Another Voice
Charter Member of The Element
- Joined
- Jan 27, 2000
- Messages
- 3,191
Simple – did the place have show, or was it just a hotel/ride/restaurant.So, when was the company running right, and how was that measured?
In 1971 the Contemporary was the future. The Polynesian was the first themed hotel and it wowed everyone how stayed there (it would take Las Vegas decades to catch up). Fort Wilderness was the west with a steam train and horse drawn carts and .
Remember – Michael Eisner ran WDW almost twice as long as Card Walker & Ron Miller did (and he ran Disneyland twice as long as Walt did). All the “original intent” of the place has now been buried under two decades of neglect and disinterest.
If you want to know what the standard was, look up the plans for the Asian and Persian Resorts. Find out how the Contemporary was run (the garden wings allowed Disney to set wide price points in a single resort, allowing more people to have the experience – unlike today’s “keep those poor people away from me” attitude of today’s “Deluxe” caste system).
Look at the Cheyenne Hotel at Euro Disney (which started life as WDW’s Buffalo Junction). See how a “Disney Value” resort was supposed to have been designed before the concept was turned into chattel houses for poor with fifty foot “Groovy Man” signs glued onto the cell blocks.
There are bits and pieces of Real Disney around if you look for them now. But a lot of time has passed. People’s memories are short. And Disney has spent billions to lower everyone’s expectations. It’s taken its toll.
You really have to wonder – what if Disney World consistented of nothing but what was built after 1984. How many would show up today to see Disney MGM Studio, to shop at Downtown Disney, to watch the ‘Stitch Encounter’ or to stay at All Stars Music? Would people go to the Magic Kingdom is 'Splash Moutain' was the biggest, most elaborate attraction there (think of a bigger one built since 1984).
Not many.
Walt Disney World exists today only because of what was built before – what was built to Real Disney standards. Pop and All Stars exist only because they are cheap. No one buys a single day ticket to Animal Kingdom – it’s a freebie when you buy a ticket to the Magic Kingdom. Downtown Disney exists only because the Magic Kingdom closes at 9pm instead of midnight these days.
WDW strip mines its past to support the weak efforts of its present. People drop thousands on a trip to see the Castle, not the Tree of Life. But the more Disney destroys what really attracts people, the less desirable the place becomes.
WDW has never had a slump in attendance as long and deep as what it is suffering today. It’s direct competition – Hawaii. National Parks, other destinations – are now beating all time records. Disney has yet to even come close to a “9/11 recovery”.
There’s a reason for it. It’s not going to be solved by chopping off bits of property and selling it to the highest bidder (it didn’t work at Euro Disney either). No budgeting scheme, no cleaver investment strategy, no brand management plan is going to do it.
It can only be solved through the age old art of showmanship. Amaze your audience and they will beat down the doors to throw money at you. Treat them like consumers to be squeezed, and you get a company that has to sell off 900 acres to prime real estate.