I have noticed a change in the cast members the last few trips. I had a long conversation waiting for the train at the MK. He was very forth coming in how on unhappy he was. Now don't get me wrong he was pleasant. He explained to me that most of the cast members were not happy with the changes that have been made with the way they do their jobs. He gave a for instance, they used to be able to do "special" things for guests like a make a wish kids or other guest who were just nice people. He said now to do anything extra it has turned into paperwork and a total hassle and it is frowned upon and it takes away the really fun part of their job. He also said that there has been a huge change in park guest attitudes over the past few years. Everyone comes though the gate and expects Mickey Mouse to personally escort them through the MK, he said the advertising is deceptive when they show kids dancing with Mickey down Main Street. People think that is what is going to happen and they get balled out by the guest when it does not. He mentioned also that he felt free dining was the down fall, which is funny because during the same trip (during free dining) while in the pool at the POP there were a couple of guests behaving in a not so nice way and both of the life guards were shaking their heads saying "this is what you get with the free dining crowd"
I have noticed a change in the cast members the last few trips. I had a long conversation waiting for the train at the MK. He was very forth coming in how on unhappy he was. Now don't get me wrong he was pleasant. He explained to me that most of the cast members were not happy with the changes that have been made with the way they do their jobs. He gave a for instance, they used to be able to do "special" things for guests like a make a wish kids or other guest who were just nice people. He said now to do anything extra it has turned into paperwork and a total hassle and it is frowned upon and it takes away the really fun part of their job. He also said that there has been a huge change in park guest attitudes over the past few years. Everyone comes though the gate and expects Mickey Mouse to personally escort them through the MK, he said the advertising is deceptive when they show kids dancing with Mickey down Main Street. People think that is what is going to happen and they get balled out by the guest when it does not. He mentioned also that he felt free dining was the down fall, which is funny because during the same trip (during free dining) while in the pool at the POP there were a couple of guests behaving in a not so nice way and both of the life guards were shaking their heads saying "this is what you get with the free dining crowd"
I can completely see this happening. and it sucks.. I go during free dining I would never behave that way.. no way..

