Clever Name
Well-Known Member
It's multigenerational state. I have a light saver to prove it! Dark Bader is more of a comic today than a villain.Star Wars is a "stale" franchise?
What numbers you have to back that up with?
It's multigenerational state. I have a light saver to prove it! Dark Bader is more of a comic today than a villain.Star Wars is a "stale" franchise?
What numbers you have to back that up with?
I know this is a common theory online, and I don't doubt TDO believed it at the time, but again, I think the roots of today's issues--which are exacerbated by WWoHP but would've existed anyway--was the belief you could shuffle crowds with FastPass rather than build new attractions. The Boy Who Lived is a good straw man, but WDW would be in trouble even if Universal went bankrupt 5 years ago. They overbuilt hotels, underbuilt attractions.
Uni isn't the only competition and Disney doesn't need to keep people away from uni to gain from this type of planning. In fact it's not even just about on property or not.
Uni isn't the only competition and Disney doesn't need to keep people away from uni to gain from this type of planning. In fact it's not even just about on property or not.
That's our plan, sleep in a DVC, get a car and go places. Car rental companies should get wise, and offer discounts to DVC members. The grocers got wise, and deliver groceries to a lot of we members who can't get ADR's at anyplace anymore at WDW. We cook in our DVC kitchens.The business model of the Walt Disney World Resort solely relies on keeping people on property. It does not have any flexibility for people staying on WDW property but not visiting WDW attractions. The thought of DVC guests utilizing DVC but going off-property has Disney scrambling. Unfortunately the Disney solution is to have guests pre-book and pre-plan everything. People want to pre-plan from their DVC but it is for attractions down I-4.
Disney never anticipated DVC guests leaving property to go to other attractions.
Perhaps if Disney treated DVC members like the best customers they are instead of taking them for granted they would see a bit more of their cashThat's our plan, sleep in a DVC, get a car and go places. Car rental companies should get wise, and offer discounts to DVC members. The grocers got wise, and deliver groceries to a lot of we members who can't get ADR's at anyplace anymore at WDW. We cook in our DVC kitchens.
Almost as exciting as FastPass+ for offsite guests at DAK.
"Gee, I can stand in line for a FastPass+ kiosk just so I can get a Fast Pass for It's Tough to Be a Bug or I can save my money and head to Universal for the most exciting new addition to an Orlando theme park since, well, since the opening of Wizzarding World of Harry Potter in 2010."
"Gee, what should do?"
Which one do you think will boost revenue and profits more?
Who are these people running Disney? Do they have a clue?
Oh right. They're the same executives that OK'ed John Carter.
MyMagic+ was the attempt to do theme parks completely differently. A more personalized experience custom tailored to one's preferences.
I don't disagree, but Potter is not a straw man and the trouble Disney would face without it is nothing like what it is facing now.
Yes, they have overbuilt hotels and underbuilt attractions at WDW. But Potter creates competition for vacation time (and dollars) that Disney has never had before in O-Town. While there have always been other parks and places or Orlando hoping to siphon off a little Disney time, there has never before existed a competitor with this combination of quality, name recognition and fan base.
I guess in many ways this is Disney's perfect storm.
Star Wars is a "stale" franchise?
What numbers you have to back that up with?
Maybe a comic keeps coming up because you a spelling him name wrong?Dark Bader is more of a comic today than a villain.
Gosh, I feel like a pioneer. Here it is 30 years after my first visit and people are starting to do exactly what I always have done since day one. My first visit included side trips to Kennedy Space Center and Silver Springs that was in 1983. My second included trips to Sea World and Cypress Gardens and Tampa. And so on, year after year including one year an overnight to Key West. Primary location was WDW, but, I loved exploring Central Florida and always, always had other things on my agenda. Even when I stayed on site, at least one, maybe two days were spent elsewhere. Don't get me wrong, I love WDW, but, my interests aren't just WDW. I have gone to Uni many times, even in the dark years when everyone thought it was an awful place. I enjoyed it. Didn't go as often, but, it was always on my list for consideration. Now...it's more of a priority and my anticipation is higher when going there then to WDW. Possibly because WDW, to me, is a been there, done that, but, it no longer also includes must do again.I don't disagree, but Potter is not a straw man and the trouble Disney would face without it is nothing like what it is facing now.
