Speaking with the manager and moving to another resort ate up a considerable amount of their time and I'm sure they're trying to enjoy their vacation more now. I hope
@mommyrosa2 won't mind me answering for her... They requested to be moved yesterday morning and were able to move next door to GF Sugar Loaf. They are happy they moved and she reported a huge difference in service at GF.
DD and I arrive Friday for 10 nights and I have many concerns based on past negative experiences at Poly. It's DD's last summer vacation before graduating high school so I let her choose any resort. But, I warned her that if we're displeased, I won't hesitate to move. We've actually had to do this a couple of times, once from Poly. I wouldn't hesitate to do it again if I felt unhappy. It completely salvaged a disappointing stay and the GSMs (at the resort we moved to) made it easy and painless. Poly, OTOH, made a mess of it and CR had to try and fix their mistakes.
I know what you mean; our vacation time is so precious to us that we use a towncar service rather than ME. Nothing wrong with ME, but we choose to be able to decide what time to leave to get to MCO, for example.
Can I ask you a question?? If we're at a resort and are unhappy after speaking with management, how do we tell them that we want to move elsewhere?? And do they check to see where there is availability for you?? And then do you pay the difference if moving to a more expensive resort, or conversely, do you receive a refund if you move to a less expensive resort?
Back in 2001 on our first family trip and my first on-site stay, we booked Caribbean Beach Resort. It was great, we loved it. Nothing at all wrong with it. Then a few days in to our trip we had dinner at the Grand Floridian. When we got there, my DH asked me why we weren't staying there! I said, well back when we were planning this trip and working up a budget, we decided on a moderate resort. So he said Ok, but I think we should stay here.
So we walked over to the check-in desk at the GF and my DH asked if there were any rooms available with a view of the castle. The lovely CM took us to see what the rooms looked like, then she checked her computer to see if a "castle view" room was available. There was, so DH said ok, please tell us what to do to move here from CBR. The GF CM said she'd take care of the "paperwork" end of it, we paid the difference in resorts, then she said to just go back to CBR and pack. She called CBR to tell them we'd be moving, and when we got to CBR they even had a van waiting for us to take us and our luggage over to GF.
Anyway, that was a different situation. But I've read many times on here that people move to another resort when they're unhappy with their current resort, and I'm not sure of the logistics.
Thanks for any info, and hopefully, we'll be happy at the Polynesian, but I'd like to know what to do in case we're not happy, considering all of the construction etc, and the fact that DH and I both need to rest in the middle of the day due to medical issues that we have. We're staying CL but in a GV room, so unless we happen to get an upgrade to the lagoon side, we may have an issue with noise during the day. I have emailed IPO to ask for the quietest room possible, and all of the IPO CMs responses were very nice until this last email that I got a couple of days ago. The tone of the email sounded almost stern, and she let me know that all of the GV rooms WILL be facing construction, and since I'll have a wheelchair, then maybe I'll be "upgraded" to an accessible room. Yes she used the word "upgrade". I didn't respond to that email but I felt like writing back and saying "Hey, an accessible room is NOT an upgrade!" They have accessible rooms on both sides of the Hawaii building; I've stayed in them before! My reservation wasn't originally booked as an "accessible" room, but I had just mentioned that if one was available, then we'd be happy to stay in one, and if not, then a regular room is fine because we've stayed in regular rooms with my wheelchair before, too. It just irked me that she used the word "upgrade" in reference to an accessible room.