Join Dave Weiner, the CEO of Priority Bicycles, as he shares the company's journey of integrating Artificial Intelligence (AI) to enhance Customer Experience (CX). Through a rich narrative, Dave delves into how Priority Bicycles leverages various communication channels to maintain a seamless interaction with customers. This session also explores how AI aids in providing professional and timely responses, thus enhancing the overall customer satisfaction and engagement. The emphasis on maintaining a human touch in digital interactions provides insights into balancing automation and personalized customer service.
0:00
(upbeat music)
0:02
- And welcome to our next session
0:06
with Dave Wiener for Priority Bicycles.
0:08
Dave, how are you doing?
0:10
- I'm great, Ryan.
0:11
Thanks for having me.
0:12
- Oh, of course.
0:13
So, first of all, let's start off.
0:16
We're just gonna go right into it.
0:17
Tell us a little bit about yourself, Dave.
0:19
How you got into being the CEO of Priority Bicycles
0:23
and the founder, and we'll start there.
0:26
- Sure.
0:27
So, Priority Bicycles is nine years old.
0:30
We started back in 2014, mid-2014,
0:34
with the idea of maintenance-free bicycles.
0:37
So, I grew up in the bike industry
0:40
and then worked in software for a number of years.
0:42
And when I left software, I had this,
0:46
you know, this period when I was in software
0:48
where I wasn't working with bikes and I missed it.
0:52
I wanted to get back into bicycles.
0:54
Yet, I felt that the bicycle industry was really
0:57
going up market so fast.
1:00
It's all about carbon fiber and dual suspension
1:02
and going as fast as we could.
1:04
And so, I started to think,
1:06
with my time away from bicycles,
1:10
how could we make better bicycles
1:12
and really for the people that I was riding with
1:14
that was just looking to ride on the weekends
1:17
and have fun on their bike.
1:18
And so, we came up with this idea of maintenance-free
1:21
bicycles and low maintenance bicycles
1:23
and how to make the most reliable bike
1:25
that you could ever buy.
1:26
And living in New York and commuting to work a lot,
1:29
I really want to look at the segments of commuting
1:32
and of recreational cycling.
1:33
And so, really, that's where we've been.
1:36
All of our bicycles are assigned to be
1:38
the most low-maintenance in category.
1:41
We sell consumer direct online,
1:43
either at our website and we have a co-braded website
1:47
with Costco.
1:48
So, it's the only two places to buy our bikes.
1:51
And all of our bicycles are, you know,
1:54
again, meant to be low maintenance.
1:56
- So, if I were to ask you,
1:59
so all of the consumers and your customers
2:03
are buying online,
2:06
there's no sort of physical store right now
2:08
that they see the bicycle before they buy.
2:11
- We do have a handful of stores in the country,
2:13
but not like-
2:14
- Okay.
2:15
- Yeah, okay.
2:16
- The vast majority of our business is online.
2:20
- Okay.
2:21
- We like having the one-on-one relationship
2:22
with our customer.
2:23
That's really important for us.
2:25
- And where does that, well, actually,
2:27
I'll take that question in maybe a couple minutes here,
2:30
but let me first start with what was kind of like
2:32
an interesting point for me that I wanted to make
2:35
and get your thoughts on,
2:37
but if you go to prioritybicycles.com
2:39
and you go to their contact us page,
2:42
and I have it up next to me right now.
2:44
So, 100% customer satisfaction, 365 days a year
2:47
that you can contact them.
2:49
They have an in-house support team.
2:52
I see a, you can attach a file, include a note.
2:56
They bring up their contact information with a calling,
2:59
WhatsApp, I see you can schedule time with them,
3:02
virtual showroom, the list goes on and on.
3:05
So, I guess what at the point I'm trying to make here
3:06
is that from this page,
3:08
it sounds like customer support is extremely important
3:13
to your business.
3:14
Maybe by questions, like, walk me through that.
3:17
Has it been like this since day one of the business
3:21
or has it evolved?
