EPCOT is scheduled to close at 5pm on Tuesday, October 22 due to the Gartner IT Symposium/Xpo holding a special event.
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Here come the angry guests who did not realize this was happening.Reminder: EPCOT is closing at 5pm tomorrow, October 22, due to the Gartner event.
Pretty good point, considering they have the dynamic pricing and all.Disney closes EPCOT early for a special event making $$$$$$---they don't discount the daily ticket price making $$$$$$. Shame on you Disney
Disney closes EPCOT early for a special event making $$$$$$---they don't discount the daily ticket price making $$$$$$. Shame on you Disney
Disney doesn’t set their prices based on how many hours the park is open, but by how many “things“ you can do in the hours the park is open. A lot of people will opt out of going to Epcot today because it closes at five meaning lines will be shorter And the net number of things you can do if you do attend should remain about the same. If they lower the price because there’s less hours more people will show up looking for a deal, resulting in longer lines and less things being done per person. I will give you that there is no nighttime spectacular, but generally speaking that is the one loss for the average guest.Disney closes EPCOT early for a special event making $$$$$$---they don't discount the daily ticket price making $$$$$$. Shame on you Disney
Disney sets their park prices based upon expected crowd levels, not based on how many “things” you can do in the hours the park is open. The higher the demand level and the higher the crowds, the higher the price point.Disney doesn’t set their prices based on how many hours the park is open, but by how many “things“ you can do in the hours the park is open
This isn’t how supply and demand pricing works at all. Disney sets its pricing to maximize profits, not to hit some “breakeven” point. On days with higher demand Disney knows it can charge more. That’s it, pure and simple. Disney isn’t leaving money on the table.By lowering the price, it’s less profit per ticket, which means they need more people to hit the same breakeven point.
I over simplified my answer, but unless something has drastically changed in the last 15 years from when my brother worked in the parks as an attractions coordinator as he explained to me, Disney tries to optimize the “ride percap”. A magic number that says if the average Guest does X number of attractions in a day they feel they got their money’s worth.Disney sets their park prices based upon expected crowd levels, not based on how many “things” you can do in the hours the park is open. The higher the demand level and the higher the crowds, the higher the price point.
This isn’t how supply and demand pricing works at all. Disney sets its pricing to maximize profits, not to hit some “breakeven” point. On days with higher demand Disney knows it can charge more. That’s it, pure and simple. Disney isn’t leaving money on the table.
The conference happens every year and is probably booked years in advance.I over simplified my answer, but unless something has drastically changed in the last 15 years from when my brother worked in the parks as an attractions coordinator as he explained to me, Disney tries to optimize the “ride percap”. A magic number that says if the average Guest does X number of attractions in a day they feel they got their money’s worth.
There are many levers they can use to get this number to hit where they want it. In the 2000s I remember many times my brother having his hours extended the day of at MK because they were not hitting these numbers.
Now they have more levers they can use to adjust the equation. Need more attractions for the expected Guest? Increase park hours.(a cost to Disney) Need less Guest? Increase the price.(no cost increase, but less revenue … so many less profit)
Another factor to consider is when the conference was booked? Were tickets already available for that day? I wouldn’t be happy if I bought my tickets a year out only for the price to be dropped six months later. This isn’t an airline.
I don't know for sure but I would think its a given that it is.Any idea if Luminous is playing tonight at the event? I wanted to try to encourage somebody I know to attend if they are running it.
Disney sets prices on what they see from data people will pay for them. Nothing else.Disney sets their park prices based upon expected crowd levels, not based on how many “things” you can do in the hours the park is open. The higher the demand level and the higher the crowds, the higher the price point.
This isn’t how supply and demand pricing works at all. Disney sets its pricing to maximize profits, not to hit some “breakeven” point. On days with higher demand Disney knows it can charge more. That’s it, pure and simple. Disney isn’t leaving money on the table.
A glorious 3 hour fireworks show about all things but mostly America.Any special Fireworks for the Event tonight?
Honestly..A glorious 3 hour fireworks show about all things but mostly America.
Correct. And people will pay more for certain days and times of the year, hence why they charge more at times when the parks tend to be more crowded.Disney sets prices on what they see from data people will pay for them. Nothing else.
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