I wouldn't hire someone, who lacked passion for their job. It will eventually, take a toll on their performance. A functioning warm body isn't sufficient. IMO. They maybe don't embody what every customer thinks they should be, but they certainly aren't so awful that they should be fired.
Same thing at Disney. Many people look at their jobs at Disney as something they love. They're passionate about the brand, they loved the parks as a guest before they ever started to work. They love talking to people about the company they work for, and they have a pretty great time on the job. But to some people ... it's a job. They go in, they do what they have to do to get paid, they go home.
, they used to be able to do "special" things for guests like a make a wish kids or other guest who were just nice people. He said now to do anything extra it has turned into paperwork and a total hassle and it is frowned upon and it takes away the really fun part of their job. He also said that there has been a huge change in park guest attitudes over the past few years. Everyone comes though the gate and expects Mickey Mouse to personally escort them through the MK, he said the advertising is deceptive when they show kids dancing with Mickey down Main Street. People think that is what is going to happen and they get balled out by the guest when it does not. He mentioned also that he felt free dining was the down fall, "
. They seem to be part of the "it's just a job" crowd. Nothing matters, but the bottom line. Really, really sad, it started at the top and has trickled down. It has hurt, the quality of service, and morale. This doesn't bode well for the future. IMOThere is nothing inherently evil about free dining. But any time you try to "pack the parks" as Disney clearly has recently done......... after reducing your workforce....... it's not going to go well. The CM's feel resentful of all the extra work with less backup, the guests feel less magic.... and you end up where we are now. Not terrible by any means......... but certainly different from where things were a few short years ago.
The problem is that the face of Disney is also suffering..... the CM in the parks. The ones responsible for the change aren't available to see. They're off shomewhere in an office calculating their next big bonus for lowering operating expenses while increasing attendance.
Free dining has brought many more guests into the parks and resorts,
I wondered about that - I thought the hotels ran pretty close to maxiumum occupancy year-round anyway? If that's true, then free dining can't make much of a difference to guest numbers.
I wondered about that - I thought the hotels ran pretty close to maxiumum occupancy year-round anyway? If that's true, then free dining can't make much of a difference to guest numbers.
They didn't before Free Dining. If you keep up with Disney financial or stockholder reports, they give specific occupancy numbers. Now, Disney hotels were and are always more full than pretty much every other hotel in Orlando, but they still weren't high enough for Disney.
Create Free Dining, and voila! you now have slow periods in which you could virtually have your choice of room, and walk on major e-ticket rides, now being sold out, with jam packed parks.
Free Dining was a brilliant move on Disney's part, as people will flock for something that is free. Despite the millions of threads on the DIS that claim that Free Dining isn't actually free, it is. Disney does not charge you for the dining part of your package; therefore, that makes the dining portion free. The question is whether or not it's the best deal, as you have to pay rack rate for your room.
Free Dining basically has packed the parks during what were relatively quiet periods for the resorts and parks, and so now, Disney hotels are at a pretty high and consistent rate of occupancy all year round. Genius!
At the same time as all of this, Disney also started to decrease their CM workforce. Huh? Why would you decrease your workforce, when you have now figured out a way to pack your resorts and parks all year round? Surely, there are going to be housekeeping, restaurant or resort issues, and there have been many of those. This current management team at Disney is obsessed with profit margins - how else do you explain an increase in patrons, but a decrease in employees to handle such patrons? As well as decreases in operating budgets for areas such as housekeeping and janitorial - these are the two areas that see the most effects from high occupancy rates at Disney. We have been having major issues in these areas over the years with DVC, and so it is a definite area that I see Disney going downhill.
This new management team, in my opinion, functions in a just deal with it world. Despite very busy parks, resorts and restaurants, less maintenance, janitorial and housekeeping CMs, Disney expects us guests to just deal with it. I have never seen more rides break than in the past few years, and I have seen messy parks, restaurants and rooms, more now, than every. CMs can't keep up with guest load, which has directly been affected by promos such as Free Dining. In the real world, when you increase patron numbers, you also need to increase your operating budgets to handle all of those patrons. But, in the Disney world, the opposite seems to hold true...
Tiger
> snip <Everyone comes though the gate and expects Mickey Mouse to personally escort them through the MK, he said the advertising is deceptive when they show kids dancing with Mickey down Main Street. People think that is what is going to happen and they get balled out by the guest when it does not.

Free dining did not fill up rooms year round. Free dining is there to keep people coming in a soft economy. Overall attendance is down or flat over the past several years. There are fewer people coming and fewer people staying on site.
Even with free dining, the Disney hotels have been in the low 80 percent zone in occupancy rates and have even listed its hotels on Priceline now, or at least were doing so recently, because occupancy rates are not where they want them to do be.
The most recent annual report even comes right out and says hotel occupancy is down at Disney's U.S. resorts and up overseas.

As I stated earlier in this thread, these 2 things together are what is responsible for most of that vague feeling people have that Disney is just not the same as it used to be. Still a good place to vacation, still better than most. But much has been lost by expecting CMs to handle this new level of busy......with a smaller workforce.
We're just going to substitute Trails End which has a great price for the best fried chicken in the world and a "buffet respectable" roast beef (they call it prime rib but it looks more like a top round to me...). Still, it's a great value, one of the few remaining at Disney.Free dining did not fill up rooms year round. Free dining is there to keep people coming in a soft economy. Overall attendance is down or flat over the past several years. There are fewer people coming and fewer people staying on site.
Even with free dining, the Disney hotels have been in the low 80 percent zone in occupancy rates and have even listed its hotels on Priceline now, or at least were doing so recently, because occupancy rates are not where they want them to do be.
The most recent annual report even comes right out and says hotel occupancy is down at Disney's U.S. resorts and up overseas.
