el_super
Well-Known Member
Josh didn’t create Covid and post Covid surge travel and inflation
LOL "covid surge" has just become the new "it's the heat" for you.
Josh didn’t create Covid and post Covid surge travel and inflation
No. See, I know this is complicated so try to follow me here.LOL "covid surge" has just become the new "it's the heat" for you.
Covid and shutdowns aren’t normal. When things opened back up. Many surged to do large vacations and enjoy life again for the first couple of years. Look it up. Not just Disney.
The heat. Now, believe it or not, the summer months are hot in Florida. Always have been. Nothing new there. 90 vs 95 with the same humidity level doesn’t feel much different.
You continue to prove you have no sense of the place. Past, present or futureLiterally... record breaking profits. This has been the problem with this thread since the beginning. Some want the lower attendance to be a referendum on the subjective quality of the experience, but it isn't. So they have to ignore the objectively good financial results the division has been posting.
In the past, they used discounts and annual passes to smooth out the extremes in attendance shifting, but without those discounts in place, you're going to see a general return back to the cyclical nature of the resort. Instead of going once or twice a year, maybe they extend that out to one trip every three or four years. That's definitely in the math for lowering the attendance overall.
People can really only stay away for so long.
They don't have a strategy to decrease attendance. If they did, they wouldn't be building new lands and rides. Their strategy is to get the maximum amount of profits. And it is not working well at WDW right now, which is why you see the scramble modes going on.I'm not at all denying the COVID surge is a thing. It just seems silly to try to argue that Disney shouldn't have raised prices, and implemented crowd controls, if your basic premise here is that people would have paid any price to go. You're basically validating their attendance strategy while at the same time trying to deride it as the wrong decision.
It's hotter now than it was before. And people have far more options to spend their entertainment time than standing out in the sun. It's going to have a negative impact on theme park attendance for years to come. It also nicely explains why the Disney parks in more temperate climates are not having the same attendance impacts.
It's a real thing... just like the COVID surge.
Their strategy is to get the maximum amount of profits. And it is not working well at WDW right now
Heavy discounts aren’t typically a way to discourage bookings eitherThey don't have a strategy to decrease attendance. If they did, they wouldn't be building new lands and rides. Their strategy is to get the maximum amount of profits. And it is not working well at WDW right now, which is why you see the scramble modes going on.
In a perfect world they would offer an industry leading guest experience and find that sweet spot for price. Keeping crowds reasonable and the price within the tolerance level of what people will pay for an industry leading experience.Heavy discounts aren’t typically a way to discourage bookings either
They never want less attendance
That is an indisputably stupid concept
I wanna have some of whatever you’re having. In what world does fewer people in the park cost less and provide me more value?Having fewer people in the park reduces stress for guests, cast and equipment alike. It costs less and you get more value from it.
And yet, the average wait time in 2019 with all those extra guests was 27.15 minutes, the average wait time in 2022 was 28.31 minutes. So while the parks may be less crowded walking down the street, because of all the other cuts, it's having a negligible impact on your waiting in lines, which guests would care the most about.Maybe, but it's not bad enough to be having a significant impact on the revenue coming in. I'm sure their per cap spending is through the roof right now too, which might be a better place to be positioned for long term growth.
Like I said before, we've seen the parks when they had 20M guests per year visiting MK. We know what it's like when it's crowded beyond reason and there is no good way to do everything you want to do. For Disney though, there just wasn't any room for growth with that model, because you can't just keep cramming more and more people into the same parks.
Pushing the reset button was the only way to evolve the parks back into a growth model.
So Disney managed to chase away guests resulting in less folks in the parks while keeping the wait times the same.And yet, the average wait time in 2019 with all those extra guests was 27.15 minutes, the average wait time in 2022 was 28.31 minutes. So while the parks may be less crowded walking down the street, because of all the other cuts, it's having a negligible impact on your waiting in lines, which guests would care the most about.
I suspect part of that was due to their overly loose and generous DAS system, which is gratefully now being recalibrated.So Disney managed to chase away guests resulting in less folks in the parks while keeping the wait times the same.
Well the facts are; there are less folks in the parks and they “fixed” DAS.I suspect part of that was due to their overly loose and generous DAS system, which is gratefully now being recalibrated.
So do you think Epic will have poor attendance next year in the summer months?I'm not at all denying the COVID surge is a thing. It just seems silly to try to argue that Disney shouldn't have raised prices, and implemented crowd controls, if your basic premise here is that people would have paid any price to go. You're basically validating their attendance strategy while at the same time trying to deride it as the wrong decision.
It's hotter now than it was before. And people have far more options to spend their entertainment time than standing out in the sun. It's going to have a negative impact on theme park attendance for years to come. It also nicely explains why the Disney parks in more temperate climates are not having the same attendance impacts.
It's a real thing... just like the COVID surge.
The problem they have for themselves is that they've boxed themselves in with absolutely ridiculously inflated rack rates. So much so that once they start undercutting themselves with discounts they won't be able to sell anymore regular rooms and like a house of cards, it all collapses.This right here. I owned a hotel less than 3 miles from main gate. We did very well and stayed at least 90% occupancy year round but.... We had several rooms that we called suites. They were in reality 2 rooms we connected. Not many people go for a higher priced "suite" at a 2 star hotel. They just wanted a room close to WDW to sleep and shower. So we sold on a non holiday weekday maybe 4 of the 12 "suites", but we almost always sold out every available regular room. In low times many of those were Disney contractors working on new stuff. You have to know how to play the game. I would encourage my staff to scan the families checking in who had good vibes and upgrade them to the empty suites. This would open another standard room which I would almost always rent out. Empty rooms DO NOT make any money! I filled every room I could every time. When I employed this strategy our occupancy was closer to 97% and our reviews soared across the board. WDW right now has no vision and is so short sighted.
If they stay with the ticket packages, and not offer single day tickets, EPIC will have intentionally controlled attendance.So do you think Epic will have poor attendance next year in the summer months?
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