raidermatt
Be water, my friend.
- Joined
- Sep 26, 2000
- Messages
- 6,856
You know, Pixar was a publically traded company, and they had a very different way of making movies and a different overall business philosophy. No sequels, hight quality, innovation, etc.
True, they were bought by Disney, but now who is actually running Disney animation? Pixar, and they are running it the Pixar way, which of course was once the Disney way.
So don't tell me Disney has to do things the way they do because they are a publically traded company. All Wall Street cares about is that you make money. If Disney told them the best way to make money was to do some things differently than they currently do, Wall Street would give them the chance to prove it.
A reasonable philosophy, sure. But it doesn't account for one thing, which is how much it will cost you to get customers back if you go over that line and lose them.
Once they leave, you can't just go back to the old way and expect them to come back. You'll have to spend more in order to change their habits back. Walt knew that, but it's not like he invented the concept. It's a lesson many have learned the hard way.
The question is, will Disney cross that line with too many people?
Attendance wasn't exactly booming last quarter. Up 4% at WDW, flat at DLR.
True, they were bought by Disney, but now who is actually running Disney animation? Pixar, and they are running it the Pixar way, which of course was once the Disney way.
So don't tell me Disney has to do things the way they do because they are a publically traded company. All Wall Street cares about is that you make money. If Disney told them the best way to make money was to do some things differently than they currently do, Wall Street would give them the chance to prove it.
As for the ticket hike, etc.....just look at anything else that's popular. They will keep raising the prices until people stop coming. That's what I would do if I ran the business.
A reasonable philosophy, sure. But it doesn't account for one thing, which is how much it will cost you to get customers back if you go over that line and lose them.
Once they leave, you can't just go back to the old way and expect them to come back. You'll have to spend more in order to change their habits back. Walt knew that, but it's not like he invented the concept. It's a lesson many have learned the hard way.
The question is, will Disney cross that line with too many people?
Attendance wasn't exactly booming last quarter. Up 4% at WDW, flat at DLR.