Just speaking for myself here. But I specifically bought the Alta because it didn't have a clutch and it didn't have a shifter.
I still consider myself a novice dirt rider, although I've ridden street for 30+ years. And frankly, the simplicity of the whole electric setup is what appealed to me. Not that I'm particularly uncoordinated, but learning to ride on dirt, especially as an old geezer such as myself, is hard enough when transitioning from pavement. And having to worry about shifting, feathering the clutch, stalling the bike on hills in rough terrain, etc., was just too much of a distraction to the learning process. Especially when I was trying to teach my kids to ride at the same time.
I value the simplicity and robustness of the electric powertrain. It lets me concentrate on proper riding form, gripping the bike with my knees, good balance, proper throttle control, vision, traction, etc. With an ICE bike, those items were way down my checklist of things to worry about in any given instant. I was primarily thinking about when to shift, of if I was in the right gear for this corner, or do I have enough momentum to get up this sandy and rock-strewn hill without bogging it, and things like that.
Switching to electric instantly crossed those distracting items off the list, and I could concentrate on riding instead of managing an imprecise internal combustion process and whirling set of gears and springs. I also took one whole hand and foot out of the control-coordination process, which simplified things tremendously. Right hand go, right hand/foot stop. Brain say, "Wheeeee!"
On the Alta, the act of riding was instantly more fun. My confidence in my riding went way up. I tackled trails and obstacles that had made me hesitate on the ICE bike. The whole lack of maintenance and noise thing and the awesome torque were just icing on the electric cake. Now, I'm not saying I don't like the sound of a thumping four-stroke or banging fast shifts down a straight. I still like those things, and I'm perfectly capable of doing those things. But I enjoy the act of riding more than I liked managing an engine.