Mountain
Biking: A good living or just a good life?
During more than a decade as
a professional mountain bike racer, BikeSkills’
instructor Joe Lawwill stood at the top of many podiums,
including one that earned him the title of Masters Downhill
World Champion in 2002. Along the way, he learned a great
deal about the professional sports in general, as well
as the business and the lifestyle aspects of mountain
biking in particular. In the interview below, Joe takes
a break from teaching the art and science of mountain
biking and shares his thoughts, observations, and opinions
about being a pro.
From Cross Training to Career
Bikeskills: How did you get started in biking? When did you become
passionate about it?
Joe: Being the
son of a successful professional motorcycle racer I
was exposed to two wheels from the very begriming. However
as a little kid I never liked all the noise motorcycles
which made bicycles much more appealing to me. Plus
Bmx was a pretty big deal where I lived. the local bike
shop "The Cove Bike Shop" was a hot bed of
hot BMX bikes. I had many friends to ride with and even
had a local track riding distance from my house. They
held races there during the summer for a number of years.
Although I realize now I lacked many skills at the time
I was one of the fastest kids my age on a BMX bike.
I rode my bike to school as soon as my mom would let
me, and I would stop by the track on my way home pretty
much every day and ride for hours with my friends. Eventually
as I got bigger and the local bmx track got a paved
bicycle path down the middle of it I stopped riding
altogether. Plus my dad came home with a motorcycle
one day that seemed a lot more fun than pedaling my
bike everywhere. I eventually got involved in motorcycle
racing and throughout high school I was racing motocross
almost every weekend.
Due to the dwindling number of riding areas here in
Marin, the driving required to practice and race took
its tool on me. In an attempt to cut down on driving
time and still get related training in I took up mountain
biking. It didn't’t hurt at the time that my dad
was getting involved with bicycle pioneer Gary Fisher
to make one of the first full suspension mountain bikes
ever. My dad has a long history of designing motorcycle
frames and parts as well as building the first ever
mass produced mountain bike the “Pro Cruiser”
back in 1977. With my dad working with Gary that meant
there were many odd looking full suspension bikes in
our garage. These bikes with full suspension really
got me interested in mountain biking, but the real turning
point in terms of my committing to mountain biking was
meeting a local 1st year pro Downhiller who later went
on to win the World Championships in downhill. He took
me for a ride, and when I saw what he could do on a
mountain bike I was awestruck.
Bikeskills: Did you have plans or ideas for another career other
than in the biking industry?
Joe: During
high school all I wanted to do was be a professional
motocross racer. Ending up in the bicycle industry sort
of just happened.
I’ve
always tried to remain flexible and open. Things change
and you need to be able to adapt when they do.
Bikeskills: How did your own personal career as
a professional biker and teacher evolve?
Joe: I was on the path of becoming a pro motocrosser and
really had no intentions to become a professional mountain
biker. I was only riding mountain bikes because I thought
it was good cross training and I had access to some
really cool bikes. Oh, and it was a lot of fun!
Becoming
a pro mountain biker came about because of a local race
at Hollister Hills I went to with that local pro that
showed me what was possible on a bike. I signed up as
expert. Everyone rode the same course. After it was
all said and done it turned out I had the fastest time
of the day. That meant I beat all the pros including
the local pro! But winning that race wasn't the turning
point. It was the phone call I got the next day from
Gary Fisher. He basically asked me if I would like to
go on the moutainbike circuit and represent Gary Fisher
bicycles. He offered me $6,000 as a salary and $8,000
to cover expenses. At the time I was working full time
just so I could afford to drive to the motocross races.
I figured what the heck and said ok to his offer. If
the mountain bike thing didn't pan out I would just
go back to motocross. I was still pretty young and felt
giving up a summer would be ok.
Once on
the circuit I totally fell in love with the lifestyle.
I did better and better every race and before I knew
it I was a full time pro mountain biker. Each year I
made more and more money until around 1999 when I took
my first pay cut. Even though my results were better
than ever, mountain bike companies were dramatically
reducing their racing budgets: I went from making roughly
$50,000 in 1998 to less than half the next year. Still,
I was totally committed to racing mountain bikes. I
stuck it out hoping things would change. They didn’t.
