Themeparksandy1981
TS Member
I think there pricing is stupid like if I go with my wife and 2 kids aged 10 and 3 I have to pay £144 and petrol and parking brings it up to £200 for a day out before u include food and drink.
Imagine how annoyed people would be if they bought a 1hr ticket and then found that it’s a busy day and after queuing up they only get to go on one or two rides. Timed tickets work for things like entry to a soft play park, not a theme park where queues and the amount of actual rides you could go on would be very unpredictable.
It could easily be The full day tickets are all that’s advertised, but on the day deals are released through local advertising staff / banners on the promenade, digital advertising which can be accessed quickly and relatively cheaply@Rob F another one of those situations where if you bring additional people in for that promotion = great, if you shift your main crowd to an evening ticket that's not good news.
It could easily be The full day tickets are all that’s advertised, but on the day deals are released through local advertising staff / banners on the promenade, digital advertising which can be accessed quickly and relatively cheaply
If the park saw just 100 or so £10-20 tickets with potential additional spend and upsell extensions to timed access, food drinks. Its better than just the income from 400 people on park at £40, whom likely booked before they even arrived in Blackpool.
Im not suggesting advertising on the website etc
I'm suggesting on the day promos to get people through the door, am I suggesting it should run every day ? No.
But from an economic point of view it seems the beach needs additional revenue when times are hard for everyone, yet outside of the park its very busy. The park need to access some of that revenue potential when the full day price doesn't appeal to the majority of visitors to the resort.
Its simple business in 2022 adapt and take the revenue potentially there or be left behind to fail
Meanwhile Towers got 90 mins on The Smiler, 65 on Wicker Man, 60 on 13, 60 on Rita, rest of the coasters were 30+
You’ll generally find most seaside parks do wristband/tokens as the kind of guests will just want to wonder round, and possibly not spend all day their, especially if they are only in the area for the day or a couple of days.Meanwhile Towers got 90 mins on The Smiler, 65 on Wicker Man, 60 on 13, 60 on Rita, rest of the coasters were 30+
Just because POP only works for "proper" theme parks, I think it harms places like the PB. The mindset isn't there to spend full whack on entry for all members of a party. As much as Mandy wants people to be in the mindset of paying for a full day, if the market doesn't want it then the Beach will lose out.
You probably wouldn't be in Staines/Chessington/Alton/Ower randomly on a day out, but you'd be in Blackpool/Southend/Skegness/Ingoldmells on a day out and fancy a ride or 3. That's the difference and that's what PB fail to realise.
Cheeky bustard...another decade to go mate.I assume this is how @rob666 feels
Mhmm we believe you....Cheeky bustard...another decade to go mate.
Just.
I think there's some truth in this but it's worth reflecting on the same things that make it unaffordable for guests mean it's increasingly unaffordable for a family business to supply.In the end I think it just comes down to what people can afford and in the current climate people just can't afford to pay what pleasure beach are asking.
They have chosen the wrong time to ramp up their prices.
I think there's some truth in this but it's worth reflecting on the same things that make it unaffordable for guests mean it's increasingly unaffordable for a family business to supply.
Energy, staffing, F&B stock costs etc are all increasing at unprecedented levels.
I think there is probably consensus that the park need to respond to that, the debate is regarding how they do it.
Their current (I hesitate to use the word) strategy seems to be on less people paying more on the gate (where there is 100% margin) vs. people paying less on the gate to make it up on secondary spend (which has ever decreasing margins).
And as importantly ...I suppose the big question is, would they get twice as many paying guests if they charged half the price ?
And as importantly ...
- What is the revenue advantage from twice as many people ? Are you selling lots of food or just confiscating twice as many picnics ?
- In the current climate, what is the cost disadvantage in having twice as many people on park ?