Brian Noble
Gratefully in Recovery
- Joined
- Mar 23, 2004
- Messages
- 18,359
My bet is no, given that human nature is what it is. In 2016, Consumer Reports wrote that the median age of a timeshare buyer was 39. Assuming that's still true (and there's no reason to think otherwise), today's 39-year-old has spent about half their life with Google being ubiquitous---the use of the word "google" as a verb dates back to 2006.Will the generation of kids growing up today change how they buy timeshares?
Yet timeshare sales don't seem to be slowing down. From where I sit, timeshare purchases are primarily qualitative, with just enough of a quantitative fig leaf to assuage the worst of the doubts. Are there exceptions? Sure, but the sales operation doesn't have to worry about exceptions, because they are by definition unusual.