3:22
- Yeah, it has most certainly been there since day one.
3:26
Nine years ago when we started buying bicycle online
3:30
was still not really common,
3:32
and it's getting more popular,
3:34
but bicycles were one of the last things
3:37
to really go to online.
3:39
And certainly a lot of people are still buying
3:41
a bicycle and store,
3:42
and I grew up working in bike shops,
3:44
and I know how to give customer service
3:47
the way we gave it in the bike shop in the 80s and 90s.
3:51
So, to me, if we were gonna bring our bikes to market
3:56
and bring them, price we wanted to go online
3:59
was really important.
4:00
Yet, how do we give that customer experience
4:04
that you get in a store to a customer?
4:07
Well, the first thing it starts with
4:08
is being available 365 days a year.
4:12
We're on from nine a.m. to 10 p.m.
4:16
365 days a year, we are not yet 24/7,
4:21
but I would actually like this to be.
4:24
So, to me, I feel that we win customers
4:29
by responding to their questions really quickly
4:32
and with really knowledgeable sales team
4:35
that can help support any questions
4:37
that customers can have.
4:39
And then, when a customer gets a bike,
4:41
they often have questions,
4:43
and again, we win the customer by responding quickly
4:48
with the knowledgeable response.
4:51
And so, it's always been there since the beginning
4:54
that we will do customer service that much.
4:57
Nine years ago, I was doing a lot of nights and weekends,
5:00
unfortunately, not anymore,
5:02
but having really knowledgeable staff
5:05
that can get back to our customers very quickly
5:08
on whatever mode of communication they want
5:12
is very important to us.
5:14
How do you or your team kind of, I would say, like, train?
5:22
Or like, how do they understand how to answer the questions?
5:26
Is there any sort of, again, training that happens beforehand
5:30
before they start taking questions from the customers?
5:33
We've never hired somebody to date
5:36
that hasn't worked in a bike shop
5:38
or have really on the ground bicycle experience.
5:43
So, it is important to us that our support team members
5:46
all really know a whole lot about bikes,
5:49
and for really most of them,
5:51
almost everybody rides a bike every day
5:53
and has bicycles as part of their life
5:55
and has worked with bicycles in some way, shape, or form.
5:59
Not that we won't hire someone that hasn't,
6:03
but they need to have a lot of tribal knowledge on cycling
6:07
and know the ins and outs of riding a bike every day,
6:10
because that's what we expect them to help our customers with.
6:14
Yeah.
6:15
Has the channels shifted at all?
6:18
And let me kind of clarify that.
6:21
Again, you've been around for nine years.
6:24
Have you seen any increases or decreases
6:27
from people contacting you versus phone, rather than chat,
6:31
or, you know, email versus WhatsApp?
6:34
Anything that kind of pays attention?
6:36
WhatsApp is the wildcard that has really grown a lot for us.
6:40
As we receive a lot more communication via WhatsApp
6:44
that I would ever expect.
6:46
You know, and I say that when we started with SMS,
6:50
that was more popular than I thought it would be,
6:53
but then putting on WhatsApp, I thought,
6:55
would be a percentage of our SMS, and it's actually more.
6:59
And I think one of the reasons for that is a lot of times
7:05
customers want us to see something on their bike
7:08
or hear something on their bike.
7:10
And if you think, if you want to take a 20-second video on your phone
7:14
or maybe even a three-minute video on your phone,
7:16
and need to send it to a support person,
7:18
how do you do that?
7:20
And I know for me, I have to take the video,
7:23
transfer it to my phone, upload it, right?
7:26
Right.
7:27
Send them a Dropbox link, whatever it is.
7:29
So people really like WhatsApp because they can send us big videos.
7:35
And so we get a lot of that.
7:38
And people love it.
7:40
And even, you know, often, in a lot of our shortcuts,
7:45
like, "Hey, can you send me a video of that?"
7:47
The best way to do that is via WhatsApp.
7:49
People just get that.
7:51
Interesting.
