Originally Posted by MinnieGirl33
If I was someone who booked free DDP during the bounceback promo & then free DDP was offered to the general public I'd be pretty ticked.
They dangle the carrot, I part with money for my next vacation while I am on vacation then... ha-ha-ha... turns out you didn't really need to do that & WDW just earned interest on your money for how many months???
Credibility would go out the window for me.
I traveled in January of this year and was more than willing to pay the $200 deposit for the package, but unfortunately that offer had expired just days earlier.
I've been a very loyal Disney tourist for many years, as most of us here are. I didn't recieve a 40% code nor was I presented with a returning incentive. So what about people like me? (and I'm sure there are others in similar cases)
I am planning on returning in September for my brithday week (9/8) . At the moment it feels as if I'm getting "penalized." I spent thousands on a vacation days after the dinning option expired and wasn't lucky enough to recieve a 40% code. I would feel almost "kicked in the face" if a very nice deal wasn't released to EVERYONE for a time frame this fall.
In my mind... thats when credibility would go out that window.
Disney isn't trying to screw anybody here out of a deal by not offering them discounts. They're offering targeted discounts based on what they feel THEY need to do the greatest amount of business at prices that will contribute to their bottom line. If you didn't fall into that group, it's not personal. They're going to adjust their discount offerings from year to year based on the bookings they get.
Disney isn't trying to screw anybody here out of a deal by not offering them discounts. They're offering targeted discounts based on what they feel THEY need to do the greatest amount of business at prices that will contribute to their bottom line. If you didn't fall into that group, it's not personal.
I traveled in January of this year and was more than willing to pay the $200 deposit for the package, but unfortunately that offer had expired just days earlier.
I've been a very loyal Disney tourist for many years, as most of us here are. I didn't recieve a 40% code nor was I presented with a returning incentive. So what about people like me? (and I'm sure there are others in similar cases)
I am planning on returning in September for my brithday week (9/8) . At the moment it feels as if I'm getting "penalized." I spent thousands on a vacation days after the dinning option expired and wasn't lucky enough to recieve a 40% code. I would feel almost "kicked in the face" if a very nice deal wasn't released to EVERYONE for a time frame this fall.
In my mind... thats when credibility would go out that window.
Not to start an argument, but why would the bouncebackers need some sort of justification? Would they not be paying the same rack rate prices? (depending on time of year of course) The only difference is that some would have booked it early and some would have booked it later. Bouncebackers have their first picks of when and where to stay. If free dining was offered again, anyone who booked it then would just have to hope what they want is still available. If free dining was offered to the general public, I'd be really upset if I'm paying rack rate just as bouncebackers did and then get jipped on the free dining by having it altered somehow. It was the bouncebackers choice to book early, and there was never a guarantee that Disney wouldn't offer the promotion to the general public. It's not unusual for companies to offer "get it before the public does" deals. In fact, Disney has done promos like this before...i.e. Disney Visa cardholders have been able to book various promos before they were offered to the general public.I can understand your frustration....Personally I believe Disney can still offer free dining but modify it slightly so there is some difference in the promotion from those who got it through the bounceback program. Something to justify having those folks book trips earlier then planned. Maybe eliminate the snack credit, just something slightly different. That's just my opinion.
I was told after I booked the bounce back program in Dec that they had done extremely well with the promo and that they were not going to offer free dining except to those who signed up for the the bounce back promotion.
Not to start an argument, but why would the bouncebackers need some sort of justification? Would they not be paying the same rack rate prices? (depending on time of year of course) The only difference is that some would have booked it early and some would have booked it later. Bouncebackers have their first picks of when and where to stay. If free dining was offered again, anyone who booked it then would just have to hope what they want is still available. If free dining was offered to the general public, I'd be really upset if I'm paying rack rate just as bouncebackers did and then get jipped on the free dining by having it altered somehow. It was the bouncebackers choice to book early, and there was never a guarantee that Disney wouldn't offer the promotion to the general public. It's not unusual for companies to offer "get it before the public does" deals. In fact, Disney has done promos like this before...i.e. Disney Visa cardholders have been able to book various promos before they were offered he general public.
I'd bet $100(disney dollars of course heehee) that many Disney employees browse these sites for exactly these types of topics..Who is booked before a promotion, who is not going to book if there isnt a promotion, etc... and report findings to upper mgmt. Also like someone stated before if res sees alot of bookings in Sept what would be their incentive to offer something more to the public??
Think about it, if you really wanted to make a stink, the fact that they gave it to people in the UK and then not to give it to American's is really polarizing. Disney is an American company..I don't want to fight with the Brits, I hold an Irish passport myself,but really why give it to some and not others? It's about marketing, plain and simple. It's not all magic and Mickey, its corporate and money! That said we have no idea what they will do, but I expect we will know soon!
Personally, I don't understand how a free dining offer to the general public isn't "fair" to those who booked through the bounceback promotion. They got a guarantee that they would have free dining, their first choice of resorts, and at least 2 months advance notice of dates around which to schedule their ADR's. The rest of us are in the dark, guessing which dates might be available at various resorts, and trying to plan ADR's when we're unsure of dates, resorts or whether there will even be free dining. Being able to book a trip a couple of months earlier than the general public is in itself a bonus, so I don't get how allowing others to participate based on availability detracts from that. Most cruise lines offer a similar service--some sort of discount if you book your next cruise while you're actually on a cruise, and I've never heard anyone argue that it isn't fair to those who aren't on a cruise.
Now if Disney is projecting high enough occupancy rates that they don't feel they need to offer free dining to the general public, I can understand that. But it will be interesting to see what happens over the next few months if they don't. Will there be enough cancellations that we'll see another great offer akin to free dining or the 40% off sometime in May or June? I'd also be curious to find out how many of those bounceback bookings either have been or will be cancelled. You know, we're on vacation, having a great time, so sure we'd like to book our next trip! Then you get home, back to reality, and the vacation and holiday season bills start coming in and suddenly it doesn't seem like such a great idea. So while it initally looked like the promo did exceptionally well, once the cancellations started rolling in, the numbers don't look as good.