raidermatt
Be water, my friend.
- Joined
- Sep 26, 2000
- Messages
- 6,848
But this goes back to the old argument of how much money should Disney leave on the table. Is it fair for a company - any company - to accept considerably less for their product when the market says otherwise ?
That's an over-simplification of the argument. Its phrased that way to justify the hikes, but it fails to recognize that there were valid BUSINESS reasons for not charging "what the market would bear". Those who don't believe it was in the company's best interests to make the hikes (at least to the extent they were made) believe that that by providing a greater VALUE for the guests, the company would actually leave less money on the table in the long run.
The beauty is that the company was already past the early "bite the bullet" stage of that philosophy. Where they were falling short was not expanding the resort quickly enough to take advantage of the strategy.
Hence the under-utilized asset problem which brought the wolves to the door.
Once the new team was in place, the company could have grown the resort while maintaining the strategy, but instead grew while using the more common "market pricing" strategy. Ceratainly it was a valid strategy, and one could even argue that in most cases, its the optimal strategy. I just don't believe that in this case it was the optimal strategy.