In fact they got worse. For the next three years I was
earning roughly $10,000 per year as a world-class professional.
I wasn’t making a real living anymore, and it
certainly wasn’t a living that was consistent
with how hard we trained, the risks we were taking,
or the brutal travel schedules we were forced to deal
with. I realized I would have to do other things.
About the
time I was thinking of what to do next, my friend, Rob
Howard, came to me with a proposal to teach his buddies
how to ride better. At first I wasn’t really interested
but once I got out there it was a lot of fun watching
these guys progress so quickly, plus the money was good.
So ever since then I have been putting on clinics that
people really seem to benefit from.
Bikeskills:How
much do you have to train to be a downhill/free rider?
Joe: If you want to be a professional you have to dedicate
your life to it. You eat, sleep, and dream mountain
biking. If you don’t you’re both wasting
your time and literally risking your life. Most of my
injuries came from not being prepared either physically
or mentally. When it’s time to race– or
perform at a world-class level– you’re either
capable or not. You have to realize that what prepares
you is physical and mental training, not some “Go
for it” attitude. That kind of attitude –
without dedicated training –will land you in the
hospital.
“Free Riding” on the other hand, is both
overused and all too often a type of riding that does
little to improve racing skills or relationships with
anyone other than the staff at emergency rooms and orthopedic
surgeons. In fact, some of the freeriding events, I
don’t know what to make of them: are those guys
riding mountain bikes, or just happen to be on mountain
bikes when they fling themselves off cliffs? The bottom
line is that some of those events are not only dangerous
to the people competing in them, they’re dangerous
to our sport because they make professional mountain
bikers look stupid and irresponsible, not like the highly
conditioned, trained athletes we are.
It’s a living...
Bikeskills: Can you support yourself as a professional
mountain biker? Could you support a family?
Joe: That’s
a tough question to answer. But for the most part, the
answer is no. But let me qualify that answer.
First off, you have to think in terms of “most
professionals” engaged in a given area. For example,
we know that most doctors can support themselves and
a family, as can most engineers and attorneys. That
is not the case with “most” professional
mountain bikers. There, the term “professional”
refers to the level of skills and the theory that you
get paid to ride. The truth is that probably less than
10% of all professional mountain bikers can support
themselves without “other” income and my
guess is that only 1% or 2% of the pros could support
a family with their racing derived incomes. Add that
to the fact that many professional mountain bikers start
racing when they stop going to school and have short
careers, and you can see the long-term financial stability
of a professional mountain biker is not good.
I’ll tell you what will support a family, and
that’s what you learn – not earn –
from becoming a professional mountain biker. Things
like dedication, discipline, delayed gratification,
giving something you’re all — not for money
or even recognition, but simply being the best you’re
able to be. Those ways of thinking and acting will help
anyone achieve whatever they set their sights on.
What are other types of jobs/careers for a person who
wants to be involved in mountain biking?
There are some mountain bike industry jobs out there
but these days just having a successful racing career
does not mean you have the skills to get a good paying
job at a bike company. Keep in mind that successful
mountain biking companies are first and foremost successful
businesses. With that in mind, any professional with
a solid education and real skills can find jobs in the
field. Not many, and in some cases the equivalent job
in mountain biking might pay a little less than the
one down the street at a high tech company, but if you
love bikes, then a bit less money might be a reasonable
trade-off. In terms of positions that offer the best
pay and the most flexibility in case you want to –
or need to – find a job in another industry, engineering
(particularly mechanical engineering), accounting, and
law are your best bets. Another area that appears to
be more important – and better paying –
within the bicycle industry is international manufacturing,
procurement, and contract negotiations. That’s
an area for people with MBAs and second language skills.
This doesn’t mean that you still don’t find
former racers, mechanics, etc. at many bike companies,
just that they don’t have the mobility and chances
for advancement that they once had: again, even the
coolest mountain biking company has to be a well run,
expertly staffed business.
