- Joined
- Aug 23, 1999
- Messages
- 5,475
Everyone is paying thousands. Just like the other.
I bet that's what coopersmom meant as well, tongue in cheek. No one's money is worth more than someone else's. Though SOME think so.
Everyone is paying thousands. Just like the other.
I bet that's what coopersmom meant as well, tongue in cheek. No one's money is worth more than someone else's. Though SOME think so.
IBy law, a guest can extend their room stay and not have to change rooms. The hotel will tell you that you can't, but all a guest has to do is stand their ground and they will not be moved. The word for this in hotels is "under-departed".
Last I was told, Hawaii is the only state where a guest can be forced out of a hotel room.
Everyone is paying thousands. Just like the other.
Everyone should be able to put in room requests as they wish. And NOT be lied to but accommodated if it is available. What is the big deal with making room requests? What if I want a room by an elevator, or a room far away from an elevator? Why is that such a big deal to request, especially paying top prices at WDW. I don't get why it is such a big deal.
I do mostly agree with you. However, there is a seperate department that handles reservations when you have a medical need for a certain type of room. So that is the route people need to go if they have to have a ground floor room because they use a scooter, or whatever room type fits with what their challenges might be. Though I do think Disney could do a better job of getting that information out there.
I also don't think connecting rooms are a need for larger families. If you have 2 adults you can split up into 2 rooms without the inner door. It is way more convenient to have connecting doors, but it isn't truly a need.
Because EVERYONE doing it (or a LOT of people) is a logistical nightmare! Trying to accommodate person A because person B wants this and person C will not tolerate that is a LOT of man-hours. Nevermind persons D-Z! I'm sure people will still make requests. Nothing wrong w/ that, but limiting them will eb a GOOD thing,
Welcome to the service industry! Do not go into hospitality if accommodating people is a PIA! This is not public school or prison. This is (supposedly) a high end resort, right?
This is Disney Marketing you to buy DVC![]()
Um, without connecting rooms I would not be staying at a WDW resort. I don't want to sleep with my kid -- I want to sleep with my husband with my kids in the next room, easily accessible with a connecting door.
Nothing on vacation is a necessity. The vacation itself is not a necessity. If wdw stops accommodating requests we will simply stay somewhere else. The customer service declines, so does attendance and CMs get laid off. DVC becomes worth less and less for resale. WDW becomes worse as a Disney vacation destination for everyone. See the domino affect?
Nope. Because the same exact people don't always go to WDW. There are always newbies planning a trip, so if Disney wants to tweak how they do things, the newbies won't know anything was ever different. It is not a finite pool of guests they are drawing from.
And as you say--sleeping with your hubby and not your kids is a want. Not a need. So you are free to either choose an accomodation that will hold you all in one space--DVC unit or a suite--or you can get 2 rooms knowing as you do that asking for a connecting room is all you can do. You cannot demand them or have a 100% expectation of getting them.
I also think this is just another example of how some people get greedy and ruin it for everyone. Apparently it is just not enough to get the room type you booked, you have to be able to make 8 requests and expect to get them all met. Too much of this nonsense and Disney puts their foot down. No great suprise really.
So WDW is placing all of it's expectations of revenue on new people and no returning guests? Smart business strategy.
I don't really care because I do not expect to return to WDW until the construction mess is over, about 2-3 years from now. And we will not be staying onsite because of the poor accommodations across the board -- not worth it. I'm just commenting on how ridiculously low-grade their service and merchandise has become.
No, not no returning guests. Just the majority being new guests. And those new people won't remember the good old days where you could make requests and then throw a fit because the word request wasn't clearly enough defined. It is sad that so many people didn't get it that Disney had to do what they did.
No, not no returning guests. Just the majority being new guests. And those new people won't remember the good old days where you could make requests and then throw a fit because the word request wasn't clearly enough defined. It is sad that so many people didn't get it that Disney had to do what they did.
Newbies and those of us returning guests who don't give a rat's rear end where we are placed in the resort and are just happy and grateful to be there.![]()
Why are you so grateful? You are paying to be there, right? Are they giving you a free vacation? Or do you mean you are grateful to be alive and able to afford the vacation? That cannot be attributed to Disney, though. They are not in charge of your health or livelihood.
Shouldn't it be the other way around? Disney being grateful you have been such a loyal, returning customer who is buying their product and keeping them in business?
Gratitude is a wonderful quality to have.
Entitlement is not.