It’s $6 a gallon in Southern California… And we still drive to Disneyland from San Diego. We’d take the train but service has been discontinued indefinitely due to a landslide. Taking the train used to be a luxury but now it’s cheaper than driving.What is interesting about this to me is that they aren't going to just lower prices. So what happens when there's a recession and a 2 day visit to the parks for a family costs $2000? they've committed to this business plan and I'm not so sure it's going to work here in the near future. I mean, gas is $4.60/gallon for us - when people have to choose between driving to work or taking kids to DLR, I don't think there's much of a choice.
Finally, considering all of these things, it interests me how busy the parks still are at current rates. It makes me feel like I have been lied to my whole life about the state of American finances - if we, who have plenty plus some discretionary income, think it's overpriced and the value isn't there, who are these hundreds of thousands of people who are paying and totally cool having a meh time? It makes me want to cry thinking about someone who makes $60k a year going and spending a few thousand on a Disney trip and getting horrendous lines, broken down rides, shoulder to shoulder people in NOS, no daytime parade, and half the time no real nighttime entertainment either. I just don't understand.
1. From 1955-1982, Disneyland charged an entrance fee, and you paid for each ride you wanted to ride. They weren't free with admission.Because it used to be that with every Disneyland park ticket everything from shows to parades to meet and greets with characters was free with park admission . But Disneyland should learn not to increase ticket prices every year and lower the ticket prices to get more people to visit in the future
Dodger
Disney has been pretty upfront with :
Our solution to crowd control is higher prices. We will raise the cost of tickets till crowds get in line.
We also want to change to the experience at the parks.
Why can't they just limit the number of people allowed in the parks daily? Isn't that the purpose of the reservation systems? They can also raise ticket prices to balance out this restriction somewhat, but the constant and consistent increase of EVERYTHING has nothing to do with crowd control and everything to do with corporate greed. The company can still make profits limiting the number of people allowed in the parks every day, but they won't do that when they can overcrowd and overcharge.Disney has been pretty upfront with :
Our solution to crowd control is higher prices. We will raise the cost of tickets till crowds get in line.
We also want to change to the experience at the parks.
This is what will bite them in the end. The one and done folks who come back and just badmouth the Mouse because of their experience. Get enough of them and it will haunt you. We went in 2001 to WDW for our honeymoon, loved it so much we went back every other year after, till just before Covid. Used to promote it to anyone that would listen, not anymore. We go to Universal Orlando as well when visiting Florida, it reminds me of how Disney felt all those years ago, spontaneous and fun. Never been a slave to my phone there like Disney is now. I long for the day when my biggest planning came down to what day was historically busy for what park to avoid and going to guest services for a reservation at a table service where ever we were. Standby lines moved at a reasonable rate.Being a Dis- member and having done a number of trips to Disneyland (and a couple to WDW) I feel I know how to “do” Disneyland in a way that makes it successful...I knew how to stack fastpasses, do rope drop, get free stuff etc, but a lot of the people that save up to Disneyland do not, and that makes me sad. I know several families from here where I live (BC Canada) who have just been to DL in the last months and none of them had a good time, and all swore off DL. One had gone before and couldn’t believe it was the same place…the crowds, the lack of fast pass, many many rides down, the prices of everything…they couldn’t believe how different it was.
Disneyland is a bit of a different beast. I went to WDW right before genie plus and I don’t know how it is in FL but in CA it was somewhat manageable and also DL is so much more compact and the wait times aren’t near as chaotic in Florida. I highly recommend listening to Carlye Weisel’s Very Amusing podcast on DLR. very informative.This is what will bite them in the end. The one and done folks who come back and just badmouth the Mouse because of their experience. Get enough of them and it will haunt you. We went in 2001 to WDW for our honeymoon, loved it so much we went back every other year after, till just before Covid. Used to promote it to anyone that would listen, not anymore. We go to Universal Orlando as well when visiting Florida, it reminds me of how Disney felt all those years ago, spontaneous and fun. Never been a slave to my phone there like Disney is now. I long for the day when my biggest planning came down to what day was historically busy for what park to avoid and going to guest services for a reservation at a table service where ever we were. Standby lines moved at a reasonable rate.
Going to DL in two months because my wife has never been and now I'm just hoping it will be ok regardless of the dumb amount we've paid to go. I'm sure we will have fun because of the newness of it compared to our World trips but I doubt we will be trying to figure out what we have to do to go back as soon as possible like we did once apon a time, long long ago for World.
They will be fine in the short term but I think their short sightedness will bite them in the end.
