ChipnDale79
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 2, 2012
- Messages
- 2,017
There you go. And now they are limiting the refills....for more huge profit
You know Bob Iger is big on fitness, here's a picture of him getting his daily swim in:
There you go. And now they are limiting the refills....for more huge profit
Well I'll just leave it out there that its 14$ for a beer at the Barclay Center.
8$ for Large soda at Yankee Stadium
5++$ for draft beer (at a cheap NYC bar)
6$ large water at AMC movie theatre.
So this price increase doesn't really "get my knickers in a twist"
Part of the problem is being onsite for potentially a week or more. I would likely be more upset about these prices if I spent a week at any of these places. Plus as ChipnDale said it's the cumulative effect of so many different price increases all at once.Well I'll just leave it out there that its 14$ for a beer at the Barclay Center.
8$ for Large soda at Yankee Stadium
5++$ for draft beer (at a cheap NYC bar)
6$ large water at AMC movie theatre.
So this price increase doesn't really "get my knickers in a twist"
Yes that's still an option.In our past trips, we were able to get water for free from many of the concessions/restaurant spots. Is that still available? We usually just bring some water bottles for everyone and refill there. Aside from that, we'll packs some juice boxes and snacks as well.
Although I'm ambivalent to the price increases and don't really want to argue their justification, I don't think "bring your own" is a practical response for many people.
- Travelling by air with several days worth of groceries in not really doable.
- Where would people get their groceries? I'm sure there are some available on site, but I've never looked.
- Are these groceries priced reasonably? Is there a reasonable selection?
- If you didn't plan to stay in a room with a kitchen, you'll need to upgrade - which is just a different additional cost.
Also, going to a sporting event can take place between meals. You don't have that option for a multi-day Disney stay.
The only real option to combat the high prices is to just not go.
You know Bob Iger is big on fitness, here's a picture of him getting his daily swim in:
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I see this as counter productive.
My family usually would order drinks as CS but when the price gets so high we just order plain old ice water. I can't believe we are the only ones. I'm no economist but if they hit the saturation point for their guests with increase prices/ decreased quality it only hurts them more in the end. Which may explain why attendance is up andspending per guest is down.
If they continue to decrease portion size and quality at the Sig resaurants and people go elsewhere they lose more in the long run
Garden grocer is more $$ than a regular grocery store but we use them for bottled water and other perishables. Amazon delivers and we get the nukeable Mac n cheese in a cup saving us a lunch or dinner here or there.
There's always the refillable cups at the resorts-- tho we have never purchased. I rarely buy water or beverages at a Disney park, unless desperate.
They don't care about anything beyond the next quarterly report, therefore they don't give a crap about the long term effect of these price increases.
All of these increases doesn't mean my family will spend more money, it just simply means we'll spend less time at WDW. We've decided that our 2017 trip will not be 7 days as it is usually, we're knocking a day off and making it a 6 day trip.
We've also decided that we may head over to City Walk on our arrival day and eat at Margaritaville.
I think that is their play. Get people to pay more for everything and spend less time there. They are making the same if not more money with fewer pesky customers in the parks at any given time. Then if people stop going altogether, well that is the next management team's issue.
Right, which is a complete 180 from their previous standpoint. Previously they didn't want you to leave the property at all, i'll still take the same amount of vacation days and travel as many days, I'll just spend my money for the extra day somewhere else.
That's a market share issue, but that doesnt matter with the next quarterly report.
If you're looking to make a point with Disney you need to not go there at all. Shaving one day off your on property time means nothing to them.
Oh please tell me you're not trying to tell ME how to spend MY vacation money?
If you're ok with spending more year after year (more than inflation), then more power to you, I'm not going to tell you how to spend your money.
As a consumer, I have to say what's right for me, and maybe taking a day off of a Disney trip to spend doing something else in order to keep the cost of my trip down, is the right thing for me.
After all, its pretty easy to knock a day off when they're charging full admission for a park that's under construction.
The point i was trying to make earlier, was that in recent history Disney did everything they could to keep you onsite for your entire vacation. That's why they pick you up for free from the airport. So if that's not their stance anymore, that's a change in philosophy on their part. Which I thought someone was alluding to earlier.
I could care less how you spend your money.
The way you were coming across was "I'll show Disney for raising their prices, I'll go there for one day less!!".
That of course is silly to think that going for 6 days instead of 7 does anything to Disney's bottom line. If anyone was trying to make a point they need to not go to Disney at all.
If that wasn't your point than disregard, but that's how it came across.
Where you from again? My SF Giants are almost double that, NASCAR too. Concert venues are just as bad.
Disneyland doesn't allow it either. No coolers or picnics, a bottle or two of water or small snacks are okay.