Ms Bibbidi
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 21, 2022
- Messages
- 1,246
.
Last edited:
There is good reason to be leary of Chapek's administration. He is purely a data guy and is burning up the trust of Disney's biggest fans.I certainly hope so. But I'm kind of an Eeyore when it comes to the Chapek administration handling of matters when prioritizing (or non-prioritizing) annual passholders vis-a-vis ticketed or on-site guests. The past handling is just dripping with contempt towards locals and passholders in general from the per-capita spend being such a big talking point, shorting the passholder buckets in favor of ticketed or resort guests, allowing on-site passholders to have length of stay so they can plan trips while throttling off-site guests with three to five measley reservations, killing the ability to do any long-term planning, being last in line for dining reservations and ride reservations because of the 3 to 5 reservation limits, etc.
The real item they have to get rid of is annual passholders being limited to 3 to 5 reservation holds at a time. It is impossible to do any planning months or weeks in advance. So, we get left behind. Always. Now this -- taking away the prime morning hours when the weather is nicer.
I asked why would Disney want to make it attractive to stay off-site. The truth is they won't. Even if every room is booked. If every room is booked consistently, they will build more rooms. If every room is booked, they won't need more AP holders. The parks are jammed right now. It may be tough for my AP friends to hear this, but they don't need AP holders right now. That is why they are not for sale except for a highly restrictive FL resident pass. Eventually that will change, but until then expect more of the same.Because even if they sell every single hotel room and all DVC units are occupied, it still is not enough to fill the parks.
They had those fall 2019 called mid-day magic those at least started with admission at noon. They were available in 2,3, and 4 day tickets.I might be wrong, but I seem to remember talk about a year ago or so - rumors of a new ticketing option in which people could buy cheaper park tickets that only let you in for the afternoon. As far as I know, this never happened.
Maybe this AP rumor is the first iteration (or revival) of that?
Given the lack of transparency with the reservation system, there could be far fewer ressies available for full day AP reservations. Do we put it past Disney to do this?Edited my post since I misunderstood the post. So this sounds to me like they're going to add an afternoon/evening admission option rather than make it so AP holders can't enter for a full day at all. That doesn't sound that bad but I do wonder like everyone else how this will impact those staying onsite and/or DVC members that have an AP.
I don't love making the park reservation system even more complicated though.
I'm no fan of the Park Pass system but I do think there are ways where it can help both management and guests.If they already know the ebb and flow (which I’m assuming they do with all the data collected from magic bands over the years), why do they need park reservations at all to predict where they need resources? They should already know this.
Right now, pass holders are getting priority over day guests. Guest spending has always been a huge metric for Disney, so that's nothing new.Their whole explanation for requiring them is hooey and is purely to control the number of ideal customers vs thrift guests in the park, overtime and to squeak by with the smallest amount of cast members that they can manage.
Since that can mean an empty park or a what feels like a crowded park I couldn't answer the question. Disney decides just what "at capacity" means. I wish I had been at MK on Memorial Day when it was at capacity according to Disney instead of during close to mid-May when it was also at capacity. The crowds were completely different, my days were much more crowded than a Holiday day was.I realize Park Pass gains the most attention when parks reach maximum capacity and are deemed unavailable.
But consider this: since Park Pass began, has anyone ever been in Magic Kingdom at noon on a day when it is "full", and thought to themselves "I really wish Disney would eliminate Park Pass so that even more people could visit MK today"?
Since that can mean an empty park or a what feels like a crowded park I couldn't answer the question. Disney decides just what "at capacity" means. I wish I had been at MK on Memorial Day when it was at capacity according to Disney instead of during close to mid-May when it was also at capacity. The crowds were completely different, my days were much more crowded than a Holiday day was.
But that "self regulation" created both pros and cons for the guest population as a whole. Guests had absolutely no idea what they would find when they arrive at a park. And hopping to another destination because DHS was "really full" is easier said than done. Impossible for people who don't have park hopping ability.But in the olden days it's quite possible that would have been the opposite and someone choosing to go in mid-May when it's normally in between spring break and when kids get out of school would see lower crowds than a Holiday time. Before guests could self-regulate when they wanted to go and where, with the park reservation system that is out of their control.