Yes, they have overbuilt hotels and underbuilt attractions at WDW. But Potter creates competition for vacation time (and dollars) that Disney has never had before in O-Town. While there have always been other parks and places or Orlando hoping to siphon off a little Disney time, there has never before existed a competitor with this combination of quality, name recognition and fan base.
I guess in many ways this is Disney's perfect storm.
Sure they do. Uni has taken people who generally come to do Disney and only Disney and stolen a day of that trip. Now they're aiming to get a second and even third day. And they will get it. Those days will in many cases come at the expense of Disney.
People have a finite amount of vacation time. Uni is not the only competition but it's the main competition - and, worse for Disney, it's a gateway drug. Once lured to Uni, people who had always done Disney and only Disney are now starting to rent cars and do all kinds of other stuff, too.
Especially those DVCers that Disney once assumed would be its most loyal parkgoers.
The business model of the Walt Disney World Resort solely relies on keeping people on property. It does not have any flexibility for people staying on WDW property but not visiting WDW attractions.
Sure they do. Uni has taken people who generally come to do Disney and only Disney and stolen a day of that trip. Now they're aiming to get a second and even third day. And they will get it. Those days will in many cases come at the expense of Disney.
They are also exposed in the planning process to a lot of products that they don't know exist and a lot of things that, when they see it, they say[...]
In response to both of you... for this type of 'planning leads to more lock-in' - it does not mean you need 100% lock-in for the model to work and improve things. I point you back to the quote again
Like I said, this isn't just about people leaving property - but gives Disney a way of marketing their offerings. Play it real simple for illustration purposes... User is lured to site with "I heard you can make an appointment with Mickey instead of waiting in line!!"... they get there.. and now see some offering they never knew existed before.. lets say.. they learn about the Luau and now are lured into making a reservation for that. In doing so, Disney has marketed a property to the targeted audience and in doing so upsold and locked in the customer for more time.
The idea of having all the customers doing this pre-planning gives Disney a powerful funnel all the potential customers go through.. and hence becomes an extremely powerful advertising and marketing tool where they can promote offerings guests may not have been exposed to, or influence what people may chose. It's a tactic used time and time again through so many sales channels... and by having this funnel the customers go through, it's "prime time" when it comes to exposure/eyeballs. That's part of the value - that can be converted into real dollars.
And my point about UNI is... Disney doesn't have to win 100% of the customer's time to be successful. Of course they'd like to keep people on property all the time... But ANY time that Disney locks in through pre-planning is a win - they don't have to lock in 100% of the time for there to be a benefit to the methodology. If a guest was thinking about maybe spending the last 3 days of their trip 'adhoc' and deciding where to go.. and Disney successfully reclaims one of those three days by scheduling something on property = WIN. They gained one of three they were standing to lose... it's not a 'all or nothing' situation.
Yes there is a slippery slope of once people get offsite, etc... but that doesn't mean the days Disney locked in are lost.. it's just less than optimal.
When it applies to the business model that DVC was built on YES it does mean you need 100% lock in. DVC resorts were not built with the thought or intention of guests leaving property. THey would like this to be the case for all resorts but it isn't. When DVC was developed for WDW the company thought they had an edge to lock people in 100% to property. Projections and numbers were based on guests staying exclusively on property. They thought they were printing money. TO prove these efforts they partnered with Mears to try to get guests to use Magical Express so they do not have to rent cars allowing them to go of property. That is physical proof that they do everything they can to keep guests on property. This is before anything associated with MyMagic+ was developed or implemented. DVC resorts were built prior to that debacle.
