LAMickey14
Earning My Ears
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2014
- Messages
- 36
When buying resale it should only include the resort you buy into and I believe it is moving that way. Because direct cost more and should include more benefits than resale.
When buying resale it should only include the resort you buy into and I believe it is moving that way. Because direct cost more and should include more benefits than resale.
I think the structural decisions they made about Poly made it less "prime" than the point cost they assigned would need it to be.that's with a prime property like the Poly.
The issue isn't whether it impacts us. It might, but that's not the point.
The point is what this says about how DVC sees us.
I understand that business is business. But. It's also good business to treat your customers like you value them. That's especially true with Disney, a brand associated with treating its customers magically. I suppose that's just legacy now.
It is becoming almost amusing that there's so much gnashing of teeth here when virtually everyone howling is NOT impacted by the new rules for resales going forward. If you already own, you are NOT impacted by the new stuff.
It impacts in terms of the resale value of the contracts. I wouldn't buy a contract with the plan of selling it, but I literally had a contract sent for ROFR today. So now in addition to wondering if the value of the points just dropped 20%, I have to wonder if 10 years from now all we need are studios, will I be able to sell one of our contracts for a decent amount of money, or will I have to rent most of the points to get my money back, or will that be restricted more? I'd like to believe owning DVC isn't a risky investment---and while we've all been aware DVD could eliminate a lot of benefits, I guess I hadn't expected them to eliminate the DVC benefit category entirely, and I don't know what that means yet.
Bruce
The point is what this says about how DVC sees us.
No, resale buyers are not new customers. They are replacement customers. New customers buy retail.This is DVD and Disney's huge mistake here: resale buyers aren't competition, they're new customers.
1. As new DVC members, resale buyers are probably far more enthusiastic about coming and spending money than the person they bought from.
2. They're far less likely to rent out their points than the former owners, and that means less competition in that market.
3. Many owners end up buying add on points, and many do that direct. I did.
I bought BCV resale. I would not have justified buying direct. But. After being a member and using and enjoying the product, I DID buy direct, a fixed week at Poly. I almost certainly wouldn't have bought resale with these restrictions in place.
So, had these restrictions applied to me, they would have cost Disney/DVC years of APs and TIW, 8 trips and counting to WDW, a 168 point direct contract, dozens of meals and other expenses, etc etc.
I wasn't their competition when I bought resale. As a direct result, I've been their customer to the tune of tens of thousands of dollars. That's just me.
Disney/DVC has this backwards, and it's a damned shame. It's a shame for us. It's a shame for future DVC members. It's a shame on Disney/DVC.
No, resale buyers are not new customers. They are replacement customers. New customers buy retail.
This is yet another example of Disney valuing new and once-in-a-lifetime customers over loyal, on-going customers.
This will not happen.
We shall see, stranger things have happen.
As I was in 2011, I am once again concerned about the resale value, which was a major selling point my Guide brought forth during the discussions of purchasing. I really did not see that big of an impact from 2011 and personally think this is really not a huge deal to most involved. I seldom use a discount from DVC that I don't get from having an AP. Most of the rest of it seems pointless. I will personally sit & wait to see how it impacts the after market and go from there.
As to how Disney views me, I have no illusion other than I am a source of income to their purse. The way things have been going recently nothing that Disney does winds up hitting them in the purse or in their park and room occupancy statistics.
Let me rephrase. Based on what I understand about DVC, it can't legally happen.
The only real important change from this is the lack of AP discount. And that is a BIG deal to me. This is worse than 2011 IMO.