Some rides also shut 1hr before the rest now and Valhalla is 2pm openingApparently Steeplechase opens at 12 now. One of the lower capacity rides where it's important to get on it early, and that always has a queue from opening.
What a pain.
Free entry came to an end in 2009.When did they change? The last time i went must have been mid 2000s, i was there for work so a group of us popped in and went on a few rides, that's what it's all about.
The locals really dont like her or what they have done to the park. But would be the first to shout out if it ever did closeFree entry came to an end in 2009.
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Calls for Blackpool Pleasure Beach to be free for entry
Blackpool Pleasure Beach is one of the leading amusement and theme parks in the UK with some thrilling rides to suit all agesblackpool.com
Yeah, making your own parts is mostly going to be a no go area for a lot of operators, they want to opperate the ride and have company x, who designs and makes the parts be liable for any flaws.They make their own parts for the older coasters.
A number of rides are listed, not just the Dipper.
They really should do this, they still have the ticket gates in place at their rides just making peoples day worse, it would litterally cost nothing to do and attract many more peopleI don't think it's difficult to understand what the public want, and who the audience is at Blackpool. It's multi-generational families where the spend is, and has always been.
FREE Entry for 0-3 Year Olds
FREE Over 65's Non-Riders Pass
£10 Standard Non-Rider Pass
Grandparents would love to come along for free and mind the bags or the younger children and have a day out, and they're likely to give out money for arcades, sweets and F&B too to the kids whilst mum and dad relax.
Include Pleasure Beach Express in that for the grandparents to go round with the kids on, and River Caves whenever it eventually re-opens earliest seems like 2027.
I would then just make one simple, marketable price point - £30 on Weekdays and £35 on weekends when booking online.
Otherwise you have to commit to a simple +10% on the gate fee which isn't too hard to swallow i.e £33 and £38.50. Even that few pounds will make a difference to people.
It just feels punishing to visit the promenade and fancy popping into BPB and see a £50 gate fee, it's enough to make an average GP family never even consider going again or checking online as they may not even realise the online prices, which again, vary so much it's confusing for recall.
I've spent tens of millions on social media ads in my job, and only ads with one clear marketable message work and stick. It is far too confusing for even us thoosies at times never mind the GP to even understand when purchasing online let alone discuss the cost of a visit via word of mouth.
BPB survives and thrives by catering to the biggest advantage it has in the entire UK theme park market for a park of it's size, which is family walk ins off the promenade. They have neglected these customers for years with this policy and now it's coming home to roost.
On the door afternoon tickets will cater to this for sure, but it needs to be concise and easy to understand. Whilst I'm for testing a decreasing hourly amount as I've even suggested myself, I think you could still just sell a singular afternoon ticket i.e 1pm-5pm (Nick Land 4pm close and adjust for late night riding days) for half the walk in price or a fraction above to still be reasonable but focus on day tickets i.e £20 weekday and £25 on the weekend where there's more supply and more demand to charge just over the half price point for afternoon walk ins.
Sorry, it survives, no thriving there since the millennium years, which were two whole decades ago....BPB survives and thrives ...
I don’t necessarily disagree, but the risk the park takes by introducing a non-rider pass and more pragmatic pay-per-ride again is that people who were paying full price might start paying less.I agree with most of what you’ve said Matt, but unless the non-rider pass cannibalises full priced entry, then revenue has to increase with that change.
Pick a day/period pre POP:- it’s turned out to be more lucrative to not have it, although it’s not clear exactly how the park would measure that.
I was giving you a back of cigarette packet method for a rough estimation, not an in-depth statistical analysis plan. Importantly I didn't just suggest a day, but a period.How would taking one random day pre-covid, and comparing it to one random day post-covid demonstrate whether removal of the walk around pass was more or less profitable?
Visitation has obviously changed considerably, but to make it even more inaccurate a comparison, so have spending habits. You’d be comparing apples with turkeys.
But there aren't. You can do it, you just have to control for them, which is why you'd comission data analysis. It is measurable.I think you’ve just described why there are too many variables to make a meaningful comparison. Hence my original point.