To do something for forcing us to put up with them?Why do they have Florida resident APs?
To do something for forcing us to put up with them?Why do they have Florida resident APs?
Undoubtedly. I wouldn't be surprised if they eliminate the monthly passes altogether.Who says they’re actually catering to traditional Florida residents by doing this? I’d argue they’re who they want to eliminate the most…not that I agree with it
I would think the opposite. Out of state pays the most by far per year, comes less, has a higher likelihood of staying on-site (assuming more Florida residents can do day trips or may have friends/family close by to stay with), and would seem to be suckers for upcharge events and upgrades comparatively because they can’t just come on a whim from so far away. Plus lots of out of staters participate in cash cows like runDisney races which both earn money and keep the racers out of the parks a large part of the day because of how early they have to get up to participate in the runs.
Now, for APs: If the parks are sold out, what good does it do anyone to buy an AP when they can't use it because the parks are SOLD OUT? Why would WDW sell an AP to someone and then listen to them complain and demand their money back because they can't use their AP because the parks are SOLD OUT?
It seems (Pengy is gonna hate this…because it’s cognitive reasoning and not what a nitwit in a name tag is told to say…) that we can loosely “prioritize” the AP groups:I would think the opposite. Out of state pays the most by far per year, comes less, has a higher likelihood of staying on-site (assuming more Florida residents can do day trips or may have friends/family close by to stay with), and would seem to be suckers for upcharge events and upgrades comparatively because they can’t just come on a whim from so far away. Plus lots of out of staters participate in cash cows like runDisney races which both earn money and keep the racers out of the parks a large part of the day because of how early they have to get up to participate in the runs.
I think the politburo may be just cutting to the chase and testing if the higher spending (a lot of DVC and more) will “crack” and just decide regular tickets are the “new norm”?That really makes the case for NOT giving them such steep discounts if they are suckers who will come anyways
The real magic is in the data we don't have... the demographics of how much AP holders really use their passes.
Disney is on the right path for managing this I think.. which is instead of trying to control who buys what, simply control when that pass can be used.. to make sure the right discount class is used for the right purpose the company wants.
Need cheap bodies to fill the lower crowd periods... cheap passes = OK
Want to limit discounted admissions during popular times... only allow premium passes...
Disney has that control now with the blackouts and reservation system.
Then buyer patterns will follow what the buyer really wants to ensure they have access to.
They need Florida residents in down periods…and make no mistake…there will be more.Why do they have Florida resident APs? Why not make two APs one that has Christmas and Thanksgiving and one that doesn't? They want to make the parks for the elites so why give a deal at all?
So by that logic…AP sales would resume on 1/2?For the record, its been established that the main/almost only reason AP sales were stopped was because Disney is done issuing park tickets/reservations for select peak days and they haven't for AP's, so they don't want a bunch of day guests buying AP's because its their only option.
Maybe not right on 1/2, but they should resume in Jan.So by that logic…AP sales would resume on 1/2?
let’s see how it plays…
uptake of annual passes at the ticket booths would be both a success and a failure for Disney…if you look at it objectively
I’d think we’d be one of the most profitable AP groups because we need hotels and stay on property. When we had our Premiere passes we had to take 2 trips a year to WDW to justify the cost but we’d usually go 3, vs our normal once a year, that meant an extra 5-10 rooms reservations for Disney plus a couple extra weeks of us buying all our food and drinks on property.My answer would be to no longer offer out of state APs unless you own DVC. It's obvious they aren't big fans of AP holders.
I wonder if eventually all APs will be blocked on Thanksgiving and Christmas weeks. Just tickets for those 2 weeks. Maybe throw in a ticket discount to DVC members for those weeks.
That would probably lead back to the same person not to give significant discounts to wholesalers on room rates as well…several years back. They’d have large chunks of unoccupied rooms right now if covid/low occ hadn’t provided a screenSomeone seems to have decreed - No more DVC AP discounts. If that sticks around, there will be more and more displeased DVC owners who are willing to speak up and speak out. Good luck getting that genie back in the bottle without ponying up some good discounts and some serious tail-between-the-legs retreating.
Which has nothing to do with stopping AP sales - because you already have a separate control for that. So... BZZZT.. spin again.
Exactly…if you have to reserve anyway…and there’s a separate annual pass basket…it’s not about staffing.
Yes.yet haven't they already sold passes which folks can't use?
So, if you bought either the highest tier AP thinking, "I can go whenever I want," or if you bough the lowest tier thinking, "at least I can get into the park on a weekday that's not a holiday week"... wrong. You can't into the MK, it is SOLD OUT.
So, @flynnibus, what is this special control on APs that fixes this for the MK on Monday, Dec 6 that doesn't involve angry AP holders yelling at Customer Service demanding their money back?
The AP bucket still adds to the (over) crowding.
Monday Dec 6 has MK sold out to day-tickets... and every level of Annual Pass.
So, if you bought either the highest tier AP thinking, "I can go whenever I want," or if you bough the lowest tier thinking, "at least I can get into the park on a weekday that's not a holiday week"... wrong. You can't into the MK, it is SOLD OUT.
So, @flynnibus, what is this special control on APs that fixes this for the MK on Monday, Dec 6 that doesn't involve angry AP holders yelling at Customer Service demanding their money back?
We have zero legitimate idea what their current “cap” numbers are and just how the staff issues are comparable to them? I’d love to know…but no one here can provide them. Prove me wrong if you can.The AP bucket still adds to the (over) crowding.
Monday Dec 6 has MK sold out to day-tickets... and every level of Annual Pass.
So, if you bought either the highest tier AP thinking, "I can go whenever I want," or if you bough the lowest tier thinking, "at least I can get into the park on a weekday that's not a holiday week"... wrong. You can't into the MK, it is SOLD OUT.
So, @flynnibus, what is this special control on APs that fixes this for the MK on Monday, Dec 6 that doesn't involve angry AP holders yelling at Customer Service demanding their money back?
Here I do agree…that is part of the decision for sure…the question is whether that’s it? Maybe…maybe not?Yes.
And they don't want that to get worse.
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