Which type of biking is more profitable? Is it easier
to go pro/sponsored or work in another aspect of the
biking industry?
If you mean which type of mountain biking, the answer
is that none of the areas are “profitable”
as you put it. But profitable is probably not the word
you’re looking for. Profit is from the perspective
of the business owner, in this case, the bicycle company
that employs the racer. In fact, they’re the ones
that have determined that mountain bike racing and the
racers are “profitable” for them hence the
rapidly declining salaries.
In other words, in order to be profitable, if a bike
company spends let’s say $1 million on its racing
efforts, then it needs to earn more than that $1 million
to make a profit on its investment. And that doesn’t
mean $1 million in additional sales, but profits, which
are only a small part of what the typical bike is sold
for, roughly about 20%. What that means is that unless
the company sells some $5 million more bikes, it’s
not making a profit on that particular use of funds.
In the case of mountain biking, over time, the companies
that were paying for mountain bike racing determined
that it wasn’t profitable: they weren’t
selling more bicycles. The issue of why mountain bike
racing isn’t profitable or if it even could be
is complex but it comes down to some basic economics:
only 1% of all mountain bikers either race or plan to,
there are no stadiums where people pay to watch mountain
bike racing, there are no television revenues from mountain
biking, and there’s very little “logo”
wear sold as is the case with other professional sports
like baseball, basketball, or even NASCAR racing.
But if you’re really asking about “earnings
potential” from a racer’s perspective, there
are two things to consider: the total amount of money
available and the number of professional riders competing
for it. It would be easy to point out that the top European
road team riders make a lot of money – some in
the millions of dollars per year – but you also
have to consider that there are far more professional
road riders all looking for something – that coveted
big time pro contract – that’s about as
likely as winning the lottery. So by and large, the
odds are stacked against you if you’re trying
to make a living riding a bike; unless of course its
being a bike messenger and then you’ve got other
problems to deal with!
As far as other industries “related” to
biking, you’re pretty much talking about any industry.
For example, Dave Grimes is the owner of ODI, a SoCal
based firm that makes very cool mountain bike products
like grips that won’t come loose no matter what.
Mr. Grimes and his company also make parts and products
for industries that range from aerospace to the medical
world.
In the end, Grimes and company are a group of experts
in the area of injection molding. The same is true for
companies like Easton that make everything from camping
poles to baseball bats to the tube sets that most high-end
bikes are made from. The people at these companies get
to be “involved” with mountain bikes and
the culture – all the good stuff - while having
what is called “diversification” to ensure
their businesses do well no matter what happens to the
mountain biking or cycling markets.
How hard is it to start up a new biking company? What
does it take?
If you’re coming into the market with nothing
more than a handful of ideas and your only real experience
is being able to ride a bike, forget it. You won’t
have a chance. If you have a masters degree in business
and were the valedictorian at a great university, can
ride a bike and have a huge trust fund, I’d give
you about a 50-50 chance of making it a couple of years
and less than one in ten of surviving any longer than
that.
Seriously, the bicycle industry has always been tough,
probably because bikes are so fun and so many people
want to get in to it. From the outside, it looks pretty
easy. Over the years people ranging from burnt out racers
to billionaires like Sam Zell – who bought Schwinn
– have taken their shots at running bike companies.
The thing that most of them have in common is their
love of all things cycling. My guess is that within
three years, 90% of them fail as was the case with real
estate investment genius Mr. Zell and countless sharp
business people like him.
The secret to starting a successful bike or bike-related
company is this: identifying and tapping into demand.
The converse – what to avoid – is thinking
that you will create or drive a market because your
product is so cool, advanced or important because you
think it is. ODI’s grips solve a problem –
slipping grips cause safety and control problems –
and ODI’s products were able to tap in to the
demand of people wanting their grips to stay put. It’s
really that simple.
Living
the life...
Bikeskills: Do you still ride for fun and excitement,
or has it become more of a job these days?
