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- Nov 15, 2008
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There's an interesting distinction, DVD specific or Disney in general. Disney is making a ton of money from loyal customers returning each year to spend in parks shops and restaurants. But I guess we're (resale buyers) nothing but a nuisance to DVD. But I think the point xdan is making is that DVD already sold the contracts resale buyers now own. If they don't want them to remain in the hands of resale buyers they have the right to buy them back themselves. Imposing restrictions after passing and waiving ROFR seems fundamentally wrong and unfair to me.
DVD is who I am referring to. Disney has nothing to do with DVC perks other than being willing to negotiate with DVD to enter into a contract to offer something.
Case in point are the APs…DPEP is in charge of those and they do not value DVC owners any more than they do all the other bucket of guesrs who want them. No matter what DVD might want, they can’t force that division to offer them.
Of course, someone paid DVD for the product but all the perks and extras continue to be paid for, in some way, by DVD. And, someone who buys on the resale market gets exactly the same guarantee to use their product at their home resort as someone who buys direct. So, DVD has no control over that. So they don’t care if the contract changes hands. But perks are not part of the contract..and that is the key.
Everyone who buys DVD should know that perks can be eliminated, whether you are resale or not. I bought when free valet parking was a perk and within a few months it was gone. There was no grandfathering or anything…why? Because it was a contract with a third party and the cost was no longer something DVD wanted to pay for in order to give the perk.
In the end, DVD has decided it will only offer an incidental benefits program…and that is what TOTWL was…to those who buy from them.
Another way to think of it is that DVD is not selling you the perks with the contract. They are not part of the POS, they can’t be.
They are giving them to you, as a person, and thus only you get to use them. Just like some airline credits when you have to cancel…only the person who booked the original trip can use that credit…it can’t be given to someone else. It’s the same thing…why should the airline care who uses it and sits in the sit?
They do because they want the other person to buy their own seat and not use yours.
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