And you've spoken to exactly what people liked, you could turn around and go to another park (even just looking at the parking lot or the lines for security which you could do without a park hopping ticket). As is right now you're locked until at least 2pm if you have a park hopping ticket. A guest could also decide they preferred another park on a specific day such as looking at the weather, hard to watch Fanstasmic! if it's pouring rain for the whole day. Weather is totally unpredictable and yet there's a smidgen of flexibility for someone without a park reservation system.But that "self regulation" created both pros and cons for the guest population as a whole. Guests had absolutely no idea what they would find when they arrive at a park. And hopping to another destination because DHS was "really full" is easier said than done. Impossible for people who don't have park hopping ability.
When a day is at capacity it's at capacity for all ticket holders including AP holders. That's the point. Whatever formula for each day is up to Disney to decide. Hence when you asked the question "I really wish Disney would eliminate Park Pass so that even more people could visit MK today" it's hard to answer that because at capacity doesn't mean packed to the gills. It means whatever Disney wants it to mean.I would hypothesize that the current reservation system has a lot to do with those variations. A day heavily weighted toward MYW ticket holders arriving at 9am is going to seem a lot busier than a day when Passholders have taken a lot of the reservation spots, arriving later in the day. Perhaps this procedural change is an attempt to correct that.
It's a combination of what Disney wants it to mean and what sort of experience guest actions produce.When a day is at capacity it's at capacity for all ticket holders including AP holders. That's the point. Whatever formula for each day is up to Disney to decide. Hence when you asked the question "I really wish Disney would eliminate Park Pass so that even more people could visit MK today" it's hard to answer that because at capacity doesn't mean packed to the gills. It means whatever Disney wants it to mean.
I mean honestly I don't. I can see them doing this. I think they're going to more so "punish" local APs and APs staying offsite rather than those with a hotel stay. Chapek has said in the past that APs are not as valuable a guest as day guests so it's possible.Given the lack of transparency with the reservation system, there could be far fewer ressies available for full day AP reservations. Do we put it past Disney to do this?
I think we're simultaneously talking about the same thing and yet different things if that makes sense.It's a combination of what Disney wants it to mean and what sort of experience guest actions produce.
Assume for a moment that Disney caps MK attendance at 50k on two separate days, and both have reached reservation capacity. Guests will have vastly different experiences depending upon whether 40k people are actually in the park at 10am vs 20k in the park. There is some logic in creating additional layers so that they can identify when people intend to arrive. Whether or not it turns into an administrative nightmare for the guest remains to be seen.
My point is that with Park Pass, the number of guests should be about the same on both days. What differs is when/how those crowds choose to visit the park, and thus how it impacts the whole. Again, if 40k people show up in the first hour--and stay the majority of the day--the park is going to look and feel very busy. But if only 20k show up in the first hour--with the rest scattered throughout the day--the park will look and feel much less busy.I think we're simultaneously talking about the same thing and yet different things if that makes sense.
What I was responding to is your question about being in an a no park reservations available day in MK and pondering if I would be okay with Disney letting in more people. Well answering that question isn't something in the control of the guests because on one day it could be much more crowded than another day despite both days being no park reservations available all because of how many Disney decides is good.
Surely they can track many long term trends, but I'm not sure how well that applies toward predicting the future. We've all had those park days when things felt busier or slower than anticipated. You referenced a mid-May day at the MK that was "more crowded than a Holiday." Regarding that day, I see two possibilities:As far as identify when people intend to arrive they already know this. They've been gathering data for nearly 10 years now on MBs and they've been able to continue to keep up with cell phone data via the MDE app in conjunction or in lieu of MBs if the guest didn't have MB.
The last AP I owned was the Epcot after 4 pass.I mean honestly I don't. I can see them doing this. I think they're going to more so "punish" local APs and APs staying offsite rather than those with a hotel stay. Chapek has said in the past that APs are not as valuable a guest as day guests so it's possible.
I do think having an option for a ticket where you can only enter at 4 pm isn't a bad idea. Other Disney parks such as the ones in Japan have tickets like this and they're half off from the regular full day ticket price. I'm waiting to see how that works for APs though, if the rumor is true.