The only time biking felt like a job was when I was
forced to race when I had nagging injuries that should
have been healing. There’s something very wrong
about sponsors and teams pressuring riders to race no
matter what. Then again, there’s something wrong
with the riders doing so. In the end, it’s the
nature of the beast. Professional athletes have a warrior
mentality: they don’t stop fighting, trying, giving
it their all just because they are injured, because
that is not the nature of war and conflict. Somehow,
as a professional athlete you need to reconcile that
as important as doing your best is, if you don’t
take care of yourself, you could end up with injuries
that degenerate and end up resulting in life-long disabilities.
But with the intense “do or die” days more
or less behind me, I’m back to being able to love
riding bikes.
Bikeskills:Is
racing as fun as it sounds, or does it get old and burned
out?
I would
say it depends on the individual. I am very competitive
and love a challenge. So for me, I love the challenge
of racing and thus love racing mountain bikes. Others
find competing stressful and unfulfilling. For them,
not only is racing not fun, but many find themselves
burnt out on the sport they once loved. Ask former professional
baseball players, motorcycle racers, etc. and you’ll
find people in both camps: ones who still go to all
the games, events, and are up on what’s going
on in the sport and others who want to change the subject
as soon as you bring up their former glory days.
The bottom line is racing is a lot of fun if and only
if the life of a professional athlete fits with who
and what you are.
Bikeskills: As a pro rider, what do you do for the
sponsoring companies?
First and foremost I must represent their products in
a professional manner. That means not only do I have
to conduct myself on and off the race track in a way
that projects a positive image, but I have to believe
in the products as well. I’m not sure every rider
feels that way about his or her sponsors, but I do.
It comes down to a partnership between the sponsors
and me. While they may be paying me, I’m out there
earning it, sometimes risking my life in the process.
If both sides – the rider and the sponsor –
take it that seriously, you have the potential for a
great, long term relationship.
Beyond ensuring that I’m always prepared to do
my best out there, I always try to project a positive
image and attitude, and I make myself available to talk
to fans and other riders about the products I use. People
often need information to make an informed decision
about the bikes and components, and who better to ask
than the people who depend on them to make their livings?
I do my best to make sure I know as much as I can about
the bikes I ride, the components on those bikes, even
the protective gear I wear. This allows me to act as
a highly influential source of information for my sponsors’
products.
The other important contribution I make to my sponsors
is product feedback. Being a second generation professional
racer and developer of racing products, I know how important
rider and racer feedback is to creating superior products.
You can have all the engineers and fabricators in the
world, but unless you have someone out there telling
them how what they made really works, superior products
won’t result. It’s no different than what
you see happening with test pilots and the engineers:
the test pilot goes out there and puts a new design
through its flight envelope. But when something goes
wrong, breaks, or doesn’t work quite right, it’s
up to the test pilot – not the engineers or scientists
– to bring both the airplane and that information
back to the base. The best professional racers do virtually
the same thing for their sponsors.
Bikeskills: Do they give you free complete bikes
or only some parts? Do they offer things like health
benefits? Are some companies better to ride for than
others?
Joe: Free is not the right word to
use. Sponsors supply product as compensation for your
services. As far as what they give you, it depends on
how valuable you are to them. Remember, in the end its
business for them, and for you (the racer) too.
As far as what you “get,” once again it
all comes down to basic economics: how many people are
you and your efforts exposed to? How positively are
you perceived? What is the actual effect you have on
those people (do they go out and buy the product you
use and endorse)? Does the company feel that you present
them in a way that reflects what they want as their
image?
These days – right or wrong – bicycle companies
have concluded that because so few people race or watch
races and there’s virtually no televised mountain
bike racing, that the economic reasons to pay mountain
bike racers just aren’t there. It’s sort
of an algebraic equation: you can project the greatest
image possible and be a great spokesperson for a company,
but if no one watches the racers, the activity doesn’t
help sell more bikes. It’s kind of like multiplication
times zero …
Another thing you have to always keep in mind as a professional
racer is where you stand with your sponsors. As brutal
as it sounds, you’re both better off and better
prepared if you realize that you’re sponsors are
always thinking “what have you done for me lately?”
