Davey Jones II
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2008
- Messages
- 2,475
I agree wholeheartedly with your first point. But I don't really see where you're going with your second point. Disney is not obligated to reinvest profits in the way that you prefer. To paraphrase Fix-It Felix - they don't have to do boo. You - and everyone else - have the power to vote with your wallet. You are not obligated to go. If MM+ is the disaster that some posters claim and seem to be rooting for, it will be very apparent. And then the crowds will no longer impinge on the quality of your trips.
Any business that fails to reinvest in their business is a doomed one. I hope I don't have to explain that obvious point.
Secondly, any business that does reinvest, but in the process fails to give their customers what they want to buy, is also doomed.
Third, it is particularly important to give your most loyal customers what they want, as per the 80/20 rule. When applied to business, that is a rule of thumb which states that 80% of your revenues come from 20% of your customers.
Now, I'm not saying that Disney is failing to reinvest in park infrastructure. But it's pretty clear that the pace of park reinvestment was greatly slowed (from glacial to sub-glacial) by the cost overruns and logistical/technical difficulties involved in installing the new IT.
Just look at DHS. It's probable that the Studios will be partly shuttered for the rest of the decade. Was that really their plan? In a park already begging for more attractions, they are closing a chunk of the place with nothing but rumors to give us hope for replacements.
Is this how you reward -- and keep -- the loyalty of your customers?
Also, I'm not at all convinced that this new IT was necessary for the company. They already had a reservation system in place, it worked fine, and it was less buggy than the new one. They already had a fast pass system, and it actually improved the loyalty of customers who knew how to use it. FP+ does nothing for customer loyalty; if you think that guests are more likely to come back just to get their measly three reservations per day, then I have some Florida swampland to sell you.
I know some of you worship at the alter of new tech. But how many times has a new gadget flopped miserably and failed to catch on? All the time. Newer is not always better. "Newer" often translates to "does the same thing as the last gadget, but with more bells, whistles, and bugs."
So why did Disney pull the trigger on this new IT? Not because they were "forward thinking". I contend they did it because they thought it would help sell more merch. That, and the data mining. So their priority is the continued Walmartization of WDW. Turn the place into a giant mall, and, oh yeah, here are some rides, too.
All rides exit through the gift shop. But if you put the gift shop ahead of the ride, you are putting the cart in front of the horse. And showing contempt for your customers.