In the whole overall discussion of this being a 'soft' period, I have espoused reasons why it's soft, which implies I agree that it has been 'soft.' I have never denied that this September is soft. However, it's not the ghost town some have made it out to be.
A decade ago, September was a ghost town, and it was a good period for refurbs. The problem is, Disney also made business decisions that created new problems.
They encouraged CMs to make line-level jobs a career, and people did it despite the awful pay. Now soft periods mean budget cuts, which mean cut hours. Disney has to drive business year-round. (But we know they don’t care if everyone has adequate pay, because they still cut hours as if the parks were going out of business.)
Guests expect fireworks year-round instead of only summertime and special events. Disney has to drive business year-round.
Disney relied on Magic Bands to redistribute crowds instead of building new attractions, and they foolishly invested over $2 billion that will never be fully regained because the infrastructure will always need to be updated. The money has to come from somewhere.
Then, Disney created festivals and events (mostly running) to drive year-round attendance, and they created another problem because they couldn’t cut operating hours or schedule multiple rolling refurbs like they did from 1971–about 2009.
Star Wars opens soon enough for people to postpone vacations.
On top of all this, two years ago, Disney began cutting staff during the historically soft periods even though attendance levels were higher, leading to artificially created long queues at attractions and restaurants. This created poor guest satisfaction ratings and word of mouth; and along with overpriced hotel rates, the bad reputation is catching up to them.
Suddenly, soft attendance is a huge problem.