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Disclaimer

This page explains how to use the joreveliq educational materials responsibly. The course is designed for bicycle retail learning and coaching, not as brand documentation or mechanical certification.

Educational training only

joreveliq provides educational content for bicycle sales, product knowledge, and customer consultation in a cycling retail setting. The materials are intended to support staff training, onboarding, and day-to-day coaching. They are not a substitute for your store’s internal procedures, workshop standards, or safety checks.

The course focuses on practical retail communication: how to run discovery, how to translate specifications into understandable outcomes, and how to document a handover so the workshop and the customer are aligned. It also teaches common terminology used across modern bike categories, including geometry language (stack, reach), drivetrain standards (gear range, chainline), braking basics (rotor sizing), and accessory compatibility checkpoints.

Always follow manufacturer instructions, official service documentation, and applicable laws and safety standards when setting up, servicing, or delivering a bicycle.

No affiliation with brands

joreveliq is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by any bicycle brands, manufacturers, or component suppliers. Any product references are used for educational context only—typically to illustrate category differences, standards, or retail communication patterns.

Trademarks and brand names (if mentioned) remain the property of their respective owners. Mentioning a standard or component type does not imply that a specific manufacturer approves the course content.

Not mechanical, safety, or legal advice

Course materials are not professional mechanical advice, safety certification, or legal guidance. Bicycle setup and service tasks can involve risk if performed incorrectly. Always follow the correct torque specifications, assembly instructions, and inspection steps provided by official technical documents.

Retail policies also vary by region. Warranty handling, consumer rights, and return practices should be aligned with your store’s policies and applicable local laws.

Accuracy and changes in standards

Cycling products evolve quickly. Standards can change (axle spacing, braking interfaces, drivetrain compatibility), and manufacturers may introduce revisions that affect what fits or how a component should be explained. We aim to keep the educational content accurate and practical, but we cannot guarantee that every detail remains current across every market and product generation.

The safest approach on the sales floor is to treat the course as a method and vocabulary toolkit, then confirm edge cases using official documentation before you promise compatibility or delivery timelines.

Use in team training

If you are using joreveliq as part of staff onboarding, pair it with your store’s real workflow: how quotes are written, how service slots are booked, and how handover notes are stored. That pairing is what turns theory into a reliable habit.

Managers may adapt scripts and checklists for their local market. Keep the core intent intact: clear discovery, honest tradeoff framing, and a documented handover that reduces misunderstandings between sales and service.

Questions or clarifications

If you want to confirm how a topic is intended to be used—especially around compatibility checks, handover steps, or how to teach a consultation script—reach out and include a brief note about your shop context. We will respond by email.