mmackeymouse
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 15, 2008
- Messages
- 2,855
I didn't want to hijack the existing
The AP thread got me thinking on the AP price hikes' reasoning being crowd control, which I don't necessarily think is true. BUT...it got me thinking. With getting rid of NE tickets and hiking up AP tickets and current price structure....it feels like that all flies in the face of crowd control.
1 or 2 or 3 day passes are astronomical per day. And, as we all know, it's on a sliding scale. So, it is designed for someone with a 3 day pass to say, "Oh, it's not much more; I'll get the 5 day pass." or the person with the 5 day pass to say, "Oh, it's not much more; I'll get the 7 day pass." So, the sliding scale is designed to encourage people to be in the park more days. So, a family there for a week who was going to spend maybe 2 days in the park, spends 5 because they can. So, if their point is to thin out crowds, their pricing makes it so people are in the parks more days than maybe originally intended.
I would say to lower the 1 and 2 day tickets so that the people who only want to go 1 or 2 days go those days they want to, rather than crowding up the parks on additional days, just so they can get their money's worth. Now I understand that by pricing single day tickets too low, the swarms of non-AP locals and day visitors would be a nightmare so....how about, low single day pricing for resort guests only? I know a number of people, my family included, who go to Disney annually or every 2 or 3 years that only want to go to the parks for maybe 2 or 3 days, but because of the pricing, end up usually going with a 5 day pass and then going, so they get their value out of it. Now, yes, this is great for dollar signs, BUT if Disney's purpose is to thin the crowds, it doesn't make sense.
By getting rid of NE tickets and jacking up AP ticket prices, as well as the huge prices on single day tickets, they are going to price out the resort-leaning Disney visitors, and you know what's going to replace them? Visitors with intentions to go EVERY day all the days. Again, good for the bottom line, but if the idea is crowd control, they would actually be creating more crowds, because they have priced out the park-goers that go a minimal amount.
I don't have an answer...I think I am as perplexed as just about everyone.
The AP thread got me thinking on the AP price hikes' reasoning being crowd control, which I don't necessarily think is true. BUT...it got me thinking. With getting rid of NE tickets and hiking up AP tickets and current price structure....it feels like that all flies in the face of crowd control.
1 or 2 or 3 day passes are astronomical per day. And, as we all know, it's on a sliding scale. So, it is designed for someone with a 3 day pass to say, "Oh, it's not much more; I'll get the 5 day pass." or the person with the 5 day pass to say, "Oh, it's not much more; I'll get the 7 day pass." So, the sliding scale is designed to encourage people to be in the park more days. So, a family there for a week who was going to spend maybe 2 days in the park, spends 5 because they can. So, if their point is to thin out crowds, their pricing makes it so people are in the parks more days than maybe originally intended.
I would say to lower the 1 and 2 day tickets so that the people who only want to go 1 or 2 days go those days they want to, rather than crowding up the parks on additional days, just so they can get their money's worth. Now I understand that by pricing single day tickets too low, the swarms of non-AP locals and day visitors would be a nightmare so....how about, low single day pricing for resort guests only? I know a number of people, my family included, who go to Disney annually or every 2 or 3 years that only want to go to the parks for maybe 2 or 3 days, but because of the pricing, end up usually going with a 5 day pass and then going, so they get their value out of it. Now, yes, this is great for dollar signs, BUT if Disney's purpose is to thin the crowds, it doesn't make sense.
By getting rid of NE tickets and jacking up AP ticket prices, as well as the huge prices on single day tickets, they are going to price out the resort-leaning Disney visitors, and you know what's going to replace them? Visitors with intentions to go EVERY day all the days. Again, good for the bottom line, but if the idea is crowd control, they would actually be creating more crowds, because they have priced out the park-goers that go a minimal amount.
I don't have an answer...I think I am as perplexed as just about everyone.