godisneygo
Earning My Ears
- Joined
- Jun 30, 2007
- Messages
- 2
Has anyone encountered any "less then truthful" kiosk people at Disneyland for the Disney Vacation Club?
Has anyone encountered any "less then truthful" kiosk people at Disneyland for the Disney Vacation Club?
Has anyone encountered any "less then truthful" kiosk people at Disneyland for the Disney Vacation Club?

The announcement for California, if it happens, could be related to the rework of parts of one of the existing properties into DVC accomodations, similiar to what has been done with AKL / AKV.
My sources tell me that that one is number 2 behind the new Contemporary Villas ( 15 stories worth ) annd before the Hawai'i one.
The property in question was built with the intention of converting some of the upper floors into DVC accomodations.
I will say one thing about the salesperson who spoke with my hubby. I had ordered the video online, and instead of just sending it, they called and did what DH felt was a fairly hard sell on him. The main thing they talked to him about was the international properties, went on and on about all the non-WDW places we could use our points on.
That got him quite psyched about it.
And then we got the Dreams book with the points charts in it, and we saw how incredibly "expensive" all those other places were, and it was quite a big letdown, because he'd gotten very happy to think of traveling. We just don't plan on owning enough to do many of those other properties, even with banking and borrowing.
So that's the one hard-sell we encountered.
But that wasn't at a kiosk. I'm actually quite hoping to run into a DVC kiosk person during our trip to DL in September!![]()

We found the people at the kiosks very factual. The one that finally did set us up for a presentation was very clear that there weren't any fancy giveaways, just a couple of fastpasses. They all suggested that a presentation was the best way to get all our questions answered.
What I also liked is that they didn't come out of the kiosk and try to approach you - they always waited for you to come in to show interest first. Which was a big contrast to some of the other timeshare booths in the area outside WDW, who were very aggressive when we were walking by shopping. That attitude gave me a very good feeling about DVC.
I also support the comment that they really open up once they know you own. We had one CM in one of the Downtown Disney booths spend 20 minutes describing a great day you could have at WDW without setting foot inside a theme park.
No, but I'm wondering what the point of your thread is.Has anyone encountered any "less then truthful" kiosk people at Disneyland for the Disney Vacation Club?

What did he think was "expensive" about the exchanges? IT is usually the same as a 1 or 2 bedroom would cost you at WDW. Unless you are talking about the concierge collection, and yes, they are expensive. I would never consider them too much though when a week's exchange is possible.
(I've been talking too much recently, so I had to justify this blather with the "I've been asked" bit, LOL)Do you have their marketing Dream book? If so, look in the back.
I'm looking at it right now, and yes, i suppose that part of it is the Concierge collection that just BLASTED us out of the picture. We're not planning on the 160 point purchase up front, we plan to start TINY through resale, and until our family grows we plan on a studio.
Then turning pages and looking at the World Passport collection, even 124 points for a week in a one bedroom, low season 2007, that's still more than we would care to use, even if we had that with banking and borrowing, and we KNOW we would just want to pay cash to travel if we would have to give up 3 years of itsy vacations to get just one week.
Adventurer Collection made us LOL at 166 points per 1st and 2nd passenger in low season for an Alaskan cruise on a line that isn't our fave, and etc etc etc.
Comparing a 4 weekday (hubby works over the weekends so we always travel mid-week) stay in a studio, in the lowest season (can't remember the lingo, just put the book down), at OKW, and what points that would generally entail, and compare it to even the low season things in the Dream book, and you can see where it was much more than DH was expecting after the big talk-up about ALL the travel from the person on the phone.
HOWEVER this was not a person at a kiosk as I mentioned in my first post, it was someone on the phone after we'd requested the DVD, and I only talked more about it b/c I was asked.(I've been talking too much recently, so I had to justify this blather with the "I've been asked" bit, LOL)
OK, but this is a completely different scenario than most DVC owners - there are not many who own only a tiny contract and consider the cost of anything over 8-10 points a night for a studio in low season to be "expensive." I'm not quarreling with your plan, because of course the reason we all like DVC is because it's flexible enough to fit almost anyone's vacation plans, but I think it was your DH's expectations that were totally out of line, not the DVC rep.
I agree, Liz. When you contact a timeshare sales company for information, you are ASKING them to contact you. DVC sales people are very soft sell compared to others in the timeshare industry. Bumbershoot, the tiny contract comment kind of goes around why DVC has a minimum point sales agreement. A timeshare is not realizing it's full benefit if you don't own enough points to take advantage of those benefits. Since 160 points is needed for an II exchange, that is and should be the minimum ownership requirement. I'm one who wonders why DVC has not tried to prevent the ownership of less than minimum contracts. It doesn't really seem fair that someone who owns 25 points total should get the same benefits as someone who ones the minimum of 160 and upwards to 5000 points.
Besides that, if you are only planning to own that "tiny" contract, then maybe you are better off paying the higher rack rates for value rooms for your trips. There doesn't seem to be much point in owning if you are only going to use 4 weekdays and assume you are staying in an OKW studio in low season all the time. The real point of DVC ownership is missed in that case. The true value of none of those features. No need to blast the program when you are trying to beat the system.
I really don't see the big deal of 124 points for a week in a 1 bedroom. In value season at OKW its 160 points for 7 nights. I just assumed the kiosk people are just there to set up appointments. We passed the one at VWL and a older couple was getting the "dog&pony" with the book and mentioned "WE LOVE OUR DVC", got afrom the sales person as the couple decide to book their tour.