7:52
And so we get a lot of communication on WhatsApp,
7:54
especially for things technical.
7:57
But we also get a lot of international customers on WhatsApp.
8:02
Americans still like to email a lot.
8:04
A lot of our international customers like to use WhatsApp.
8:08
It's just a more fluid form of communication.
8:11
So you ship internationally, then?
8:13
We do.
8:14
Yeah.
8:15
Not a ton, but certainly products every day.
8:19
And has it always been like that since you started the company
8:23
or has that grown that international kind of thing?
8:26
Yeah, it's almost been there.
8:27
Our bikes are unique in what we offer.
8:30
And so you can't necessarily find a similar model anywhere else.
8:36
And so when we started, we really wanted to focus on the North American market
8:41
because we thought that was where we were going to grow.
8:44
And certainly we do.
8:45
But customers kept asking to buy our bikes internationally.
8:48
And so eventually we realized that if we didn't ship them,
8:51
at least we couldn't answer the question.
8:53
So it is expensive to ship our bikes internationally.
8:57
We sell bikes every day.
8:59
Okay.
9:00
So is there anything else I'm missing in kind of the formula of like customer
9:04
experience
9:05
for priority bicycles?
9:06
So what I think the audience and I have heard so far is that you respond rather
9:10
quickly.
9:11
It's really important to get to them.
9:12
It seems like it's across all different channels, whatever the consumer prefers
9:16
And it's also being really knowledgeable to answer pretty much any question,
9:20
that kind of comes to your team.
9:22
If I'm missing anything else, or are those to the three variables that you kind
9:25
of focus on?
9:26
I would also add on top of that that we make a customer happy no matter what it
9:30
takes.
9:31
Okay.
9:32
So we believe being an online store only as good as our last review.
9:37
And our last review is happening today, right?
9:41
So we do go above and beyond to make our customer super happy.
9:47
That's responding quickly with a knowledgeable answer.
9:51
And then ultimately making them happy even if sometimes that happens.
9:57
And is that like, is that review?
10:01
I guess let me kind of step back.
10:03
I feel like there's some CEOs that are like, we got to get more reviews.
10:07
And they kind of like craft their business.
10:10
And like they're, it's like, okay, here's how we're going to get more reviews.
10:14
And it sounds like a few, it's just like, it's kind of the after effect of
10:18
everything that
10:19
you do.
10:20
It's not like we have to get more reviews, but that's just kind of what comes
10:23
of it.
10:24
It's a byproduct of basically the customer experience.
10:26
Yeah, we don't ever ask for reviews when you buy a product in x weeks, you get
10:31
an email
10:31
it says, we don't really see if you send a review, but that's it.
10:34
We never ask for anything beyond that.
10:36
That said, if you give a customer a bad x most customers, they don't sit at
10:42
their phone
10:43
and they're saying, I love this product.
10:45
No, it happens is they dislike your product for some reason or another.
10:51
And then the first place they go is to be the loud person on it.
10:54
Right.
10:55
So we just want to prevent that.
10:58
So we're not asking for reviews.
11:01
We're just trying to make sure that if somebody has inclination to write a
11:06
review, it's a good one.
11:07
Yeah, that's great point.
11:10
So let me kind of take the next step in this conversation about data
11:15
specifically that
11:18
the data that you're collecting.
11:20
And again, as CEO, you probably have one perspective on this and that's kind of
11:23
what I want to get into.
11:24
But how important is throughout the customer experience as you're learning
11:29
about the customer to actually
11:32
collect more and more learnings about that customer for future communications.
11:38
It's really important.
11:40
And that's why our support system needs to run across all the different
11:47
channels a customer can talk to us on and bring that information into one place
11:52
We always say we have a 360 degree view of customer.
11:55
So no matter how our customer contacts us, we can quickly see what they've
12:00
bought from us when they bought it.
12:02
And all the communication we have had, if we don't know that particular
12:07
customer, don't know what he or she has and don't know what questions they've
12:11
asked in the past, we can't respond to it intelligently.
