- Joined
- Nov 15, 2008
- Messages
- 45,048
It will be very interesting to see how Riviera pans out. I for one am not a great fan (but as I say never stayed so my opinion could change) but that is a personal decision and there is a DVC for everyone. The resale restrictions still put me off- whether they are putting people off generally though, or just people who know and care about such matters remains to be seen. The sales are said to be record for December, and that healthy sales may or may not continue- I would caution it did open December and the only other resort to open December was Old Key West- so if it was not the biggest selling December, something would perhaps be seriously wrong as there is bound to be a lot of pent up demand who wanted to see it first, and of course the huge media events etc all over Youtube etc. If that was paid for advertising, I dread to think how much it would have cost. They are also pushing it very hard- the hardest sales push I have personally witnessed at WDW- lots of posters etc- but I think I underestimated why it will probably sell so well.
It also has a massive advantage initially in that a large proportion of people, at least staying on property and many off property guests will ride the Skyliner out of necessity or curiosity and where does it go- straight through Riviera. So whilst it is easy to avoid say Copper Creek if staying on property, many are taken straight into Riviera- that may prove in the long run to be an amazing sales tool. The footfall or just Gondola view of visitors who do not own must be massive compared to virtually any other resort- and seeing is selling. I think many of us may have underestimated what a sales tool having thousands of non owners travel through the resort daily is- imagine all those staying at Caribbean Beach, having just dropped $5k on a vacation, learning they can make the upgrade to Riviera and go for 50 years for a lot less, whilst Riviera is rubbed in their face every time they go to Epcot. Or the visitor who stays in a villa as they see the room rates too high, to be going straight through Riviera on their Skyline ride from HWS to Epcot and learning when they buy in (which they can do for a monthly cost) the daily cost of those Tower Studios is on a par with the villa they are in. The more I think about it, the more I think this will drive a crazy number of sales until the resort sells out.
So it is way too early to say how it will do on resale. And I would also caution, just because it sells well direct in the first years does not necessarily mean it will be popular long run, especially with the restrictions. But maybe DVD were correct and the restrictions will not affect it- who knows!
i think you are right about the Skyliner and it giving Riveria an audience. Cash rates are pretty steep, even with discounts, and what a great way to get people thinking.
I also think that as more people stay there, you could have people who pick up RIV points resale, depending on price, in a few years, who want it to add to other points they have that trade.