Harley Davidson has traditionally targeted an audience of middle-aged men, in recent years targeting "older white male boomers" specifically (Hagerty, 2011). The company's demographic is usually wealthy, since the bikes are not primary means of transportation for most riders. The company has now begun targeting other audiences as a means of sustaining sales levels. Although the company sells its bikes in overseas markets, 71.3% of the company's business comes from North America. Most of what Harley sells is motorcycles (75.5%) with parts and accessories making up the bulk of the remaining sales for the company (2010 Harley Davidson Annual Report).
Harley is positioned as a luxury good, and sells primarily in the heavyweight and superheavyweight classes of motorcycles. The company markets its products to its customers as something of an escape from everyday life, a means of freedom from drudgery. The size of the bikes is also part of the positioning -- Harley does not compete in smaller bike categories, but rather markets as a bike that is for fun, as opposed to daily use. Lifestyle marketing is critical to Harley's strategy. Customers identify with attributes such as freedom, and a zeal for life with the Harley brand, and view the brand as quintessentially American (CDF, 2012).
2. Harley Davidson's approach to marketing towards women is not to change its positioning but to "be our thing to more people." Thus, the brand does not want to eschew the image it already has in order to market towards women. Instead, Harley Davidson is specifically targeting women and in the process of doing this is attempting to convey that the traditional attributes associated with Harley's bikes apply to women as well.
With respect to product, Harley still markets heavyweight bikes to women, but as Hagerty (2011) notes, the company focuses on marketing its smaller bikes to women, and is even...
The younger crowd may be more attracted by the dangerousness of the bikes and by the sense of adventure involved. Older groups seek a certain return to youth and show an adherence to the idea of freedom. The motorcycle at one time had the aura of an outlaw lifestyle, as noted, an image that the company has not sought and often seeks to counter. Still, that image remains strong
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