This is something I'm interested in. Thanks for bringing it up. Some of my thoughts/tips...
Personally I think bikes are hard to photograph. Unlike a building, car or even a person, there's not much mass or surface area if that makes sense.
In my humble, non-expert opinion I believe the best way to photograph a bike (to strictly show the bike) is straight from the side against a solid backdrop. Try and keep everything aligned so it doesn't distort the bike. I generally don't use the kickstand and place the handlebar against the backdrop to hold the bike up. You may have to photograph from slight front and rear angles to show some features. I do like to mix up the backdrops I use. Use the camera's automatic setting. I think that's the simplest thing to do to get a good picture. If you have a cluttered background it's hard to distinguish what's part of of the bike and what's not. Camera's, settings. depth of field etc.. is a whole other story. Photographing bikes amongst other bikes is really tough.
One of my favorite things to do is ride a newly finished bike around looking for good backdrops to photograph it.
The way I generally do it.