This is me/us. We did USO in 2020 (because California was closedWe went in 2001 to WDW for our honeymoon, loved it so much we went back every other year after, till just before Covid. Used to promote it to anyone that would listen, not anymore. We go to Universal Orlando as well when visiting Florida, it reminds me of how Disney felt all those years ago, spontaneous and fun. Never been a slave to my phone there like Disney is now. I long for the day when my biggest planning came down to what day was historically busy for what park to avoid and going to guest services for a reservation at a table service where ever we were. Standby lines moved at a reasonable rate.
Well said!Dear Disneyland,
Today, we were informed that you would be increasing your ticket prices to enter your parks. As a long-time business owner and director, as well as a free-market adherent, I completely understand the need to increase revenue in order to cover rising expenses and meet projected profit margins. Especially during this time of rapid inflation, we all are doing what we can to balance the books. That said, as a long-time mega-DisneyParks fan, I do feel I need to address some issues.
First, it seems that most of your ticket prices went up at a higher proportion to inflation, which we all know has been your calling card for the last decade. The price hikes have always been out of proportion with the national economy. We've put up with it for quite some time, though I feel our patience is wearing thin. The fact that you took away a free service, FastPass, and replaced it with a pay-to-play daily fee called Genie+ actually felt like a ticket price increase. You either pay the extra money to have the same thing that was free two years ago, or you lose value in the park by spending so much more time in lines. In essence, my ticket price went up with Genie+ in order to keep the same "product." And with a family of five, that went up $100/day just to stay in the same place we were before.
Second, the aforementioned Genie+ has now gone up in price along with the ticket increases. Not only did you raise the price on multi-day tickets by 9%, you raised the price even more by adding yet another $5/day for Genie+. And as if you hadn't gouged consumers enough, Individual Lightening Lane prices increased, and there's information that Genie+ may go up by even more than $5/daily on certain busy days. Is it me, or do these price increases seem out of control?
Third, you have increased prices, but the experience of visiting Disneyland has lost value. With crowds soaring, the constant breakdown of rides and attractions, an awful dining reservation system that has no written rules, the crashing of the Genie+ app, and the lack of adequate (in number and training) cast members, it seems odd that you would ask your customers to pay even more for an increasingly disappointing product.
Finally, if you're raising prices, where are the extra entertainment options that should come with those increases? I'm not talking rides. Where is "Mickey and the Magical Map"? Where is a daytime parade? Where is "Paint the Night"? And for the prices we pay for tickets, Genie+, and the way over-priced dining packages, why isn't Fantasmic! played every night, especially with the large crowds you're letting in during the month of October? The fact that NONE of these things are happening is a slap in the face to all guests who have faithfully made you their annual choice in vacations year after year. Quit hiding behind "it's the Virus thing slowing us down". Everyone else has moved back to normal, but not Disneyland?
As someone who's made trips to Disneyland all my 47 years, and even taken half-a-dozen trips to Walt Disney World, I feel like I understand your product well enough to say this: you are currently doing a terrible job and a great disservice to the Disney brand and reputation. I believe I speak for the majority of your theme park customers that we know you are capable of doing so much better.
So...do it.
Sincerely,
THE DisneyGator
Disney needs to take a long look at why the parks were so successful back in 1990-1999, then 2000-2010, then 2011-2020, then 2021 to 2023. There will be stark changes on how things were run, the quality (or lack of there of) product, service, perceived value, how quickly there were increases vs decrease in value/quality of a vacation. Getting rid of the payment plans for APs would thin the crowds drastically. The golden parachutes for suits need to be reevaluated. Keeping the parks in tip top condition should and needs to be their up there in top tier of must always do. Bring back standards to what Walt Disney had.I totally get what everyone is saying about the decreased experience combined with the increased cost. I, too, have been dismayed by the difference in quality experience now as compared to pre-pandemic.
Can't lie; I'm also selfishly thinking that perhaps this will have the (possibly intended) effect of siphoning off a percentage of attendees, making the parks less crowded and, well, a nicer place to be. What's kind of awful about that is that it disproportionately affects families and those with lower incomes. I don't know how you balance providing quality family entertainment with lowering the ever-increasing demand and budgeting costs while making it financially within reach of most. I also don't know how to figure the costs for Disney to do what they do.
Most of us don't like to pay more for a lesser product, but we're also not privy to behind the scenes cost analyses. I've heard all sorts of statements about it, many contradictory. I just don't know.
Well said!I personally have always thought that this not about reducing crowds But Disney wanting to have its cake and eat it too.
