Why It’s Hard to Find PureFit Nutrition Bars at Your Local Bike Store
One of the questions I frequently receive from customers — especially road and mountain biking enthusiasts — is why is it so difficult to find PureFit Nutrition Bars at their local bike store. Despite having an excellent track record among the nation’s top 100 bike shops, the majority of bike stores across the U.S. continue to overlook us, and here’s why:
- It’s the economy, stupid: Bike stores feel the impact of the current ‘down’ economy just like retail businesses in every other sector of society. Just yesterday, for example, we learned retail sales fell for a second straight month in April, which is a disappointing performance that raises serious doubts about whether consumers are regaining their desire to shop, let alone shop for high-end bicycles sold by independent retailers. My educated guess… most bike shop owners are not presently focusing on adding new nutritional items, even if they take up minimal shelf space and are excellent for cyclists.
It’s a $2.00 item: Lets face it; bike storeowners and managers like to sell bikes. Reliable and performance-driven bikes cost between $500.00 to $5,000.00 and even more. Bike stores have a tough enough sales job as it is, let alone the wherewithal or desire to educate consumers on the virtues of a $2.00 nutrition bar (which, I might add, won’t melt in its packaging, making it ideal for both road and mountain bikers).- It’s all about the cost: That’s right; consumers are buying their nutritional items — like most perishable goods — at the most inexpensive places they can find. This trend has not gone unnoticed among bike storeowners and the employees they hold accountable for buying in and displaying products like PureFit Nutrition Bars. Nowadays, enthusiasts — regardless of what kinds they are (bike, running, kayaking, hiking, etc.) are turning to discount vitamin stores, online retailers, and membership club stores like Costco for the best deals in town. Long gone are the days when bike shops could count on the majority of their customers buying everything for a Saturday morning ride from them. In these economic times, which I believe are far from over by the way, consumers are not only cutting back, but they tend to buy only what they need and at the cheapest prices they can find.
- It’s all about the shelf space, too: Traditionally, bike stores have not offered a lot of floor or shelf space for nutrition items like nutrition bars. Therefore, the little space available (e.g., racks near the cash register or the counter space upon which you rest your hands during checkout) is highly sought after and usually goes to ‘popular’ brands. Despite the fact that leading trade magazines like Bicycle Retailer recommend bike stores dedicate larger amounts of space to nutritional items such as PureFit Nutrition Bars, not enough do. Ultimately, the bike industry as a whole is giving those sales away to other stores.
Despite our current economic climate and the way some bike shops approach retailing, consumer preference and demand can bring with it an entirely new approach. If you really want to be able to buy PureFit Nutrition Bars from your local bike store, be sure to tell the store’s owner or manager about your preference. Remember, it’s all about what you want!

Welcome to the PureFit Blog! I'm Robb Dorf, founder and CEO of PureFit, Inc., an Irvine, California-based company I started in the summer of 2000 dedicated to making the highest quality, all-natural, gluten-free, 40/30/30 nutrition bars on the planet. 


Never mind bike shops. Why is it impossible to find the bars in *any* major grocery store? The only place I can find them at is my health club where they are priced at an exhorbitant $3.50 a bar!
I wanted to follow-up on this post because of a call we just received. Hi-Tech Bicycles San Diego, one of the countries premier high-end shops, just called to place an order. Randy is truly a nice guy, and said he can’t keep our product in stock. That got me thinking. PureFit is sold at some really awesome shops. I didn’t query all of the retailers in our database, but here’s a few that deserve to be mentioned:
Hi-Tech San Diego
Edge Cycle Sports Laguna Woods
B&L Bike and Sports Solana Beach
Precision Bikes Lafayette, LA
Gear West Bike Store, Long Lake, MN
Atlantic Cyclery
Athena Cycles Studio City
Bear Valley Bikes
Drexel Hill Cyclery
Elite Bicycles Citrus Heights
Irvine Bicycles
Paragon Cycling
Performance Cyclery Saugus
Pro Cycling Colorado Springs
Pro Peloton Cyclery Boulder
Red Hawk Bicycles Temecula
Revo Cycles Dana Point
Road & Track Sports
Rollin’ Thunder Cycle & Ski
Sabino Cycles
Utah Mountain Sports
Thanks again to all of the bike shops who carry and support us. I know this list leaves many of you off, especially some “Top 100 Stores,” but you all rock and we truly appreciate the support.
Robb