- Joined
- Apr 16, 2006
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- 9,585
It sure beats just hanging around...I've heard Easter is really a killer time to go.
oh! did I really just say that??? Sorry - I went to see Deadpool yesterday, and the effects still haven't worn off.
It sure beats just hanging around...I've heard Easter is really a killer time to go.
This is kind of like telling people who love potato chips, but who keep getting them stuck in their teeth, or occasionally find the green chips, to just quit eating them.I read through these posts with all the hand wringing. I've got a very simple solution to it all. STOP GOING TO WDW! Problem solved. Every company in the country is working to do more with less people and Disney is not exempt. If you go to a restaurant or a hotel and end up not liking the food or service you don't keep going back do you? If you do keep going back then you must really like the service or the food and therefore have nothing to complain about. I'm guessing the majority of you have nothing to complain about and will be going back in the near future.
It sure beats just hanging around...
oh! did I really just say that???
Sorry - I went to see Deadpool yesterday, and the effects still haven't worn off.
The old non-digital ticket books are way before my time but don't people seem to reminisce favourably about those?
Iger took a measly 22.3 million bonus this year. He's hurting too, folks.
it looks like everyone at Disney is tightening their belts... Bob Iger's salary, bonus and stock options only came to $44.9M...times is tough...
THIS is what makes me angry. I am not saying that executives don't deserve salaries, but THIS MUCH? When they are cutting the jobs of people making $8.50 an hour? If my math is correct, $8.50 an hour, 40 hours a week, 50 weeks a year (because you can be SURE that these folks don't get paid vacation time) comes to $17,000 a year. If you cut 1000 full-time employees earning this pay wage, that's 17M dollars saved, BUT it's 5.3 million dollars LESS than Iger took as a BONUS this year. OK, I know that part of Iger's bonus probably came in options, not cash, but still... JEEEEEEZZZZZZ. He could save the company money, keep 1000 people employed full-time, and STILL take a bonus of $5,300,000! (Yes, I know it's not this simplistic if you take benefits into account, but still... a bonus of over $22,000,000? REALLY??)
If anything brings Disney down, it's going to be top-heavy management greed. I do NOT understand management taking these obscenely large bonuses while cutting jobs. If the company is in this kind of financial state, how do they justify these bonuses? As usual, the little guy bears the brunt and the rich get richer.
THIS is what makes me angry. I am not saying that executives don't deserve salaries, but THIS MUCH? When they are cutting the jobs of people making $8.50 an hour? If my math is correct, $8.50 an hour, 40 hours a week, 50 weeks a year (because you can be SURE that these folks don't get paid vacation time) comes to $17,000 a year. If you cut 1000 full-time employees earning this pay wage, that's 17M dollars saved, BUT it's 5.3 million dollars LESS than Iger took as a BONUS this year. OK, I know that part of Iger's bonus probably came in options, not cash, but still... JEEEEEEZZZZZZ. He could save the company money, keep 1000 people employed full-time, and STILL take a bonus of $5,300,000! (Yes, I know it's not this simplistic if you take benefits into account, but still... a bonus of over $22,000,000? REALLY??)
If anything brings Disney down, it's going to be top-heavy management greed. I do NOT understand management taking these obscenely large bonuses while cutting jobs. If the company is in this kind of financial state, how do they justify these bonuses? As usual, the little guy bears the brunt and the rich get richer.
............and cuts from a project overseas that is impact folks here in the US................the executives get praise for maintaining a stock price.............and the working folks get it for their mistakes in China and the maintaining of that stock price.This is what I don't get. I have no idea what is "reasonable" for an executive bonus. I don't even want to get into that. But how can someone in charge of a company performing to a level that requires cuts like this even deserve a bonus that large?
............and cuts from a project overseas that is impact folks here in the US................the executives get praise for maintaining a stock price.............and the working folks get it for their mistakes in China and the maintaining of that stock price.
Doug![]()
Updating my info:It appears to be referring to FP loader CMs for attractions where FP isn't a necessity. So far, there are reports of Wishes, BatB, and Flights of Wonder not having FP availability beginning mid-April.
Agree with the concerns about greed at the top. I'm not against people getting wealthy by creating and managing major businesses, but at some point compensation is enough.
However, apart from that, cost cutting is often a mistake, in my opinion.
At some point "belt tightening" goes past unneeded excess and starts to hit critical functions, and then you get get yourself into a death spiral as a business.
People at the top can be blind to the real effects. Let me give you an example from a friend of mine.
She lives in a state where the politics of the moment have lead to "belt tightening" at the state level. From the outside, many people are happy. The budget is down, money is being saved, unnecessary state workers are being cut. Many people are happy, because it sounds good.
But from the inside, here's what's actually happening. They cut an administrative assistant from her department. He was paid very little because he was entry level and did tasks like photocopying. On the other hand, she's a highly trained and highly (within state parameters) compensated mid-career professional.
But here's the thing - the photocopying has to get done anyway. It's not something they can skip. So now, instead of paying small money to a person who needs a job, they're paying her vastly more money... to photocopy. The state is now paying $$$$ for each photocopy rather than $. AND her main job is getting done less well, because she's diverted from my main functions.
Point being, efficiency is not always gained just by "belt tightening." It seems like an easy fix, and sometimes it is, but often you're just slapping lipstick on a pig and pretending it's all OK. If Disney really is in a bind (and why they would be in one and the mismanagement around that is another story) then smarter to really bite a bullet and stop some operations altogether, but keep the ones you need running at full quality and capacity.
Of course, if you start cutting out things (e.g. cutting events, hours, etc.) then you start to degrade the breadth of the experience, and people stop coming. And workers leave the area because they can't count on you. And you get into a negative spiral.
My point? Manage the dang thing correctly, for crying out loud. Once you screw it up, there are no easy fixes.
You do realize this is likely a lower level management issue right? I don't know Disney's titles but I doubt anyone down through the department managers were told to cut 20% of staff. They were told to reduce $x million.
The management of these divisions then made the decision to cut the headcount. They could have gone after efficiencies, lean projects to reduce waste, etc. I know for a fact the food service side is a mess of efficiency. But the easy, guaranteed (and imo lazy) answer is cut hours. More than likely there is compensation for achieving these cuts so they will take the quick and guaranteed.
In terms of executive compensation it doesn't bother me. Often the goals and objectives of the captain of a massive ship such as this are vastly different than daily operations. Their job is about 3-5 years from now. Not today.
Clearly Disney is steering the ship in a different direction. This is only part of the big picture.
So who was in charge 3-5 years ago?
They have been doing this at Cosmic Rays for as long as I can remember. It is very wasteful to keep all 3 stations open when so few people come in to eat that late, so you only keep the station open with the food choices which interest the highest percentage of guests.Early this month I wanted to eat the chicken at Cosmic's fairly late in the eve (around 9.30pm) According to guide it was open until 10pm, so I double checked with a CM that 10pm was closing and they said yep, so I watched MSEP and headed off. What I hadn't been told of course is that yes Cosmic's was open but all stations but the burger place were closed so no chicken, so only a third of Cosmic's was really open.
I was pretty fed up because I did not want a burger, and so did voice my concerns to a manager. She said and I quote that this was "due to cuts and costs as it involved extra labor keeping everything open."
Really Disney? You can't afford to give your guests a full counter service menu until closing time as it's too expensive?
Maybe it's me, but I wasn't impressed.