An interesting article from Micechat's Kevin Yee today. It addresses how WDW is dealing with the economy (cutting some things back, like Xmas decor, but giving away other things like rooms and food), but raises an interesting high level question about what a "premium experience" is and if discounting erodes that. Do the discount tables in the shops say something about the value of Disney?
In general, I'd prefer Disney to offer a premium product for a premium price. Disney to me ought to be top of the line. I can get my discounted fares and thrills much cheaper, much more close to home. So disney will never win in that market.
Discounts don't bring me to WDW, a childhood-imprinted love for WDW does. Whereas slipping standards are keeping me away.
I also left DRP with money burning in my pocket this summer. I wanted to spend, but couldn't find anything to spend it on. This was new to me. From previous vacations, I remembered always overspending. I always wanted it all. So this time I put myself on a budget. Then ended up not even managing to spend the half of it.
Now something is amiss when your customers - in my case, an outright fan - want to spend more, but can't find a way.
I am afraid I'll end up in the statistics as 'came for the discount, then underspend while there'. Which is not the case. My money was simply spend outside of Disney, or not spend at all.
Which brings me to the following. Slightly related, but not too off-topic for this thread: my entire experience of DRP. Unlike the previous time, this year I slept in the centre of Paris, ate my meals there, divided my time between the city and the park, and spend most my money in the city. Much as I adore DLR's castle park, the hotels, nighttime entertainment and food just don't do it for me. It's not a complete resort the way WDW is.
Might as well be more frank: entertainment outside the gate is rubbish. The second gate too is not an enticement, it is a disaster area. There's no great water park either, or indoor tropical paradise.
That sugarcandy hotel near the entrance is fantastic - if woefully misplaced too near the entrance - but the other hotels are rubbish. To me, they look like bland Euro 1980's social housing projects. Good food is difficult to find, both within and outside the parks. That goes for both junkfood and proper meals. I survived on those hotdogs they sell in a dozen places in the park.
Sad really. Such a nice park, and despite the common perception that the resort suffered financially because of too large investments in the hotels and everything outside of the gate, I think it is precisely in that area that the resort is let down.