It's a tricky statistic, and like all statistics, can be misleading. Let's take Josh from easywdw as an example. He lives in the area and goes to a park every day, 365 days a year. (Or has someone go for him. I'm not sure if he actually goes or not.) Same with the folks at Touring Plans. They have boots on the ground every day. And remember the uber-thread from Princess Jess on her college program? She was in a park almost every day, or so it seemed. These folks (and every other Florida resident with an annual pass who flips the turnstile day after day) count, statistically, as "repeat guests". So Josh, all by himself, offsets 365 first time guests. In other words, if you take 366 people who enter a park during the course of a year and 365 of them are first timers, and one of them is Josh, you have a total of 730 "individual park admissions". 365 are first timers and 365 are Josh, (who is a returning guest) for a percentage of 50% returning guests. What would be an interesting statistic to know would be, what percentage of people staying in on-site resorts are repeat guests and what is the average number of visits that they have made?
Let's be honest here. WDW has been open for almost 50 years. The fact that someone is a "repeat guest" isn't all that impressive. That's like saying that 70% of all people who shop at
Walmart have shopped at a Walmart before. If someone went once in 1987 and again in 2011, sure, they are a "repeat guest". But so what? With all the changes that have taken place, they may as well be a first timer. I think that what ellie05 is missing is the difference between a repeat guest and a habitual guest. Are 70% of WDW visitors habitual guests? Of course not. And habitual guests do find cost saving strategies that occasional guests do not. In many instances, it is the only thing that allows them to be habitual guests. I suppose that there are habitual guests who spend as if it were their "once in a lifetime" visit, with a suite at the Grand Floridian every year, and the Deluxe Dining Package. But isn't it more likely that habitual guests have different spending habits? Isn't there a specific Board on this site for cost saving strategies? Who do you think contributes more to those discussions--first time guests, occasional guests, or habitual guests? As hard as this may be for some to swallow, in the hospitality industry (when it is running on all cylinders in a good economy), businesses care less about the habitual guest who has "been there, done that, bought the t-shirt" and more about the pie-eyed first timer who wants to "experience it all". Who do you think eats dinner in their room more often--DVC owners on their 25th visit, or the family on their first visit?