People that choose to spend that kind of money is  the target audience disney is trying to lure in. I choose to spend the  amount of money that I do because I can. If I spend twice as much as you  then yes I deserve some perks that you do not get.
		
		
	 
	
		
	
	
		
		
			When people choose to stay at Contemporary  or Grand Floridian its not to show the World that we are Mr. Moneybags,  we're doing it because we have an expectation FROM DISNEY, no one else,  to give us their most Premium experience available. If there wasn't a  market for this type of resort, they wouldn't exist. One thing to do to  cater to that market is to offer certain perks that warrant the extra  cost of that resort. 
There are already a lot of those perks available to Deluxe guests that  don't impede the moderate, value, or day guests in any way. For example,  when we stay in Club Level we have our own private concierge that has a  little more pull at certain restaurants, like Le Cellier or CRT and  with a little schmoozing on his or her part, and flexibility on ours,  99% a table can be found for us at a relatively last minute. That  doesn't mean that someone with a reservation at Le Cellier is going to  be asked to leave the restaurant to make room for that person but its  just an extra accomodation.
Giving the resort guests the opportunity to obtain fastpasses from the  resort can be another one of those perks. No one is going to ask someone  staying at All Star Movies to make way for the family from the  Polynesian because their fastpass is "more vailid" than theirs. Will  there be less fastpasses available at the machines? Probably. Will  anyone notice that change? Probably not. 
This has been an idea that's been put aside for too long.
		
		
	 
	
		
	
	
		
		
			*standing and applauding*
		
		
	 
	
		
	
	
		
		
			I totally agree with this post.
While I don't like the fact some of the deluxe secrets are being told to  the general public, it totally hits the mark.
		
		
	 
:ROFLOL:
HAH.
What secrets?
What perks?
A deluxe hotel at Disney gives you a very nice bed and a great location,  and I stay at the deluxe level as much as I can (Poly Club Level being  my most frequent hotel), but I've stayed at too many real 4 and 5-star  hotels to consider the Disney Deluxe Resorts worth the $$$ they charge  at a nondiscounted rate.
Concierge can only pull special strings for you if you ask at the right  time during the right month. But the yellow room key is pretty.
Do I love the deluxe resorts? Yes, I stay at them as much as possible  because the theming and separation from the parks are sublime. Do I  think they're worth more money than the values and moderates? Yes, for  the room sizes and locations. Do I think deluxe resorts actually provide  substantial perks for the price normally charged? Hahahahahaha. No. I  stay there because I use discounts.
 BTW, for reference, I've stayed at all the MK monorail resorts  (concierge), all the Epcot deluxe resorts (concierge at Yacht), and AKL.
 
Now here's how it could potentially affect Fastpass.
Disney has currently set up the FP system so that everyone is equal. Using FP as a perk for staying Deluxe works well at Universal, where regular guests  must pay for the privilege, because Uni hardly has any room occupancy  compared to Disney, and only has two theme parks with a few FP  attractions anyway. But Disney's deluxe resorts have many more rooms  than Uni's three hotels.
Under a new system:
For the sake of argument, we'll assume that deluxe guests get credits equal to one FP per applicable attraction per day (based on the average number of FP rides at the Disney parks) included in their room keys. We'll also suppose that the FP system can automatically adjust  the number of paper tickets distributed to the general public, based on  the amount of hotel guest FPs being used that day. 
In our theoretical system, the FPs are linked to the room keys, not just  the room key/tickets combinations, because linking them to the tickets  would isolate the guests who aren't on vacation packages (like APs), but  are staying at Deluxe Resorts and should therefore get the FP  privileges.
Now we'll say moderate resort guests get a limited number of included  FPs per park per day, and value resort guests get even fewer.
All guests can still use the FP machines without affecting their resort  privileges, but those paper FPs are subject to the regular FP rules.
SCENARIO  ONE. Using our assumptions, Disney has loaded the FP  lines at every park because they don't know which days guests will use  their allotment for each park, let alone whether or not guests parkhop.  At this point, FP lines could potentially be longer than the Standby  queues, because every Disney resort guest has a certain number of FPs in  addition to the paper ones that anyone can get. 
Lowering the number of paper FPs distributed sounds like an easy fix,  except that hotel guests who take advantage of both the included FPs and  the paper ones are pulling double FPs without the timed blockout  periods that currently prevent overdistribution. And if Disney simply  gives credits, as opposed to one-FP-per-attraction like Universal  successfully uses in just two parks with limited FP rides anyway, hotel  guests could continually use multiple credits at a popular ride (e.g.  Expedition Everest) and get a paper FP for a less crowded one (e.g.  Dinosaur), making a regular FP almost impossible to get. Again, the FP  lines could become much longer than the Standby ones.
SCENARIO TWO. Now we'll use almost the same assumptions as the  previous scenario, except that hotel guests 
do have to wait in  between each FP credit usage, and the credits are also tied to the FP  machines in the parks, thus preventing hotel guests from racking up FPs  all day. In this scenario, hotel guests simply have a certain number of  FPs and cannot piggyback on the general guest park machines—as long as  the room key and ticket are the same card. That's a pretty big loophole.
APs could exploit this by using the deluxe room key for some  attractions, and their tickets for others, thereby getting around a  blockout period. The key and ticket could be linked for the length of  their hotel stay, but this would be a huge logistical headache for  Disney, who would have to ask APs, CMs, and non-package hotel guests to  scan their tickets to link them to the hotel room key. Given the  infrastructure required to link and track this, I doubt Disney would  spend the time doing this to close the separate room key/ticket  loophole. We'll just assume it remains. The number of separate tickets  to ticket/hotel key packages may be small enough that Disney doesn't  care if the separate holders can double dip.
So at this point, the included FPs are no longer a perk, because the  built-in blockout periods mean resort guests aren't getting more than  they could if they simply walked up to a FP machine and inserted a  ticket, but the hotel guests do enjoy the convenience of not having to  walk all the way to an attraction for a FP. I suppose that's a decent  perk for staying on property, but it isn't particularly special. And  moderate/value hotel guests could close the deluxe gap by simply getting  FPs the old-fashioned way.
:dazzle:
I know these are only two scenarios, but they'd both be massive  headaches for Ops, especially if the general FP machines adjust their  output based on the number of Disney hotel guest credits being used.
I'm not saying that Deluxe Resort guests shouldn't get more benefits (I  think they should!), and I'm not saying that a hotel/FP correlation  wouldn't work in some way; but if Disney bases its model off the  Universal Express Pass system—which works because Uni only has three  hotels and two theme parks, and nobody else can get an Express Pass  without paying for it—the Disney FP system wouldn't work.
Only closing FP machines entirely and making it a paid option would  solve the problem posed by having over a hundred thousand on-property  guests with built-in FP credits.
EDIT:
There is one more scenario, but it's so underhanded, I'd rather not consider it. Disney could limit the TOTAL amount of FPs a guest could get (from hotels or regular machines) based on whether or not that guest is staying at a Disney resort, and then based on the level of the resort. A Grand Flo guest would then be able to enjoy more FPs than a Pop Century one, and both of them would get more FPs than somebody staying at a Comfort Inn down I-4. The problem is, at what point does the FP program become meaningless? Let's say a deluxe guest gets 8 MK FP credits per day, a moderate gets 6, and a value gets 4. An off-property guest gets just 2. Would Disney risk making that many guests angry, especially since a significant percentage of guests do stay off property? I don't know if Disney would risk the bad image.