Founders Buy Back Kona Bicycles

by 51

After a surprise stand shut down at Sea Otter and mass layoff of staff last month, Kona Bicycles has been bought back from Kent Outdoors by founders Dan Gerhard and Jake Heilbron, who have issued this press release to mark what should be a new beginning for the brand.

Dear Friends,

Kona Bicycles has been in the news lately. We’d love to say that it’s because the new Ouroboros is blowing everyone’s minds (because it really is that good), but truthfully, it has been a bumpy couple years. So, it’s time to print a positive headline: Kona is returning home to its roots.

Dan Gerhard and Jake Heilbron have purchased the brand back from Kent Outdoors, and along with a team of dedicated, experienced Kona employees, are reuniting to keep the Long, Sweet Ride rolling. There are a lot of familiar faces here who you know from epic dealer launches, My Kona videos and trail days who are dedicated to the cause. Kona’s employees, dealers, and our dedicated customers have always been our strongest resource, and they keep on jamming to the beat of their own drum. With this return to being rider-owned and operated, we’re doubling down on our unique brand legacy and getting back to some basics. 

Renewing relationships with our nearly 1000-strong North American and European dealer network is our highest priority. Most of us started out in bike shops, and in our eyes, IBDs are our strongest advocates and allies. Healthy retailers are integral to making sure that Kona fans everywhere experience the ride of a lifetime. To best honor our dealer relationships, we are pausing D2C for all bikes. Konaworld.com will show changes to reflect this, and our social and communications channels will be getting reworked as well once we get things rolling. Bear with us, and we will keep you informed as we move through this transition. 

On the bike side, new Kona inventory is headed to our warehouse and distributors, and alongside the freshly released Ouroboros, we’ve got some incredible bikes in the pipeline that we are looking forward to unveiling. We’re beyond grateful for the support that our suppliers have shown us in this endeavor. Vendors like Fairly Bikes, who have been with us since our first bike in 1988, are a testament to the value of longstanding relationships where people take care of people.

In more good news, we are now positioned to price our bikes much more competitively. Private ownership allows us to be more streamlined, more flexible, and quicker on our feet. This, combined with the support of our suppliers, means we can deliver high quality bikes in a distinctly Kona flavor at super attractive prices. We’ll never do a BOGO Sale again, so don’t ask, but we promise to offer good value for good money, always. 

Our Pacific Northwest roots are as strong as ever. Offices in Ferndale, WA and North Vancouver, BC continue to anchor us proudly in place. Tenacious, resilient, straight talking, gritty and sometimes covered in grease, we are committed to keeping the distinctly Kona flavored bike buzz flowing, and helping people find freedom and fun. We are back. We are still here. Let’s ride.

Welcome back to the smallest biggest bike company in the world.

https://singletrackworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/502-club-raffle-2-win-a-niner-jet-9-3star-rdo/

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Hannah Dobson

Managing Editor

I came to Singletrack having decided there must be more to life than meetings. I like all bikes, but especially unusual ones. More than bikes, I like what bikes do. I think that they link people and places; that cycling creates a connection between us and our environment; bikes create communities; deliver freedom; bring joy; and improve fitness. They're environmentally friendly and create friendly environments. I try to write about all these things in the hope that others might discover the joy of bikes too.

More posts from Hannah

Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 51 total)
  • Founders Buy Back Kona Bicycles
  • 13
    kimbers
    Full Member

    whooop!

    5
    honourablegeorge
    Full Member

    That’s a rare good news story. I started mountain biking on a Kona hardtail. would have been sad to see them go.

    nickc
    Full Member

    Positive news, I like that they’re going back to a dealership model. It’ll be interesting to see what happens at Halfords.

    Good luck to them, I hope it does well.

     

    2
    chakaping
    Full Member

    Sounds good.

    Hope not too many jobs are lost.

    Will they bring back the Dawg and the Stinky?

    3
    bigrich
    Full Member

    long low slack explosif please.

    chakaping
    Full Member

    long low slack explosif please.

    Would sell if the price was reasonable.

    Splatter paintjob or not?

    hot_fiat
    Full Member

    Kupanaha!

    2
    radbikebro
    Full Member

    I’d pay silly money for the splatter paintjob – bring back the 90/00s colourways!

