This is not magic, it’s just common sense. The known good, proven processes and procedures in use right now at WDW are working. It’s safer in WDW than the average supermarket. I am guessing the progressive folks in CA would be even better at complying with the process and procedures than the average person.lView attachment 502136
Do you have this weeks powerball winning numbers also?
lol, what are you describing as profitable? seriously. wdw is open but from what I'm reading it's not profitable.
As long as we overlook a worldwide pandemic and people unwilling or unable to travel at this point in time, the conspiracy you are alluding to makes sense. However, to throw blinders on and attempt to blame accounting for not having anything to account with then all of that rhetoric adds up to incorrect finger pointing. The problem is we are in the middle of a pandemic and the cost of operation has not declined unless they take some temporary moves to put a Band-Aid on a heavily bleeding wound. When one is dealing with billion dollar budgets the extent of expense is also in the billions. This is not your household budget.I believe the phrase Bob C used was ‘net positive contribution’. I’m sure there’s some creative accounting involved, but that phrase represents the companies attitude towards P&R overall and individual business units within it. Manage costs to achieve, stay closed if that’s not possible.
This is why the water parks remain closed. This is why menu items are limited. This is why layoffs were inevitable. This is why decisions from park hours to entertainment offerings will continue to be made by a spreadsheet.
Point of order... that is not why menu items are limited.I believe the phrase Bob C used was ‘net positive contribution’. I’m sure there’s some creative accounting involved, but that phrase represents the companies attitude towards P&R overall and individual business units within it. Manage costs to achieve, stay closed if that’s not possible.
This is why the water parks remain closed. This is why menu items are limited. This is why layoffs were inevitable. This is why decisions from park hours to entertainment offerings will continue to be made by a spreadsheet.
Manage costs? Have you been to the parks lately? Full price for limited offerings. WDW is following orders.I believe the phrase Bob C used was ‘net positive contribution’. I’m sure there’s some creative accounting involved, but that phrase represents the companies attitude towards P&R overall and individual business units within it. Manage costs to achieve, stay closed if that’s not possible.
This is why the water parks remain closed. This is why menu items are limited. This is why layoffs were inevitable. This is why decisions from park hours to entertainment offerings will continue to be made by a spreadsheet.
@techgeek is right and actually quoted Chapek as to his strategy. Thus, that's the opposite of a conspiracy: the principle is announced and followed.As long as we overlook a worldwide pandemic and people unwilling or unable to travel at this point in time, the conspiracy you are alluding to makes sense. However, to throw blinders on and attempt to blame accounting for not having anything to account with then all of that rhetoric adds up to incorrect finger pointing. The problem is we are in the middle of a pandemic and the cost of operation has not declined unless they take some temporary moves to put a Band-Aid on a heavily bleeding wound. When one is dealing with billion dollar budgets the extent of expense is also in the billions. This is not your household budget.
Point of order... that is not why menu items are limited.
Manage costs? Have you been to the parks lately? Full price for limited offerings.
Charging full price has nothing to do with managing costs. Whether pre-pandemic or during a pandemic, businesses always want to manage their costs/expenses.Manage costs? Have you been to the parks lately? Full price for limited offerings.
JPMorgan analyst Alexia Quadrani raised the firm's price target on Disney to $155 from $135 and keeps an Overweight rating on the shares. The stock has "retreated a bit" from the rebound in early September, creating a more attractive entry point, Quadrani tells investors in a research note. The analyst continues to be encouraged by the progress of recovery in each of Disney's businesses.
Laying off 13% of the workforce that provides crucial operations to your business, not to mention high guest satisfaction and positive public image, is not endurance nor recovery. It's surrender.Don't know why you're a pessimist about this. From a strictly financial point of view, just about everyone expected Disney's previous quarter to be a huge net loss. However, the income from the linear channels offset the losses elsewhere and the company just about broke even for that quarter.
Yes, breaking even is painful for a company that would usually make a profit of over a billion dollars a quarter, but, they didn't go backwards. And they have billions in reserve and in ready credit lines. So, Disney did a lot better than expected, relatively.
Since then, D+ has grown even faster than it had already been growing, movie and TV productions have restarted, parks have reopened (not necessarily profiting, but being less of a drag on the bottom line), and unfortunately for its employees, giant cuts are being made in labor expense.
Investors looking to park money in a probable recession want stocks in companies that can endure the rest of the pandemic and then recover well after the pandemic. And that's what Disney looks like.
Laying off 13% of the workforce that provides crucial operations to your business, not to mention high guest satisfaction and positive public image, is not endurance nor recovery. It's surrender.
A company that surrenders to a virus is setting itself up for long-term decline.
Laying off 13% of the workforce that provides crucial operations to your business, not to mention high guest satisfaction and positive public image, is not endurance nor recovery. It's surrender.
A company that surrenders to a virus is setting itself up for long-term decline.
Boycotts are willing. The past six months have NOT been a boycott. No one set out to organize a boycott against Disney and the entire travel industry. My point was that genuine boycotting today is no more than a cancel culture tweet that leads nowhere. And in the context of my comment (i.e. people boycotting Disney because of some of their employment cuts), people will be angry yet still show up.Everyone has been freaking "boycotting" for that past six months. Not necessarily willingly, but the results are the same. People have to realize that, especially for a place like WDW, that they are short millions of dollars every single day that they were closed or even only partially open. You want the parks to continue, but at the same time you feel that Disney should just continue to pay the help with no return of income. No matter how rich the company is, there is a limit. Fixed costs don't go away, however income did, in huge amounts.
Thank you for a useful post. Putting aside the sad news of real people losing there jobs for a moment, I was wondering the impact on the park experience.To recap/put things into a perspective from things I've heard, the following departments were impacted drastically at WDW today:
- Photopass
- Guest Relations
- DVC reps
- Mid-level management, the Guest Experience Managers (aka front-line's bosses)
- Backstage data operations
Lastly, according to peeps, the Minnie Vans are no more, as in the entire cast who wasn't management was laid off.
Bob I has been on record as saying the company needed to loose a significant headcount prior to Covid. A surrendering Disney was never really an option, but if it were it would look dramatically different then the actions of the company today. Probably involving looking for a buyer, or splitting off and selling whole business units.
This is what I said.... Read the whole thing please.Boycotts are willing. The past six months have NOT been a boycott. No one set out to organize a boycott against Disney and the entire travel industry. My point was that genuine boycotting today is no more than a cancel culture tweet that leads nowhere. And in the context of my comment (i.e. people boycotting Disney because of some of their employment cuts), people will be angry yet still show up.
Everyone has been freaking "boycotting" for that past six months. Not necessarily willingly, but the results are the same.
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