12:15
Right. So having all that information is really important to us and across
12:20
multi-champ.
12:21
And I assume to, again, this is an assumption, maybe I'm wrong here, but, you
12:26
know, the lifespan of a bicycle is several years.
12:31
And so that's something that you have data on that first time that they came to
12:35
you that you purchased.
12:37
But they're probably coming back to you with questions as you talked about
12:41
maintenance.
12:42
So that's all data too that you have the understanding of the customer from the
12:45
first time that they came and purchased the bicycle, correct?
12:49
That's right.
12:50
We have customers emailing in about their nine-year-old bikes all the time.
12:54
And so how, like, can you tell me just other ways that you utilize that data
12:59
outside of like, okay, we know that this problem exists because it came five
13:05
years ago.
13:06
Are there other use cases?
13:07
We do do a good job, especially on new products of tagging different cases with
13:13
different bikes with different either requests or issues or anything we need to
13:19
know about that product.
13:21
We always say that, you know, a lot of our bikes, one of them we've been
13:24
running for nine years, if you look at the photo of the bike that we sell today
13:31
that we had nine years ago, you'd see it looks identical.
13:34
It's not.
13:35
A lot of little things have changed on that bike over the years.
13:39
How do we do that?
13:41
Well, we hear from our customers what they want, what could last longer, what
13:46
could do a better job of being the ultimate low maintenance bike.
13:49
And we make those changes.
13:51
So our products are constantly evolving.
13:53
And the way we do that is we listen to our customer.
13:57
We listen to the feedback they have on how it arrived, you know, from shipping
14:01
is shipping a problem.
14:03
You know, if maybe a boat rusted that shouldn't have rust, we need to tag all
14:08
that information so that next time we're in production of that product, we make
14:12
it better.
14:13
One last question I ask you on this, like I talked to technology companies and
14:18
obviously I work for a technology company.
14:22
And there's this line that gets repeated and repeated over, which is that like
14:27
you got to focus on the retention and the customer because that will create
14:31
super fans, which then is like a cycle and help you create even more customers.
14:35
And I feel as I'm listening to you, you're living in that and you've built a
14:39
business around it.
14:41
My question is, has that always, like, has that been the thought process since
14:46
day one, like we will generate new customers if we just create a great
14:50
experience and really focus on current customers?
14:53
Or is that just kind of been, you know, just something that just happened and
14:57
it wasn't really a focus?
14:59
I think everything you're saying is true.
15:01
It's not how we think.
15:02
We just feel like make every customer happy and the rest will follow.
15:06
So if we make everybody happy, then, you know, unfortunately with the bike,
15:10
there's not a lot of repeat business.
15:13
Unless somebody's got a family of five, they don't need five bikes.
15:16
People buy bikes for themselves and if the bikes do a good job, they'll last a
15:20
long time.
15:21
So yes, maybe in many years down the road, the bike isn't worn out, but they
15:25
decide they want to upgrade or launch something lighter, faster, whatever it is
15:31
They're going to think about us because we give them great experience.
15:34
I do think a lot of what happens is that consumers these days are so trained to
15:39
have a poor experience that if you give them a great experience that they talk
15:45
about it, right?
15:46
They're at the water core at work and they say, "You know, about this bike."
15:50
And it arrives in the scratch and I emailed the customer, right?
15:54
I'm sorry, I emailed the company, I texted them, and they responded right back
15:58
and they were helpful.
15:59
And, you know, I think people are surprised when you give good service.
16:04
And I do think they like to talk about that because good service is so rare.
16:10
But that's not why we do it. We do it because it's the right thing and that we
16:13
believe if we take good care of every customer, they will take good care of us.
16:19
You think it sounds so simple, Dave?
16:22
So let me talk about the subject that most people are here to listen to, which
16:30
is AI.
16:31
Have you started to infuse AI not just across customer experience but in your
16:36
business at all in the last six, twelve months?
