Sir_Cliff
Well-Known Member
I find these numbers very interesting, but very hard to know what to make of them without more information.
If Disney's reservations were routinely filling up and they were thus turning away guests on a regular basis from the parks through 2021, then it would seem that at least part of this was by choice on Disney's part. The logic could be COVID safety, staffing, creating an artificial sense of scarcity, or all sorts of other things, but the impact would be the same. To throw Disney a bone, I would imagine that in a tight labor market it is harder to keep 4 parks running at full staffing levels than to keep 2 running.
If the cap was set lower than pre-pandemic daily attendance and they still weren't meeting it, then I would think the cap was largely irrelevant in explaining these numbers.
I am further curious to know whether all the recent adjustments to how the parks work that were ostensibly aimed at improving the guest experience in part by making the parks feel less crowded have done the opposite, making the parks feel more crowded with less guests and the experience of visiting overall less pleasant with all the extra hoops that guests have to jump through and upcharges. They should have some metrics on that already, and if that is what is happening I hope they are figuring out how to back peddle at least some of it.
From my part, though, I really feel like I don't have the information to say what is happening here.
If Disney's reservations were routinely filling up and they were thus turning away guests on a regular basis from the parks through 2021, then it would seem that at least part of this was by choice on Disney's part. The logic could be COVID safety, staffing, creating an artificial sense of scarcity, or all sorts of other things, but the impact would be the same. To throw Disney a bone, I would imagine that in a tight labor market it is harder to keep 4 parks running at full staffing levels than to keep 2 running.
If the cap was set lower than pre-pandemic daily attendance and they still weren't meeting it, then I would think the cap was largely irrelevant in explaining these numbers.
I am further curious to know whether all the recent adjustments to how the parks work that were ostensibly aimed at improving the guest experience in part by making the parks feel less crowded have done the opposite, making the parks feel more crowded with less guests and the experience of visiting overall less pleasant with all the extra hoops that guests have to jump through and upcharges. They should have some metrics on that already, and if that is what is happening I hope they are figuring out how to back peddle at least some of it.
From my part, though, I really feel like I don't have the information to say what is happening here.