The job of any professional racer is to win races –
lots of them. If you either hit a slump in your performance,
or your career is winding down, you need to either step
it up or get ready to step out and in to whatever comes
next in your career.
What’s the range of annual income pro-riders make?
What about bikers who go into other aspects of the biking
industry, such as manufacturing parts or opening bike
shops?
Professional mountain bike racers make between nothing
and around $60,000 a year. Racers that make over $10,000
probably make up about 5% of the total. By and large,
being a “professional mountain biker” relates
to your level of skill, not income …
As far as what other professions make within the bike
industry, it’s what’s referred to as “supply
and demand.” Most of the jobs, unfortunately,
are low-paying because the skills and education levels
required are very low as well as the fact that many
people want to work for a bike shop, bike manufacturer,
even if for a short time.
On the other hand, when it comes down to highly technical
positions or positions that require advanced education,
licenses, etc. then you’ll find – especially
at the best bike companies – that equivalent jobs
and careers pay roughly equivalent compensation. Earlier
I mentioned careers like mechanical engineering, CPAs
(certified public accountants), etc.
There’s no real way to estimate what bike shop
owners make. My guess is that most people get into the
business because they love bikes. That’s probably
the single worst reason to get in to the bike business
if you don’t have both the skills and mindset
necessary to operate a retail business in a cutthroat
environment. In other words, people like Clay Mankin,
the founder and owner of City Cycle in San Francisco,
do very well because they run great businesses that
just happen to sell bikes. People that have shops that
are dirty, don’t have a good selection of products,
or, worse yet, have rude, poorly trained staff, will
do poorly – no matter how cool they think they
are.
Bikeskills: What are the long-term health problems
associated with being a downhiller or free rider?
Joe: A
great deal depends on your being smart, and luck. As
the son of a professional motorcycle racer I saw many
racers sustain serious injuries. Over the years I saw
how those injuries compounded and eventually limited
what those people could do, including simple things
like walking! I’ve always worked hard to be a
fluid, finesse rider as opposed to someone that tosses
their bike and body in the fray and hopes for the best.
That kind of attitude – in time – will lead
to serious injuries.
Bikeskills: Are all the biker’s friends with
one another or is there a lot of competition between
you that limits your friendship or gets you into arguments?
Joe: By and large, most of the pros are friends. We ride
together and spend time together after and outside of
racing. As mountain bikers we seem to have similar interests,
lifestyles, and enjoy one another’s company. Plus
when you are a pro rider you will see especially as
you get older that most of your friends are not around
during the day when you are. So if you want to hang
around people they most likely need to be doing what
your doing – training/riding/racing. Also, I have
noticed that many of my 8 to 5 friends all want to go
out and party on the weekends which is not very conducive
to being a professional racer. Not only is the bar atmosphere
not that healthy, but you end up staying up late and
not getting the sleep you need. Professional athletes
need more sleep than most people. Also racing starts
early in the morning, so staying up late really does
not work out well.
To a young person who loves downhill riding, what advice
would you give them? Is it something that would be better
pursued just as a hobby, or do you think there’s
enough potential to go for it?
Bikeskills: What area do you think has the most
potential?
It’s not so much that I strongly discourage anyone
to try and make a living at mountain bike racing, rather
that they examine their motives and expectations, as
well as the reality of being able to do so.
Joe: If
you want to become dedicated to a sport and feel that
by competing you’ll learn more about yourself
and enjoy the process, then you’ll be both successful
and likely accomplish your goals and objectives. If,
on the other hand, you think you’re going to impress
lots of people or make a lot of money, you’ll
most likely be both disappointed and put yourself in
a bad position both educationally and financially …
which may be one in the same these days.
But there’s one piece of
advice I can give a young person who loves downhill
mountain biking, cross country mountain biking, surfing,
or any sport or hobby and it’s this: if you develop
your education, skills, and talents in areas where there
are great opportunities, you’ll have more time
and opportunities to ride, run, ski, surf, etc, when
and where you want, on what equipment, and with whom
you want to do it with! |