16:40
Yeah, so the only place we use AI is, and we were using it, customer came out
16:46
with an add-on, which we can talk about, but we were using AI for all of us.
16:51
And AI for the same reasons that customer embedded it before customer embedded
16:56
it.
16:57
So a lot of our support team was using chat GBT to summarize what customers
17:03
were sending, especially because one of our customers can get really lengthy.
17:08
And then also helping craft our response.
17:15
You do need a lot of technical knowledge on how to respond for a bike problem
17:20
or a bike question sometimes.
17:23
But everybody we hire knows a lot about bikes.
17:29
They don't necessarily know a lot about writing great emails.
17:35
And they'll be the first to say that.
17:37
I think that what our team has liked is how AI can help us to respond in a very
17:45
professional way.
17:48
So with this being accurate statement that almost the use of chat GBT/AI
17:55
started almost from the ground up organically of just your team utilizing it
18:01
without even having a strategy around it.
18:04
It was just there. It was a tool. Hey, I'm going to start utilizing it.
18:07
Absolutely. That's exactly right.
18:10
So yeah, one of them started using it and told everybody else and how she was
18:15
using it and the rest is history. Right. Everyone realized, gosh, that helps
18:19
those emails sound great. You know, how do I do that and how is very easy.
18:24
So we have the first the first moment that I heard that we were using AI based
18:31
responses.
18:32
I was a little scared because it would lose what makes our team special. Yep.
18:39
But I quickly found some examples and just read that it just was helping them
18:44
speed up an intelligent response. It was already in their minds and that they
18:48
already put on paper just helped it sound a little more professional.
18:52
So is that the balance in your mind of like, okay, you want to speed up the
18:57
process here for your team members to make it a lot easier, but not at the
19:02
expense of hurting the brain and having generic responses, right? Like that's
19:08
the balance.
19:09
That's right. So we are not at the stage and nor do I plan on any time soon. No
19:13
, I'll not say forever. Having any type of AI automated responses.
19:17
It's really important that a professional that knows all about the product they
19:24
have your response.
19:26
That's who we are as a company. We don't want people reading responses from a
19:33
bot that wasn't edited by a person first.
19:37
Yeah, that's important to us because of the specialty nature of our product.
19:44
But when someone from our team can start with what they want to say and have AI
19:50
make it sound better, I think that's a good use of that's a good way to save
19:56
time and also have a really professional response to our customer.
19:59
Yeah, so I just want to dig deeper on that note because I want to ask you is
20:04
that like it sounds to me that there is this human element of it, no matter
20:10
what, like you can have the perfect response.
20:13
It could be well educated. You know, you can train the bot to know everything
20:19
about there is on priority bicycles.
20:21
But to you, there's still this variable that it needs to come across as a
20:25
person talking to another person at the end of the day. Do I have that right?
20:29
Yeah, you do. And you know, our support team is in New York City. It's people
20:34
that commute on bikes every day. We want that to remain with our customers.
20:41
And I have not seen, you know, we have tested AI in terms of, hey, I've got
20:47
this noise on my bike. I've got this question about my bike.
20:52
We have tested that a lot.
20:55
And I don't think we would ever say yes right now, but we have not been
20:59
satisfied with the answers. Right. It's not. And it's not. We are as company.
21:03
So I think that keeping humans at the forefront of our responses is really
21:09
important.
21:10
Yeah. I guess one takeaway for me that I hope the audience would see too is
21:13
that like there's, it sounds to me that there are principles that you have and
21:17
maybe as a brand or as a company that you start with.
21:21
And like the, the solutions still need to be centered around who you are as a
21:25
company rather than some of the solutions changing that around and maybe
21:28
changing the priority biases.
21:30
Do I never ask exactly that's exactly right.
21:33
So is there, is there anything else off the top of your mind? I know you got a
21:37
lot going on. But is there anything else that you might be excited about or
21:40
something you want to test out in the future or something that like, oh, maybe
21:44
I can help me with this part of the problem within your entire business?
