Disney parks have recently been on an unprecedented pricing binge over the last few years. Decisions being made at Universal, suggest that the impact to Disney's bottom line from upcoming Universal offerings will be significant. How do the upcoming Universal moves affect Disney parks? In order to truly understand the weight of possible impacts, I believe we have to first process the possible long-term impacts of the decisions that have been made by Disney over the last few years. In particular, the shift to Operational revenue focus and the lack of appreciation for the cost to value proposition mind-set of the typical Middle and Upper Middle-class guest.
Though the Orlando Disney parks are undeniably crowded, the recent Operating Revenue and Cash streams reported suggest guests are primarily focusing their spending on tickets and hotel stays. This is the reason for the recent price increases we have seen on those specific items at the parks. I don't think anyone would argue against the practical fact that Disney Genie is just a fancy way to charge you for an additional park ticket while disguising it behind a smoke-filled, coffee house crap façade of "saving you time". I also believe few would agree that hotel quality and amenities at Disney resorts are typical and reasonably commensurate to their cost? Food, drinks, souvenirs, events, i.e. all the residuals that have the primary profit overhead points are slowly being excluded by those guests with no additional discretionary money left to spend after paying for access. Residuals are one of the key profit basis for the Amusement industry and I believe the exorbitant pricing that Disney has recently adopted will have a negative impact on these financials over the long haul. The base of support for the parks comes from Middle and Upper-Middle class customers, not the wealthy. For many of the base customer set, the increased charges have pushed beyond the point of being reasonable and will create a negative impact on guest spending that will continue and grow with the current pricing conditions in place.
It's important to recognize that attendance numbers do not in and of themselves necessarily equate to revenue and profit totals. Tickets, parking, hotels... these are typically just the access leaders to significant profit lines (i.e. Residuals) but when you squeeze that financial lemon of all it's juice with operational collections, you leave little to nothing left over for additional guest spending on items from which your biggest profits might be derived. When you continue to limit or remove access for a large volume of your customer base through continually increasing access costs, the residuals cannot or will not follow. This is a long-term, acquired result that stretches out and builds over time. Nothing wakes the average Disney guest up from the dream faster than the realization that after you've paid excessive dollars just to come in, corporate Mickey welcomes you, shaking your right hand while holding out his left for your now empty wallet, assuming you'll find more to give. This is compounded by the insult added to injury feeling you get from the ostentatious and conspicuous act of calling you "Pal" with a knowing twinkle in his eye. Disney's leadership has spent years relying on it's popularity combined with a sizable air of smug arrogance in making decisions about what its guests will tolerate when it comes to pricing. They ride heavily and recklessly on the wave of perceived "magic", additionally using the pandemic as justification while seemingly unaware that it's likely the Trojan horse that has now tipped the balance. "Revenge Travel" can only support you for so long before the euphoria wears off and the reality of what a family is willing to afford comes into question. I say "willing" because in the theme park industry, it's all about the value proposition for the customer. Disney is not selling widgets when it comes to the parks, it's selling experiences. Experiences lead to the sale of residuals, products in the form of tangible things. For the customer, It's not a question of affording the cost but rather the perception of the cost to value ratio and if the customer is then willing to spend their money on the experience and hence the tangibles. Most people are perfectly comfortable with paying more than typically expected for something as long as the perceived value justifies the significant cost. This is especially true with theme parks and is where I believe a negative shift in customer thinking has started to take place that is growing in number and accelerating down the wrong road with no braking in site.
Another aspect to this, that I feel Disney has been grossly oblivious to, is the effect of Social Media on customer value perception and feelings related to the parks. The messaging that I have witnessed among social media circles, albeit anecdotally, speaks to the growing and overarching perception of an ever decreasing value vs money spent proposition. This perception is shared inside and outside the fan community, setting a course that is having a pronounced, negative viral effect. The new reputation that Disney has and is building of "Pay more...get less" can be financially devastating over the long term while not necessarily apparent in the moment. This, I believe, is the reason for Bob Iger's recent comments and concerns with increased pricing at the parks. While the 2022 fourth-quarter financials show a clear increase in revenue, Iger seems to be checking the long tail and seeing the impact of current pricing decisions on customer value proposition and perception. Frankly, I am shocked how quickly it has reared it's ugly head with Chapek's removal, not withstanding the company's issues with Disney + losses which seems to have played a large role in the reasoning behind his ouster.
Within this current environment we come to Universal and it's upcoming Epic Universe, particularly the February 2023 Super Nintendo World opening, which are likely to exacerbate these issues in a considerable way. The same perception that is building with such a negative tact about Disney is mirrored by a mostly positive view when applied to Universal parks. Several significant Disney Social Media and Travel business outlets have gone so far as to openly share their recommendations for staying and playing at Universal in addition to and sometimes in lieu of Disney. This reflects an acknowledgment of the value proposition of one vs the other in a powerful way. For many years, Disney stood with Cinderella Castle on the Orlando theme park mountain unchallenged but is now faced with a serious storming of the walls, not the least of which was started by the recognition of monies decisively spent to summon the world of a well known boy wizard. Universal woke up to what Disney parks had known since their inception: Putting the proper amount of money, resources, creativity and attention to detail into a project returns significant profits without the need to demand unreasonable costs to your guests. Ironically, this lesson was likely learned by Disney from the innovative and highly-profitable approach taken by many an impresario at New York's Coney Island in its heyday. Disney was viewed as the innovator, the leader and now is perceived as the follower if not factually. The recent D23 presentations openly put the Disney think-tank on display. However, when carefully examined, it became quickly apparent that the Emperor has no clothes. Lots of pie-in-the-sky, what-ifs and maybes but nothing concrete. Disney is moving far to slowly in an industry that demands innovation and contemporary production. They are slow to produce while ever increasing costs to their guests and ever decreasing offerings to justify them. The announcement of Super Nintendo World, an entire new land in a Universal park with three major attractions, opening after only four years of construction, is an especially stark example when you observe that it has taken Disney almost five years to open Tron and four with Cosmic Rewind. I acknowledge these are not the only attractions that Disney has recently opened (i.e. Remy's) but in an industry which typically builds coasters within a single season or two, they stand out as examples of an over-extended period especially when you take into account Tron being a clone of an already existing ride.
Many have discussed for years about the possibility of Disney "crossing a financial line" with its guests and I think it's becoming patently clear that they have now stepped over that line. The question is, what are they going to do about it? Quick changes are never easy especially with Disney parks and it's operations. Changing ingrained, negative customer perceptions is a challenge not easily met. We are talking about a large ship with a very small rudder and executing a clearly needed turn will take significant effort and time. Meanwhile, Universal continues to barrel forth unabated in its efforts to draw customers to their parks and ultimately away from Disney. Is Disney imminently in any real trouble from Universals actions? Apparently not. But, I would argue that they have already been negatively impacted and that negative trend will continue and grow without a course correction on their part. It's a battle of attrition when it comes to the theme park guest and where they choose to place their discretionary dollar, and I think Disney is currently losing that battle.