lilsonicfan
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2003
- Messages
- 3,476
Class wars? Are you referring to the difference in perks if you buy direct vs resale? I’m sorry, there is several thousand dollar difference between the two, your perk is saving 10k. My perk is having access to moonlight magic, lounges, paying an upgrade fee, etc.
I'm not the one who referred to class wars, but I would only point out that for many years, whether you bought resale or direct, you had access to the same membership perks, implying that DVD really did not care all that much about who qualified. As time goes on and the perks to resale members have waned (not all at once, which may serve to create more of a 'class war' situation), people on this board say, well, DVD's marketing budget is the reason it's only direct members who benefit.
But to me that argument has never fully made sense. If the person who owned my resale contract before me, who bought in likely at somewhere in the range of $100 per point, could access the perks if only she had held on, but I can't, simply because I bought resale, to me that has no real relationship to the DVD marketing budget. If that direct owner before me 'paid into' the DVD marketing budget once and continued to benefit as long as she held the contract, ostensibly DVD suffers nothing at all by letting me benefit from the perks once I take over the contract. My contract would have already 'paid into' the DVD marketing budget.
What makes more sense is that the slow taking away of perks to resale members and now the slow creep toward paid perks even for direct members is that this is all, of course, a way to increase profit. Originally the slow taking away of perks for resale members was to drive direct purchases. It's hard for me to understand the paid perks for direct members as being anything other than a money grab because these perks are absolutely easy to just offer to the direct members, and could easily have been offered to direct members owning more than 300 points or some such thing like that. To me, the argument that perks are available to direct-only because of the DVD marketing budget was weak to begin with, but is further weakened by DVD introducing paid perks.