bcrook
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jun 26, 2008
- Messages
- 4,939
This newspaper story might also give a hint about the future.
If dynamic pricing is instituted, wouldn't that make non expiration tickets obsolete? Any connection to the non-expiration tickets being taken off the web page?
And what would dynamic pricing mean for Annual passes?
After reading several articles on this, you have to be right on yield management. This does reinforce the idea that none of this FP + is about providing a new and exciting attraction or experience for guests. It is about changing the management model. Marketing may be able to spin it, but it is what is.
Can you suggest any good articles on yield management in the theme park industry?
Dynamic pricing (per park) could provide load leveling. If Disney knows that MK is busy on Saturday but Epcot is quiet they could offer reduced price park passes for Epcot that day. A $20 savings (or free dining at the selected park) might entice a decent number of guests to go to a different park that day.
The downside is that no park will be exceptionally quiet and our touring plan websites will be about useless. I see some potential benefits from FP+/Next Gen and think it will be a good thing for most park guests overall.
As usual, until WDW actually announces anything all of these speculations are about useless too.![]()
I think that the FP+ is designed to nullify touring plans (bad for us, but smart for management). For example, if some knowledgeable veterans like you and I have figured out a way to use the system to our advantage, why not market this to all guests. If a certain ride is usually a walk on at a certain time, then it is underutilized. FP+ can get people to that ride and balance out demand. Same thing with times throughout the day. The one guarantee for me is at DAK. After 3:00 the park starts emptying. It is easy to walk on most rides two hours before closing. With FP+, there will be a mechanism to get people to stay later at DAK or at least show up later and take advantage of the under utilized rides and attractions at that time.
mom2rtk said:I think that is a very real possiility.
A certain subset of the population will be easily manipulated. But I don't think it's a large enough subset.
Dynamic pricing (per park) could provide load leveling. If Disney knows that MK is busy on Saturday but Epcot is quiet they could offer reduced price park passes for Epcot that day. A $20 savings (or free dining at the selected park) might entice a decent number of guests to go to a different park that day.
Perhaps, but they are going to have to offer a lot more than 4 per day to achieve that balance. I can't imagine anyone with any vague knowledge of the park picking Hall of Presidents as one of their 4 vs PotC or Jungle Cruise (much less one of the Mountains)
Oh, the responses I could come up with here. I'll pass.![]()
Rather than tiered pricing, they could use FP+ as incentive to draw people to other parks, by offering more experiences.
Low crowd day at Epcot? Add a couple more FP+ in each group...
It can also be pointed out that the rumors have said just about everything.
Leave. Fastpass. Alone (!!!!)
They haven't said this (yet, that I've seen)...
This is just a testing phase. Perhaps they're keeping the available set of FP+s down to just four per day to test the data flow and network infrastructure?
Has anyone give hard evidence that they won't expand the set of FP+s available to one per hour, or 8 per day? After all, if EVERY attraction is FP+, then they'll need to expand the pool of available FP+s for each guest beyond four.
Remember, this is Disney, and they'll do what they want/can to keep the guests happy. And it's still too early to make any kind of a SWAG on how this will work.
More insight from true insiders would be helpful.
True! And maybe assigned times.
Some have mentioned that Disney wants people to spend extra time shopping and dining and just "smelling the roses". That might be fine for some visitors but we don't all tour the same. We all have preferences as to how (and when) we want to enjoy WDW activities and sights.
Besides wasn't there some mention of some dining and parades and so on being included in the Fastpass+ system too? If that comes to pass we might all end up running into each other in the Emporium for much of the day.
Another thing, I can't see leaving those who stay offsite out of this or charging them a fortune to participate. Many who visit WDW stay offsite for budget reasons or size of family reasons or whatever. It seems bizarre to expect many of these people to fork over even more dollars to potentially get fastpasses for four rides each day with some of them not even being headliners. If any in fact. Offsite visitors already have the potential to spend more on passes and dining and certainly extras such as parking. I bet that Disney makes a good bit on them already and I can't see them wanting to potentially cause them to possibly spend their vacation dollars elsewhere.
All conjecture, I know.
They haven't said this (yet, that I've seen)...
This is just a testing phase. Perhaps they're keeping the available set of FP+s down to just four per day to test the data flow and network infrastructure?
Has anyone give hard evidence that they won't expand the set of FP+s available to one per hour, or 8 per day? After all, if EVERY attraction is FP+, then they'll need to expand the pool of available FP+s for each guest beyond four.
FWIW, even a text from My Disney Experience that Stitch has a zero minute wait on Christmas Day isn't enough to make me go sit through that again![]()
"Accept this FP for Stitch now and get a free Mickey Pretzel....."![]()
Why are we not on equal footing before we arrive... now?
We cannot guarantee equality of OUTCOME.
We can only try to provide equality of OPPORTUNITY.
larryz said:They haven't said this (yet, that I've seen)...
This is just a testing phase. Perhaps they're keeping the available set of FP+s down to just four per day to test the data flow and network infrastructure?
Has anyone give hard evidence that they won't expand the set of FP+s available to one per hour, or 8 per day? After all, if EVERY attraction is FP+, then they'll need to expand the pool of available FP+s for each guest beyond four.
Remember, this is Disney, and they'll do what they want/can to keep the guests happy. And it's still too early to make any kind of a SWAG on how this will work.
More insight from true insiders would be helpful.
Too. Late.