Is it true that Disney wanted to build an amusement park in St. Louis and ski resort in California?
I *wish* they'd do a DVC ski resort!!! I think it would be a fabulous success, provided they were able to secure some good slopes (or however that works).
DVC resorts outside of the parks just don't tend to do very well look at Aulani, Hilton Head, and Vero Beach. All of those resorts can sell rooms but selling contracts was a different story.I *wish* they'd do a DVC ski resort!!! I think it would be a fabulous success, provided they were able to secure some good slopes (or however that works).
DVC resorts outside of the parks just don't tend to do very well look at Aulani, Hilton Head, and Vero Beach. All of those resorts can sell rooms but selling contracts was a different story.
Now I like their Hawaii idea but Hilton Head and Vero Beach weren't that great. Aulani is highly rated as one of the best hotels/resorts in Hawaii and has won numerous awards. It sells ok as a stand along resort but as a time shaw not so much.This is Disney getting caught up in how great they are in their own minds. Disney selling timeshares in Hawaii was a ludicrous idea. They specialize in entertainment, and they almost totally remove that when they build these hotels away from the parks. There are pieces of entertainment in these hotels, but that really isn't what drives Disney's success, and they seem to be losing sight of that.
And then you look at the parks, and they are ramming Disney characters down your throat in places they aren't needed (EPCOT), but not really increasing the entertainment value for their repeat visitors, which seem to be about half their visitors (based on a phenomenally unscientific poll conducted by me among the people I know in casual conversation). Recognize what you do well, and build on that. If your park attendance is out of control, then expand the parks, or expand the capacity of the parks. Don't try to send people to other places. If you feel you can charge us more and people keep paying it, then fine. But just realize, you are moving people form your repeat visitor to once in a lifetime visitor. That costs you revenue in the long run.
While it seems I may have wandered off topic, I don't think I have. Disney is getting lost in what their company is good at in pursuit of more profit. Their revenue exploded at the parks when they were expanding capacity and providing new things fairly consistently. The same is true of the DVC resorts away from the parks - they are simply examples of a company that is losing its way, and has lost sight of what it is good at.
Now I like their Hawaii idea but Hilton Head and Vero Beach weren't that great. Aulani is highly rated as one of the best hotels/resorts in Hawaii and has won numerous awards. It sells ok as a stand along resort but as a time shaw not so much.
Disney isn't worried about the repeat guest as much as they are the new guest because that new guest is going to often spend a lot more as many times this is their once in a lifetime trip to WDW. Disney loves that once in a lifetime visitor more than the repeat these days.
The whole profit thing goes along with who and ow the company is being run these days. This isn't Walts company anymore, this isn't even Eisners company anymore. Iger is all about keeping that stock price up.
And then you look at the parks, and they are ramming Disney characters down your throat in places they aren't needed (EPCOT)
Figment is scary?EPCOT was initially not a park filled with characters. Very early on, guests constantly complained about no characters, other than a big scary purple dragon. So Disney brought out Mickey and friends in space suits. Then came the rest.
Lol. Well, 30+ years ago the character suits probably didn't accurately represent a happy dragon. Plus if a four year old is expecting Mickey Mouse and sees a purple dragon instead, I'm betting a few meltdowns happened.Figment is scary
Never heard Figment referred to as scary.a big scary purple dragon
It's not that I don't believe you its just I've never heard of that before.Lol. Well, 30+ years ago the character suits probably didn't accurately represent a happy dragon. Plus if a four year old is expecting Mickey Mouse and sees a purple dragon instead, I'm betting a few meltdowns happened.
I don't recall Figment ever being a walk around character. He was always just a puppet on the arm of Dreamfinder.Lol. Well, 30+ years ago the character suits probably didn't accurately represent a happy dragon. Plus if a four year old is expecting Mickey Mouse and sees a purple dragon instead, I'm betting a few meltdowns happened.
EPCOT was initially not a park filled with characters. Very early on, guests constantly complained about no characters, other than a big scary purple dragon. So Disney brought out Mickey and friends in space suits. Then came the rest.
Just wanted to add that I hope @Merry Mousketeer chimes in with his knowledge of this. He's the DIS expert on Disney history.
Iger is all about keeping that stock price up.
Give me half of Eisner and half of Iger and we have the next Walt. Eisner did some great things with the parks and made WDW what is today. Iger has made some great acquisitions and helped that stock price stay up. Iger is worried about what's going to happen to ESPN these days though.He HAS to be all about stock price. It is what makes the world go 'round these days. Seriously, if you think Eisner had kept the stock price growing, do you think he'd have been voted down by the fund managers. It wasn't about "losing the magic" or what ever else his opposition tried to tell you, it was about stock price and ROI...no more, no less.