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4 Oct 2023

From the start of October, bans and restrictions on single-use plastic cutlery, polystyrene cups and food containers, single-use balloon sticks and certain types of polystyrene cups and...

2 Oct 2023

A new survey conducted to coincide with Cycle to School Week has revealed that more than a third of children are put off riding a bike because the roads are too busy. 28% said that...

2 Oct 2023

Simon Storey, of The Bicycle Bus has been presented with the Green Award at the BBC Coventry & Warwickshire Make a Difference Awards.

2 Oct 2023

A new report has indicated a total year on year fall of 8% in the UK bicycle market, with both mechanical and electric bikes affected. Sales of the latter were especially impacted and lagging...

20 Sep 2023

ACT members will benefit from a long term discounted commission of just 3%

18 Sep 2023

New statistics showing a 5% fall in cycling from last year should be a “wake-up call for the government” and are due to the Government's "flawed" decision to slash the...

18 Sep 2023

The government’s Active Lives Survey has revealed that, in 2022, Cambridge (50%), Oxford (35%), Isles of Scilly (30%), Hackney (28%), and Southwark (25%) were the five local authorities in...

18 Sep 2023

ACT member Balfe’s Bikes has begun its plan to introduce Cytech apprentices to its stores and upskill existing staff through the Cytech training programme.

15 Sep 2023

The team from Whistler Adventure School (WAS), which recently became the only centre in Canada accredited to offer Cytech technical three, is to deliver a series of free sessions in Scotland,...

6 Sep 2023

Offers designed to help Londoners 'make the green transition' following the expansion of the ultra low emission zone (ULEZ) last month include a range of discounts, offers or trials available...

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£5.7 million spent with smaller & indie bike shops through Covid ‘Fix Your Bike’ lockdown vouchers

Posted on in Business News , Cycles News

A report in Cycling Industry News says that 60% of Fix Your Bike vouchers that were issued during the peak Covid lockdown period were redeemed at smaller bike shops and independent businesses, with 40% handled by major chain retailers.

Bike mechanic

Running between July 2020 and March 2021, the Fix Your Bike scheme followed those created in other nations to help the nation through lockdown in terms of transport and exercise when most of the usual ways to do those became severely restricted to stop the spread of Covid-19.

The average cost of repairs/servicing involving a voucher was £75.88, so scheme participants paid an average of £25.88 on top of the value of a voucher for the work done.

The official report quoted in the piece says that 400,000 Fix Your Bike vouchers were issued Slightly under 189,000 vouchers were redeemed by participating businesses by the final deadline of 31 October 2021. The publication has calculated that this means £9.45 million vouchers were redeemed, with £5.67 million worth of Fix Your Bike vouchers redeemed by smaller independent bike shops and businesses.

The report argues that, bearing in mind the average extra £25.88 paid on top of the vouchers by consumers, the total amount of cash flowing into Britain’s independent bike shops during the period could have been closer to £10.5m. That number is clearly the top end of what was spent in independent bike shops, but it seems safe to assume that – even if some of the vouchers replaced consumer cash that would have been spent in bike shops anyway – the scheme worked well for the independent bike shop-dominated cycle industry.

The report drills down further and finds that the number of repairs and services undertaken is likely to have been somewhat greater than the number of vouchers redeemed – evidence from EST and interviews with retailers and voucher non-users suggests that some cycles were repaired without the repairer receiving payment for a voucher because some businesses were not eligible to reclaim the first batch of vouchers or did not have the correct information to process vouchers. And some businesses undertook work as a ‘loss leader’ even if vouchers were not valid.

While the report notes high levels of satisfaction with the scheme and the findings that it increased cycling (which has been sustained to some degree) and the reduction of car use, it also tackled the lessons to be learnt for any future potential similar schemes.

  • Clearer terms and conditions, so businesses were fully aware of requirements before participating.
  • Prior engagement with the cycle industry (including large retailers) would provide time for businesses to sign up to any scheme and to pre-order stock (though we all know how stretched supplies were at the time) and plan staff resource to cope with increased demand. The report added “It is beneficial for voucher users to be able to choose from a range of different types of cycle repairers (e.g. large retailers, smaller and specialist cycle shops and mobile cycle mechanics).”
  • Higher value vouchers might have been suitable for ‘specialist cycles’ like eBikes.
  • Vouchers could be made available to those buying cycle safety equipment or towards the cost of a replacement cycle.
  • Targeted marketing could help boost participation in under-represented socio-demographic groups, such as those living in more deprived areas.
  • The report found that the Fix Your Bike vouchers boosted and sustained boost cyclist numbers too.

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