    1
    grahamt1980
    Full Member

    @kimbers I knew you would be one of the first posters on this

    1
    dirkpitt74
    Full Member

    At last some good news for a brand!

    @nickc

    It’ll be interesting to see what happens at Halfords.

     

    I must have missed something – what have Halfords got to do with it?

    fix-the-spade
    Free Member

    It’ll be interesting to see what happens at Halfords.

    I thought Halfords had stopped selling kona some time ago?

    Good luck to the new/old owners, they’ve got a hell of a mess to clear up.

    Rubber_Buccaneer
    Full Member

    That is good news, hope they can retrieve the situation and keep my Process in spares for a while longer

    1
    ThePinkster
    Full Member

    This is excellent news. Although I’ve never owned a Kona myself, although have considered a couple, BITD, it’s always good news to hear that long lasting names will survive the grasp of big business

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    I wonder what direction they’ll take it in.

    It’d be cool to see  them do a retro-niche range, bring back bikes like the Humuhumunukunukuapua’a and some classic steel HT’s rather than genetic hydroformed and carbon bikes that could be any brand.

    I really want a humuhumunukunukuapua’a as a commuter 😂

    6
    chakaping
    Full Member

    I really want a humuhumunukunukuapua’a as a commuter

    That’s easy for you to say.

    1
    zerocool
    Full Member

    Could we have an updated Process 111 please?
    and keep the ESD alive.

    oldfart
    Full Member

    What a great positive story to start the week 👍👍👍👍

    chestrockwell
    Full Member

    bring back the 90/00s colourways!

    Across the board! Dull bike colours make me sad.

    Good news Kona btw.

    jamj1974
    Full Member

    So glad!

    6
    oldfart
    Full Member

    IMG_20240520_140422000

    oldfart
    Full Member

    Just so happens I’m wearing this today 👍

    6
    rOcKeTdOg
    Full Member

    Steel unit with sliding dropouts please

    darlobiker
    Full Member

    I hope they can make a success of it. They seem to occupy a difficult place in the market, they aren’t boutique enough to compete with the likes of Yeti but they also don’t have the buying power to compete with the big boys on vfm. They have to offer something unique to get people to buy. I’m not sure there are enough of us old duffers around for a retro theme to make sense.

    nickc
    Full Member

    I thought Halfords had stopped selling kona some time ago?

    Ah right, shows how often I go into a Halfords branch.

    1
    oldfart
    Full Member

    Must be at least 10 years ago?

    1
    wheelsonfire1
    Full Member

    Brilliant, I’m not obsolete!!

    squirrelking
    Free Member

    I hope they can make a success of it. They seem to occupy a difficult place in the market, they aren’t boutique enough to compete with the likes of Yeti but they also don’t have the buying power to compete with the big boys on vfm.

    They’re big enough to do what they like but not be hampered by VC ROI. Plenty of staples with room to say **** it and make a Humu or Bikehotrod.

    Tom83
    Full Member

    Brilliant news!

    1
    alloypenguin
    Full Member

    If they keep the line up small and focused (HT, Trail, Enduro maybe Gravel) and bin the mass market stuff at the bottom of their catalogue,  they could really make a comeback.

    Kramer
    Free Member

    @darlobiker

    They seem to occupy a difficult place in the market

    Too right. Copious history aside there’s not a single bike they make that makes me want to buy it.

    FunkyDunc
    Free Member

    That’s a very brave decision!

    They are going to have to do some clever marketing to get market share

    thepodge
    Free Member

    Looking at the last 5 years or so, I don’t think they’ll be doing much on the mountain biking side, focus seems to be on the gravel and utility market.

    chakaping
    Full Member

    If they keep the line up small and focused (HT, Trail, Enduro maybe Gravel)

    As Podge suggests, I’d expect gravel to be one of their biggest segments.

    Plus hardtails, utility bikes and maybe about three FS bikes?

    As someone else said, bring back the Process 111 (give it 120mm though) – and also a 140mm/150mm all-mountain Process and 160-170mm enduro Process.

    I’m sure their current bikes ride well enough. But they need to work on the aesthetics of the FS frames a bit IMO

    matt_outandabout
    Full Member

    Indeed having original folk involved may improve the somewhat ‘average’ MTB products they seem to be offering of late.

