I purchased AKL this past weekend on the Magic it was buy 100 points get 20 free for the lifetime of the timeshare, it worked out to $106 per point. I thought that was pretty good considering I paid $96 per point 3 years ago for BLT.
It's interesting to point out that this promotion bucks the typical timeshare trend of "it's never going to be less than it is right now". The fact of the matter is that with this pricing structure, AKV direct points purchased using this promotion were technically less expensive than AKV direct points purchased in the months prior. This is fairly rare, and I'm wondering what the reason for it is. Could AKV sales not be living up to expectations?
I have got to believe AKL has not lived up to expectations. It seems it has been for sale forever and has still not sold out. It has always sold for less than BLT, which sold much faster. I do not know what it is about AKL that does not make it attractive to buyers.It's interesting to point out that this promotion bucks the typical timeshare trend of "it's never going to be less than it is right now". The fact of the matter is that with this pricing structure, AKV direct points purchased using this promotion were technically less expensive than AKV direct points purchased in the months prior. This is fairly rare, and I'm wondering what the reason for it is. Could AKV sales not be living up to expectations?
I have got to believe AKL has not lived up to expectations. It seems it has been for sale forever and has still not sold out. It has always sold for less than BLT, which sold much faster. I do not know what it is about AKL that does not make it attractive to buyers.
I have got to believe AKL has not lived up to expectations. It seems it has been for sale forever and has still not sold out. It has always sold for less than BLT, which sold much faster.
I do not know what it is about AKL that does not make it attractive to buyers.
Interesting. I wonder why they would raise the purchase price (didn't it just go up?) if it wasn't selling well?
Your analogy does not quite work because BLT did increase in price while AKL and SSR did not, and in fact I think actually went down in price at one point. I remember a BLT price increase while AKL and SSR were selling for $99 per point."Selling well" is a deceptive term. Just because one product sells fewer units than another doesn't mean it is overpriced or should be branded a failure.
When McDonald's raises prices on its burgers, they don't just increase prices on the Big Mac because that's what they sell the most. Honda doesn't limit its price increases to just the top-selling Civic. Disney doesn't raise ticket prices for the Magic Kingdom alone.![]()
Your analogy does not quite work because BLT did increase in price while AKL and SSR did not, and in fact I think actually went down in price at one point. I remember a BLT price increase while AKL and SSR were selling for $99 per point.
Well AKL couldn't stay booked with cash guests so they turned the 5th floor into DVC rooms. Then they built Kidani and expected that magically people would love the location???
Bill
Interesting. I wonder why they would raise the purchase price (didn't it just go up?) if it wasn't selling well?
One reason that people have overlooked is that it is a built in call to action. Timeshares are mostly impulse buys and high pressure sales. Salespeople need to give people a reason to "act now" and an impending price increase is a huge motivator and a great sales tool for the salespeople.
One reason that people have overlooked is that it is a built in call to action. Timeshares are mostly impulse buys and high pressure sales. Salespeople need to give people a reason to "act now" and an impending price increase is a huge motivator and a great sales tool for the salespeople.
One reason that people have overlooked is that it is a built in call to action. Timeshares are mostly impulse buys and high pressure sales. Salespeople need to give people a reason to "act now" and an impending price increase is a huge motivator and a great sales tool for the salespeople.
I agree unless sales tactics have changed since I went through. DVC is the only timeshare I would have ever considered, so at least in my case the product sold itself.I've been to "high pressure timeshare sales presentations" before, but when going to the DVC Presentation, it was not the case at all for DVC. The staff were very friendly and casual and told us we had the entire week of our stay to decide (as we live in BC and can only buy when in the US from Disney direct). The price was the same in a week as it would have been if we bought that day. DVC doesn't need high pressured salespeople, the product sells itself!![]()
Prices go up when DVC feels it can get away with charging more.
I don't think it's always this arbitrary or simplistic.
In my opinion, the recent price increases are less about getting away with charging more and more about are softening the blow of the forthcoming GFV pricing.
I will patiently wait, and when this strategy fails I will buy it at the lower price, say if it falls into the $120's.Many considerations go into such a decision but ultimately it's about charging as much as possible to maximize profits.
Yes, VGF will be expensive. And it will be expensive because Disney feels there will still be buyers ready, willing and able to purchase even at a high price point.