Gosh, I feel like a pioneer. Here it is 30 years after my first visit and people are starting to do exactly what I always have done since day one. My first visit included side trips to Kennedy Space Center and Silver Springs that was in 1983. My second included trips to Sea World and Cypress Gardens and Tampa. And so on, year after year including one year an overnight to Key West. Primary location was WDW, but, I loved exploring Central Florida and always, always had other things on my agenda. Even when I stayed on site, at least one, maybe two days were spent elsewhere. Don't get me wrong, I love WDW, but, my interests aren't just WDW. I have gone to Uni many times, even in the dark years when everyone thought it was an awful place. I enjoyed it. Didn't go as often, but, it was always on my list for consideration. Now...it's more of a priority and my anticipation is higher when going there then to WDW. Possibly because WDW, to me, is a been there, done that, but, it no longer also includes must do again.
In response to both of you... for this type of 'planning leads to more lock-in' - it does not mean you need 100% lock-in for the model to work and improve things. I point you back to the quote again
Like I said, this isn't just about people leaving property - but gives Disney a way of marketing their offerings. Play it real simple for illustration purposes... User is lured to site with "I heard you can make an appointment with Mickey instead of waiting in line!!"... they get there.. and now see some offering they never knew existed before.. lets say.. they learn about the Luau and now are lured into making a reservation for that. In doing so, Disney has marketed a property to the targeted audience and in doing so upsold and locked in the customer for more time.
The idea of having all the customers doing this pre-planning gives Disney a powerful funnel all the potential customers go through.. and hence becomes an extremely powerful advertising and marketing tool where they can promote offerings guests may not have been exposed to, or influence what people may chose. It's a tactic used time and time again through so many sales channels... and by having this funnel the customers go through, it's "prime time" when it comes to exposure/eyeballs. That's part of the value - that can be converted into real dollars.
And my point about UNI is... Disney doesn't have to win 100% of the customer's time to be successful. Of course they'd like to keep people on property all the time... But ANY time that Disney locks in through pre-planning is a win - they don't have to lock in 100% of the time for there to be a benefit to the methodology. If a guest was thinking about maybe spending the last 3 days of their trip 'adhoc' and deciding where to go.. and Disney successfully reclaims one of those three days by scheduling something on property = WIN. They gained one of three they were standing to lose... it's not a 'all or nothing' situation.
Yes there is a slippery slope of once people get offsite, etc... but that doesn't mean the days Disney locked in are lost.. it's just less than optimal.
Yes, I totally agree with you. Transportation is crucial. I drove the first 10 years and then interspersed driving with flying including a rental car. I would never be without a vehicle and renting in Florida was very reasonable, maybe even more so now with DME on the road.Just curious, how did you get there 30 years ago? When we went from the northeast back in the 1970s and 1980s we drove. Many people did. There was a seemingly endless convoy of cars down I-95, all going to Disney, at certain times of year.
When you got there, you had your car. (And if you did fly, you pretty much had to rent one.) It was much easier to go to Cypress and Busch Gardens in Tampa or visit Xanadu (HOME OF THE FUTURE!) or do whatever other options O-Town had to offer back then.
It's a more recent phenomena that people fly in and go only to Disney (one that DME really helped to grow).
That's why Harry Potter is the game changer for more than Universal. It's the reason to rent a car and go off the res the way they did years ago. The difference today is that there are many more things to do off the res - and many more quality options - than there were 30 years ago.
You stumbled into my point. Children become aware of the Star Wars characters as their rabid fan boy and girl parents revel in the nostalgia. Of course, these young children use the terms "Light Saver" and "Dark Bader" to imitate their parents retelling of the Star Wars opera. The kids themselves have never seen one frame of a Star Wars film yet they've heard of the characters via the fan nerd pipeline. The children see the Star Wars characters as pitchmen for cars and phones.Maybe a comic keeps coming up because you a spelling him name wrong?
I don't think the funnel is as powerful as you think it is.
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