    Their gravel / touring bikes are still the shizzles, with ace paint jobs. 👍

    kimbers
    Full Member

    It’s hard to know what bikes sell well, gravel is popular but is it still a niche within a niche?

    A Humu & a hotrod are cool, but how many would they actually sell?

    Bottom of the range hardtails probably shift more units 😉  than anything else

    Also ebikes are something that the industry is obsessed with, but kona have never been big on, worth the investment?

    Likewise fashion at the moment is high pivot for enduro /DH, that’s a lot of effort to build one from scratch

    They also make quite a few kids bikes, worth it? Also 2 fat bikes

    My take

    Gravel- oroborous

    Bike packing – steel unit

    Commuter – dew

    Hardtail – aluminium lava dome

    Hardtail – carbon kula

    Hardcore ht-honzo

    Xc – hehei / 111

    Trail- 140mm fs

    Enduro – 160mm fs

    Freeride- stinky!

    A regular &  a dl spec of each one, so that’s 20 bikes in the range

    (if the new old owners are reading this my consultancy fee for this is a new stinky)

    chakaping
    Full Member

    gravel is popular but is it still a niche within a niche?

    I believe it’s still dominating drop-bar bike sales. But our resident industry people may be able to confirm/deny.

    Forgot about eebs, they’ll want a couple of those as well obvs.

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    If they keep the line up small and focused (HT, Trail, Enduro maybe Gravel) and bin the mass market stuff at the bottom of their catalogue,  they could really make a comeback.

    I would have thought they’d need the “Halfords” market to keep the lights on.  It’s got to be easier to make money selling tens of thousands of £500-£600 bikes that you design once and then have shipped straight from the factory to chain stores. Than it is to sell a few hundred Enduro bikes that takes months of R&D.

    As someone else said, bring back the Process 111 (give it 120mm though) – and also a 140mm/150mm all-mountain Process and 160-170mm enduro Process.

    I’m sure their current bikes ride well enough. But they need to work on the aesthetics of the FS frames a bit IMO

    I don’t know, I’m sure they can make a good FS bike, but in a crowded market who’d buy it?  Performance bike sales are going to be driven by being the best and can they really compete with Spesh, Trek and other big brands etc on that basis? They were literally having to sell them BOGOF a few months back.

    If they try and be the “best” at something a bit more niche they could have more success. e.g. a lot of people would buy a quality steel road bike that weighted 1lb more than the aluminum version with some luggage/guard mounts. I’m not sure they could make a successful carbon race bike though (they’ve tried before) because very few people would buy a bike 95% as good as a mainstream brand just because it says Kona on the downtube.

    They’re big enough to do what they like but not be hampered by VC ROI. Plenty of staples with room to say **** it and make a Humu or Bikehotrod.

    +1

    Make enough bred and butter bikes to keep the lights on.

    And make enough wierd / nice stuff to keep the “brand” from becoming stale.

    A Humu & a hotrod are cool, but how many would they actually sell?

    To an extent I doubt they need to. It’s like £10k road bikes, they don’t make them to sell huge numbers, they make them so people will walk into their shops and buy the £500 bike and a bit of the premium brand feeling rubs off on it.

    I’ve never seen a Hot Rod in the real world, and only ever seen one Humuhumunukunukuapa’a but they’re still pretty iconic and a bit part of their brand identity it seems.  In the same way “Lance Armstrong rides a Trek” probably still sells more commuter bikes to people who don’t even know he was stripped of his Yellow Jerseys than it ever did Madones.

    hot_fiat
    Full Member

    A 170mm process, if it was light enough, might make me think about moving on from my alpine.

    kimbers
    Full Member

    I suppose I didnt consider whether they need to offer a carbon & aluminium version of their FS bikes, thats probably adding 10 more bikes to the range

    4
    robertajobb
    Full Member

    +1 for a new Explosiv.  Or Cindercone.

    Steel, obvs.

    Threaded BB.

    No internal-routed stems or headsets.

    And none of the other bolloxy propriety stupid non-standard standards the bike industry forces on people.

    Paint job – I’ll leave that to the artists.  But I do like the jungly graphics of the late 90’s, like on my first Cinder Cone.

Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 51 total)

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