flynnibus
Premium Member
It's not really as narrow as people would make it. The target was people who spend these crazy amounts of money to turn their entertainment options over to Disney. Those types buying Deluxe stays, buying DDP, doing premium Disney experiences, etc. The cruise ships and WDW are packed with people like this.The niche were people with large amounts of money that would normally take a cruise in the concierge area, who really like Star Wars, enjoyed the new movies, are into being part of the experience type shows, like a ton of structure on their trips (i.e. do this at this time, then to this, etc.), and are willing not to spend a few days on their vacation at the parks/lounging. It's an incredibly small niche, which was a large issue.
The trick here was to get people to buy into a new type of entertainment offer.. one that spanned multiple days.. and be unique and enticing enough to get people to buy-in.
The problem was in their creative choices they made some alienating choices and cheaped out in some key areas. So call it choices in creative and execution ... and no so much about 'targeting a non-existent or too small of a market'.
There will always be a loud majority screaming 'this is too expensive...' 'who would pay that much?' while there is a smaller audience that DOES do it and is happy doing so. This is reality for any high-end product. Be it Rolex, Ferarri, or whatever... the gen pop will mock the prices while their actual customers continue to pay.
If they had a more successful story arc, and some better execution in the facility, I think it would have gone a lot further. I do think they over reached on the price point, but a lot of that is trying to set an image of value... while your actual price points can vary. Given the bigger happenings around DIS... that really never got to happen.