summary
- Strong Market Growth But Little Differentiation
- Rayvolt's Origins
- The Rayvolt Product Lineup: Swagger On Steroids
- Cutting-Edge Technology
- Go-To-Market Strategy
- Closing Thoughts
- Figure 1: Rayvolt Product Line
- Figure 2: Rayvolt Mounted Smartphone Holder With Electronic Intelligent Vehicle Assistant (EVIA) Application
- Figure 3: Rayvolt X One (With Embedded Battery Compartment)
- Figure 4: Rayvolt X One (With Embedded Smartphone Compartment)
- Figure 5: Demo To Your Door Rendering
- Figure 6: Yego Scooter Company Logo
- Figure 7: E-Motorcycle Concept From Rayvolt
Companies Cited
- Alienware
- Apple
- Ford
- Indiegogo
- Kickstarter
- Rayvolt
- Tesla
- Trident Sports
- Yego
Patrick founded the firm based on his real-world world technology experiences with the understanding of what he wasn’t getting from analysts and consultants. Ten years later, Patrick is ranked #1 among technology industry analysts in terms of “power” (ARInsights) in “press citations” (Apollo Research). Moorhead is a contributor at Forbes and frequently appears on CNBC. He is a broad-based analyst covering a wide variety of topics including the cloud, enterprise SaaS, collaboration, client computing, and semiconductors. He has 30 years of experience including 15 years of executive experience at high tech companies (NCR, AT&T, Compaq, now HP, and AMD) leading strategy, product management, product marketing, and corporate marketing, including three industry board appointments.
-
Patrick Moorheadhttps://moorinsightsstrategy.com/author/phfmphfmgmail-com/
-
Patrick Moorheadhttps://moorinsightsstrategy.com/author/phfmphfmgmail-com/
-
Patrick Moorheadhttps://moorinsightsstrategy.com/author/phfmphfmgmail-com/
-
Patrick Moorheadhttps://moorinsightsstrategy.com/author/phfmphfmgmail-com/
-
Mark Venahttps://moorinsightsstrategy.com/author/mark-vena/
-
Mark Venahttps://moorinsightsstrategy.com/author/mark-vena/
-
Mark Venahttps://moorinsightsstrategy.com/author/mark-vena/
-
Mark Venahttps://moorinsightsstrategy.com/author/mark-vena/