CapHook
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Jan 27, 2000
- Messages
- 118
One thread I had really enjoyed reading over the past few days was about the reasons Disney canceled the use of discount codes published in newspapers and other places for discounts in Disney resorts. I was really into this debate checking back to the DIS every couple of hours to see if someone else had added to the post. For some reason the moderators of the Disney Resorts sections wanted this debate to end. They are the moderators and I respect that. They did not want a debate going in the Resort section and I respect that I suppose although I don't really see how having one thread going about this topic really harms anything (those who are not interested in a thread don't have to click on it).
I would like to hear the opinions of AV, Landbarron, Safari Steve and the other "Disney business model" gurus on this subject.
I subscribe to the Houston Chronicle. Disney paid money to put a code in the travel section of the paper delivered to my house so I could get a discount on a Disney Resort. I was not being offered this discount because I subscribe to the Houston Chronicle, but rather because I lived in Texas and that is who Disney was targeting. I seldom read the travel section of my paper so I missed it. I did find the same code however at mousesavers.com. It seems to me that many people feel somehow this is wrong that I would use a code I found from the Internet. I seems to me that mousesavers.com did Disney a big favor by letting me see something I missed that they paid for me to see.
Why would Disney pull the codes? Why not just reduce the number of rooms that qualify for the discount? When I called to make my reservation I wanted two rooms at the ASmovies and I used a code. I was told only one room was left for my dates that would accept the code. I was able to get the ASsports with the discount code for my dates. This tells me there was a block of rooms for each resort that qualified for the discount but most did not. Why wouldn't Disney just say when someone called "no rooms available for that code". What is the point of canceling all codes after they have paid money to advertise these codes?
A successful model is the airlines where it seems no two people on the plane pay the same fare or a car dealer where there is no set price for the car and you can negotiate. These are way these industries get people to overpay for their product. Smart consumers who pay the reasonable amount feel like they are getting a good deal because they did not overpay. It seems with the prices of Disney theme parks and resorts that this is the sort of model they want to move to but then they pull the discounts. I don't understand.
Here were the threads
Discount codes pulled
One reason the discount codes were pulled...
I would like to hear the opinions of AV, Landbarron, Safari Steve and the other "Disney business model" gurus on this subject.
I subscribe to the Houston Chronicle. Disney paid money to put a code in the travel section of the paper delivered to my house so I could get a discount on a Disney Resort. I was not being offered this discount because I subscribe to the Houston Chronicle, but rather because I lived in Texas and that is who Disney was targeting. I seldom read the travel section of my paper so I missed it. I did find the same code however at mousesavers.com. It seems to me that many people feel somehow this is wrong that I would use a code I found from the Internet. I seems to me that mousesavers.com did Disney a big favor by letting me see something I missed that they paid for me to see.
Why would Disney pull the codes? Why not just reduce the number of rooms that qualify for the discount? When I called to make my reservation I wanted two rooms at the ASmovies and I used a code. I was told only one room was left for my dates that would accept the code. I was able to get the ASsports with the discount code for my dates. This tells me there was a block of rooms for each resort that qualified for the discount but most did not. Why wouldn't Disney just say when someone called "no rooms available for that code". What is the point of canceling all codes after they have paid money to advertise these codes?
A successful model is the airlines where it seems no two people on the plane pay the same fare or a car dealer where there is no set price for the car and you can negotiate. These are way these industries get people to overpay for their product. Smart consumers who pay the reasonable amount feel like they are getting a good deal because they did not overpay. It seems with the prices of Disney theme parks and resorts that this is the sort of model they want to move to but then they pull the discounts. I don't understand.
Here were the threads
Discount codes pulled
One reason the discount codes were pulled...