The problem with this philosophy (which I nostalgically and selfishly agree with) is that Disney execs CAN NOT return to what was successful in the 90’s or 2000’s or 2011. They need to be MORE successful than that; they need to grow shareholder value. You can‘t just do as well as you did last year, the shareholders expect you to exceed that. Year on year, you have to continuously exceed last year, last quarter, etc. So you have to get more money out of the same operation, the same concept, the same guests (or add new ones, or charge all of them more for the same experience or better yet, less of an experience). They literally don’t want to thin crowds. They want to maximize crowds and what they are charging and diminish what they, as a company, are spending to give you the experience, until people are unwilling to pay the price or endure the crowds or endure the reduced offerings. Only then would they pull back. If they are making more money having X number of people in the park, why would they ever cut it back to X-anything? Until people vote with their wallets and either don’t go at all or stop going if they used to go (and no one replaces them), Disney will continue to push. It is just economics. And I can tell you that shareholders don’t care at all what standards Walt Disney had back in the day; they care about making money (ie increasing shareholder value). Sad but true.Disney needs to take a long look at why the parks were so successful back in 1990-1999, then 2000-2010, then 2011-2020, then 2021 to 2023. There will be stark changes on how things were run, the quality (or lack of there of) product, service, perceived value, how quickly there were increases vs decrease in value/quality of a vacation. Getting rid of the payment plans for APs would thin the crowds drastically. The golden parachutes for suits need to be reevaluated. Keeping the parks in tip top condition should and needs to be their up there in top tier of must always do. Bring back standards to what Walt Disney had.
I think you're absolutely right, but I also think it's an unsustainable system. The question is, what happens when you can no longer squeeze out more revenue? When the inevitable pull-back and backlash demolish the company? What happens when this occurs in not one, but a magnitude of corporations?The problem with this philosophy (which I nostalgically and selfishly agree with) is that Disney execs CAN NOT return to what was successful in the 90’s or 2000’s or 2011. They need to be MORE successful than that; they need to grow shareholder value. You can‘t just do as well as you did last year, the shareholders expect you to exceed that. Year on year, you have to continuously exceed last year, last quarter, etc. So you have to get more money out of the same operation, the same concept, the same guests (or add new ones, or charge all of them more for the same experience or better yet, less of an experience). They literally don’t want to thin crowds. They want to maximize crowds and what they are charging and diminish what they, as a company, are spending to give you the experience, until people are unwilling to pay the price or endure the crowds or endure the reduced offerings. Only then would they pull back. If they are making more money having X number of people in the park, why would they ever cut it back to X-anything? Until people vote with their wallets and either don’t go at all or stop going if they used to go (and no one replaces them), Disney will continue to push. It is just economics. And I can tell you that shareholders don’t care at all what standards Walt Disney had back in the day; they care about making money (ie increasing shareholder value). Sad but true.
And the lifetime of the “suits” at most public companies is measured in a handful of years, not decades like it used to be. So the execs don’t care what their actions on the company might mean 10 years from now. They are making decisions for the next quarter or next year, at the most. Long term plans are just not their concern. They will be long gone when any repercussions of their short-sighted business decisions crop up.
YES! I couldn't believe the meatloaf was gone. That's nothing compared to taking out Splash Mt. But still...Well said!
There is so much more value needed to be brought back. Meatloaf at Carnation Cafe, for example.
The short term outlook for execs will be the downfall eventually. Not only for Disney but others as well. The need to keep the shareholders happy above everything else is not sustainable. Can't wait for the stay at home remote crowd being let go for third world employees because they have proved their job can be done from anywhere and don't need to come to an office. Increase the shareholder values baby, on the backs of the very people that buy their goods and services. Already gutted the manufacturing sector for shareholders, on to the administrative side now.The problem with this philosophy (which I nostalgically and selfishly agree with) is that Disney execs CAN NOT return to what was successful in the 90’s or 2000’s or 2011. They need to be MORE successful than that; they need to grow shareholder value. You can‘t just do as well as you did last year, the shareholders expect you to exceed that. Year on year, you have to continuously exceed last year, last quarter, etc. So you have to get more money out of the same operation, the same concept, the same guests (or add new ones, or charge all of them more for the same experience or better yet, less of an experience). They literally don’t want to thin crowds. They want to maximize crowds and what they are charging and diminish what they, as a company, are spending to give you the experience, until people are unwilling to pay the price or endure the crowds or endure the reduced offerings. Only then would they pull back. If they are making more money having X number of people in the park, why would they ever cut it back to X-anything? Until people vote with their wallets and either don’t go at all or stop going if they used to go (and no one replaces them), Disney will continue to push. It is just economics. And I can tell you that shareholders don’t care at all what standards Walt Disney had back in the day; they care about making money (ie increasing shareholder value). Sad but true.
And the lifetime of the “suits” at most public companies is measured in a handful of years, not decades like it used to be. So the execs don’t care what their actions on the company might mean 10 years from now. They are making decisions for the next quarter or next year, at the most. Long term plans are just not their concern. They will be long gone when any repercussions of their short-sighted business decisions crop up.