I remain to be convinced by current electric technology.
I can see them working very well in a riding school / club scenario where you turn up, pay to ride, grab another bike when the battery light flashes red and then at the end of the day you go home, but they're going to have the resale value of a used plastic spoon, so unless you can afford to toss money around they'll be even less desirable than a used thumper with metal on the sump magnet...
Future power cell tech may present the possibility of replacing the electrolyte to "recharge" - which would negate the need to buy a spare battery if you want to ride for more than 45 mins a day. There's also a remote possibility that manufacturers may agree on a standard battery format - which would increase choice and so reduce cost. It might be worth waiting a while and letting the rich kids pick up the development costs.
And anyway, if electric bikes get popular too soon then the factories won't bother with all those D.I. strokers they've been promising us for years.