21:50
We are changing a little bit of some of the parameters we are giving AI. And I
21:57
think that that has been kind of fun for us to see how the results change. And
22:03
I think that as, as we get better who we want, you know, I think we could write
22:09
a perfect job description for a person.
22:11
Now we need to write the perfect response positioning for for AI. And so I
22:16
think that's interesting.
22:19
I will see how over time, you know, we can have some questions responded to it.
22:26
The age old like I can't find my track number.
22:29
Sure, shoot that over. Right.
22:32
How do we, how do we figure out as a company, what can be responded to by AI
22:39
and what cannot. And that's a, that's a difficult question.
22:43
But I'm excited to see where that comes over time. And, you know, getting to
22:48
the point maybe where AI is fully responding, but we read it and edit it before
22:56
we send it.
22:57
Whereas today, and the AI that we've experimented with isn't there yet for our
23:03
particular niche industry. Today, as we write it and AI makes it sound better.
23:08
But, you know, can it get to that next level? I think so.
23:12
Yeah.
23:13
Not this month this year, but maybe this month next year, we'll see.
23:17
Well, it's definitely an interesting question as you know, the pace of
23:20
innovation here, but I really like it. I want just to stop again just to say
23:24
that I think it's really insightful that I think it's really insightful that I
23:26
think it's really exciting. I think it's really insightful that you're starting with your principles of who
23:29
you are as a company, how you interact, and then utilizing some tools like this
23:34
to improve upon that rather than focusing on the tools first, those type of
23:38
solutions that are coming out and seeing how you can integrate it.
23:41
I love that response.
23:43
Maybe just last thing.
23:46
Anything in terms of data being collected, I want to just go back to this
23:50
because I feel like when it comes to your product.
23:54
Now, I know you've said just before, like you have had one bicycle that you've
23:58
been selling since nine years.
24:00
Are you utilizing any of the customer data learnings to build upon like future
24:07
products? Are you doing that at all?
24:10
Or product discovery, new bicycles are just kind of in-house?
24:15
Not utilizing AI for that yet.
24:18
And that would be really interesting. We do all of our new products come from
24:23
customer suggestion.
24:25
We found early on in the company that if we design the bikes that I think is
24:30
great, they don't sell.
24:32
Whereas if we listen to our customers, because our customers, they come to us
24:36
and say, I love this and that.
24:38
And what if you did this, our customers, if you stop and listen to them in our
24:42
business, they tell you exactly where you need to go next.
24:45
And so listening to our customers is where some of our best products come from.
24:50
And so listening heavier on that, and if there's finding a way to have AI read
24:56
all of our customer inbound and help us with that,
25:01
and COA that data would be an awesome thing for us.
25:05
Yeah. Well, you've got something going. So Dave, I really appreciate the time.
25:11
Thank you for talking to us about your story, about priority bicycles, and how
25:16
you envision customer experience in the future and utilizing AI.
25:20
We love customer and love what it does to help our team respond to our
25:27
customers quickly and efficiently and beautifully.
25:31
So it's my honor to be here and thanks for having me.
25:35
Thanks Dave.
25:36
[Music]
26:02
[Music]
26:28
[Music]
26:56
[Music]
27:06
[Music]
27:35
[Music]
28:04
[Music]
28:30
[Music]
28:59
[Music]
29:28
[Music]
29:57
[Music]
30:26
[Music]
30:55
[Music]
31:24
[Music]
31:53
[Music]
32:22
[Music]
32:51
[Music]
33:20
[Music]
33:49
[Music]
34:18
[Music]
34:47
[Music]
35:16
[Music]
35:45
[Music]
36:14
[Music]
36:43
[Music]
37:12
[Music]
37:41
[Music]
38:10
[Music]
38:39
[Music]
39:08
[Music]
39:37
[Music]
40:06
[Music]
40:35
[Music]
41:04
[Music]
41:33
[Music]
42:02
[Music]
42:31
[Music]
43:00
[Music]
43:29
[Music]
43:58
[Music]
44:27
[Music]
44:56
[Music]