Sirwalterraleigh
Premium Member
I think it’s more like searching for goalposts on a baseball fieldNah, ol’ Supe moves the goalposts more than Volunteer fans after a Tennessee victory.
I think it’s more like searching for goalposts on a baseball fieldNah, ol’ Supe moves the goalposts more than Volunteer fans after a Tennessee victory.
These Halloween costume memes are great…
“We were never interested in how much money we could make, only in how good a job we could do…” -Walt Disney (1959)
Well that’s really a formality…because wdw people are really just frontline stewards…not much moreWhen Chapek and TWDC execs came recently to WDW for retreat , perhaps broke the news to WDW execs then shortly released to the public? Not surprising if more to come changes will happen to impact guest experience.
…actually he bregrudgingly supported it…and shepherded it. And died a rich man.Roy just shook his head after he heard that.
…actually he bregrudgingly supported it…and shepherded it. And died a rich man.
Then how do you think they did it for most of the 50 years up to this point?
He has straight up admitted that his starting point is that Disney makes the right decision, that the structure of a publicly traded corporation prevents them from making bad business decisions (completely ignoring that they can and do go bust).
Should be interesting which of these new pricing tools go back into the toolbox once a recession hits. I understand keeping the Park Reservations since it must help immensely with staffing.
Yes and no. It’s certainly not a bad value compared to other major entertainment options. But the quality isn’t what it used to be and that needs to be taken into consideration too.I still think the park experience (thru admissions) is underpriced. Which doesn't seem to be all that popular an opinion either.
I mean, you know Chapek is just lying. That doesn’t bother you?I am leaving open the possibility that they are right here, and making the right decisions, which seems counter to the people who want to play the "they can do no right" card and assume every decision made is bad.
If the outlook is near term sure, however, long term (as in years) no.Not at all surprising you don't understand. I am leaving open the possibility that they are right here, and making the right decisions, which seems counter to the people who want to play the "they can do no right" card and assume every decision made is bad. A position that, time and time again, is proven wrong. Proven wrong with every successful quarter.
I know that Disney could be wrong here, and that they might have to reverse course.
But are you able to admit they might be right here? You might have to. There hasn't been any evidence the current plan isn't working.
Which means there is a way to achieve both a rich, high quality customer experience and significant profit without putting the customer’s wallet in a vice!OK that too. But he definitely shook his head and sighed.
I mean, you know Chapek is just lying. That doesn’t bother you?
They are making the right decisions in what way? Certainly not to improve the guest experience.
If the outlook is near term sure, however, long term (as in years) no.
I actually don't really believe that the parks have to rely on merch and food spending for revenue, but that seems to be the predominant opinion here... that things cannot change because they absolutely need to pack the park as full of possible to maximize their revenue.
It’s plausible that he is defending park reservations because he actually believes it’s better for the guest experience?It's far more plausible that he's not lying.
Yeah I agree, depending on how bad attendance is they can always adjust with discountsNothing will go away. If the recession is bad, a few ticket discounts and probably Genie+ included with resort stays.
Sure it is. They can honestly believe that having park reservations under current conditions as opposed to not is best for overall guest experience. That doesn’t mean there saying it’s better or worse for guest experience than something that happened in the past. But that’s the past and based on past market conditions.It’s plausible that he is defending park reservations because he actually believes it’s better for the guest experience?
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