freediverdude
Was very touched by the Tapestry of Dreams parade
- Joined
- Jun 16, 2002
- Messages
- 2,033
Slightly different issue but this brought to mind another Disney topic.
Years ago, there used to be a lot of really unique shopping experiences at Disney, both in the parks and in the hotels. I strongly suspect that many of these locations didn't bring in a ton of money but they enhanced the guest experience with novel offerings that couldn't be found anywhere else. The theory was to look at the overall retail operation of the park as a whole so if one store did great and another did not so well but was a guest favorite, that was okay. At some point, from what I've heard, they started focusing on each store standing on its own. That's when we started to lose those unique places that weren't really pulling their own weight. The Liberty Square silver shop went away. The boutiques on Main Street disappeared and the Emporium expanded to swallow them all. Stuff like that. So that square footage is surely generating more income now but the guest experience has been homogenized and diluted.
I too think this might play into the in-park per guest spending, rather than just being about higher prices. 10-15 years ago I used to come home with hundreds of dollars worth of souvenirs each trip (often on only a 2 or 3 day trip). Often I would come home with about 10 new pins, a Mickey plush or two in all those different outfits, a t-shirt or two, plus whatever special was being sold at the time (anyone remember Pal Mickey? Or the series of interactive light-up pins for 100 years of magic?).
Fast forward to the Emporium era, and most of the time I walk into a shop and look and say, "Eh, nothing I really have to have in here" and leave. Nowadays I come home with usually $100 worth or less, mostly just a t-shirt or two. That's not budget issues, it's disinterest in the merchandise.