So, they are giving their bloggers and friendly media a week to try to drum up enough demand that they can then throw in a ticket increase without cratering it. It probably is coinciding with all the announcements right now, although really, those boil down to Pandora opening on schedule, ROL finally opening, and MK swapping out fireworks shows - only one of those wasn't a practical certainty for summer, so not an epic amount of stuff when people are already speaking with their wallets and saying the prices are too high...
I'm betting if their numbers don't get better the next 7-10 days, there may not be a 2017 ticket increase...again, this is "leak the news through friendly media" and see the reaction in bookings and sales...if there is no frantic buying of old tickets and bookings of packages, there won't be a ticket increase, b/c if you can't sell the summer at current rates, you sure can't sell it at higher ones...
That being said I wonder if the sales of secondary ticket sellers like
Undercover Tourist are being tracked/reported back to Disney in advance of all this price increase chatter.
However I don't believe a company like Disney would seriously include that pre-sale data in the decision to increase prices. I think that decision was made months ago when the schedules for the new openings were firmed up. Disney is probably betting on a bump in attendance with the opening of Pandora et al. If there is a positive bump we will see an additional price increases next year. If there isn't enough of a bump then I believe that prices may have to hold steady because they are not helping to get people in the parks.
I have to say that I am not a fan of this constant up-sell, erosion of quality, pay more /get less mentality that is more and more in evidence in the parks. It's obvious to me that the focus is on increasing profits and not so much on the Disney Parks experience. I think that Pandora will be the last of the great, immersive efforts from creative. That's because Pandora was incubated before the emphasis was placed
so heavily on profits before show. Some people will point to Star Wars Land and say that's what is next but the priority has shifted away from greatness and more towards quick and cheap. There have been so many misfires lately that I lack the faith in parks management to wow us like in the past.
I suppose the good news is that the majority of people who go to a Disney Park have no understanding of this shift in the Disney legacy. They will see the high prices and have to make up their own minds if they are going to be brand loyal or if their visit is a one and done. Disney themselves bet big on this "Trip of a lifetime" concept in a recent ad campaign but based on the downward trend in attendance this approach was not successful to the extent needed. I feel that Disney is trading on their legacy and they are eroding the experience in the name of profit. This is unsustainable and it's really sad to watch.
So it all goes back to ticket prices and how much the "Market will bear". Economic factors contribute much of that. A Disney parks experience is super expensive so that, in and of itself, helps to keep people out. If you talk to people that have just returned from their first Disney trip the one thing they always mention is how costly it was and what a turn off that is. Yes the trip was nice but they have no interest or ability in spending that much money again.
With high prices and less and less of a Wow factor I don't see this current direction as being sustainable either among first time visitors or the Disney faithful. When you increase the price to the point where it is out of the reach of your customers, they go away. When you degrade the experience so that it no longer has the value expected, your customers go away. It's incredibly hard to build and maintain a legacy so it pains me to see all of these poor decisions, misfires and profit oriented moves happening today.
~NM