Now, let's see the counter-argument and I will gladly debate them, but all I have seen so far is snide remarks about the topic being somewhat pointless, meanwhile the pier takes custom that would otherwise be heading to BPB.
We've already done that. I've posted the argument and you have responded to it, the only conclusion being that we don't agree.
BPB have in place an all you can eat/drink deal. So let's say they hick up the prices of hot dogs to £12 each, bottles of Pepsi to a tenner, portions of fries to £8 and a burger to £7....unless you want onions in which case it's a rennes too. All done as an attempt to 'force' or should that be, demonstrate the value of the all you can eat pass, your thoughts guys?
It's an interesting comparison, but I don't think it works. Largely for two reasons:
1. If you're in Blackpool and you want to ride a large selection of rides or coasters of a certain magnitude the Pleasure Beach is the only game in town and rides are of course the core product at the park.
2. If you want to eat, that marketplace is a little different. The park is one of a number of operations - within five minutes walk you have access to a McDonalds, JDW's Velvet Coaster, Pablo's and a number of other options on the front of varying cuisines (and quality!).
Furthermore, you can't look at the park in a vacuum. If you compare the walk up price at the Pleasure Beach vs. Alton or the other Merlin parks, it's fairly robust - the online price too.
With food, people have a perception of how much a portion of fries costs in the outside world. The all you can eat proposition is not designed to have universal take up because its desired audience have already dropped ~£27 on a wristband, therefore to try and force it upon guests would be insane - your per cap would drop through the floor because people wouldn't eat, or would eat elsewhere.
Importantly, rides largely have a fixed cost base irrespective of the number of riders (made only slightly different by running more or less trains + associated staff) - one of the biggest challenges in the industry.
There is no additional cost associated with selling someone a wristband - food doesn't work the same way, there are lots of costs associated with the ordering & buying the raw materials, delivery, refrigeration, cooking and serving of the finished product.
For me, all you can eat is an insane proposition at a theme park. I'd be interested to know what the take up rate for it is - must be fairly low (I'll straw poll my Pleasure Beach folks). All you can ride (a wristband) has take up in the high 90s - so you don't want to mess with that.
Looking forward to the discussion and debate.