
Kunal Walia
December 1, 2025
Estimated reading time: 5 minutes
Think about this for a second.
A 17-year-old Siddhartha Lal walks into his family garage and sees a shiny chrome-red Royal Enfield. At that moment, it was just a bike. He had no clue that years later, he’d be the one pulling it out of the grave and bringing it back to life.
By 2000, things were bad. The company, which had been around for over 120 years, was making barely 2,000 bikes a year in a factory meant for 6,000. The bikes felt outdated, technology was behind, and losses were piling up. Most people had already written off the brand.
But Lal didn’t.
The first thing Siddhartha Lal did when he became CEO wasn’t to copy what others were doing. He didn’t chase the flashy, fast bikes filled with plastic. Instead, he asked himself: What makes Royal Enfield special?
He came up with a simple plan, a strong business strategy planning blueprint built on three core beliefs:
He sold off 13 other businesses and decided to focus only on bikes. One brand. One purpose.
Siddhartha Lal didn’t sit in an air-conditioned office telling others what to do. He took the bikes out on the road, up the Himalayas, across rough terrain. He experienced every breakdown, every oil leak, every frustrating moment—just like real riders did.
And that changed everything.
He used what he learned to improve the bikes. That’s when the new engine came—more reliable, less maintenance, and smoother to ride—but it still kept that signature “thump.”
While other bike companies focused on power and speed, Royal Enfield concentrated on the feeling. Their ads didn’t show charts—they showed freedom, road trips, friends, and stories.
The bike wasn’t just for commuting. It became a symbol of who you are.
Enfield understood something powerful: people don’t just want a bike—they want to feel connected.
They created events such as Rider Mania, Himalayan Odyssey, and Motoverse. Riders met, shared experiences, and became a family. Clubs started in cities, weekend rides took off, and YouTube was filled with Enfield travel stories.
Today, over 10 million riders across the world are part of this tribe—and they promote the brand better than any ad agency ever could.
One day, Siddhartha Lal noticed people weren’t just coming to see bikes—they were hanging around even after. That’s when the idea clicked.
Why not turn showrooms into places where riders could relax?
That’s how the “garage studio” concept was born—cool, vintage-inspired stores where you could sip coffee, check out custom tanks, and book a test ride. These weren’t just shops—they were spaces where the “experience over product” lifestyle became real.
Enfield didn’t try to make the fastest or flashiest bikes. They stuck to what felt right—bikes that looked classic, rode well, and felt like a part of you.
Some of the best:
They kept the old-school charm but made sure every ride was smoother, easier, and more reliable.
After India, Enfield went international. They opened stores in London, Madrid, Melbourne, and Bangkok. Western riders who loved the vintage style—but couldn’t afford expensive European brands—loved Enfield.
Exports crossed 100,000 bikes a year, proving that the brand’s “India roots, world wings” dream was working.
You might think a retro brand would avoid tech. Not Enfield.
They’ve figured out how to use digital tools to strengthen human connections, not replace them.
Enfield’s journey wasn’t perfect:
But every problem taught them something new. Listening to customers and staying flexible helped them stay ahead.
No matter what you’re building—bikes, a brand, or even a blog—there are real lessons here:
Enfield is already working on electric bikes, planning routes in Latin America, and continuing to expand. But the promise remains the same:
Freedom. Adventure. Brotherhood.
“We don’t just make motorcycles; we enable stories that last a lifetime.” – Siddhartha Lal
A company that almost died is now a global lifestyle brand. Because it focused on what truly matters—riders, stories, and the soul of the machine. Royal Enfield isn’t a bike. It’s the journey about people & the vibe.
And that unmistakable thump that says: this is not just a bike. This is me.