GooseOnTheLoose
TS Member
- Favourite Ride
- Ug Bugs
Merlin is not majority owned by LEGO. KIRKBI is the largest shareholder, with 50%, but they do not own a majority.The Merlin today ia not the same Merlin, 20 years having multiple staff restructures and the fact has had multiple versions whether a public entity to being majority owned by Lego
There has been some form of group annual pass for at least the past 26 years. Hardly a house of cards.They’ve built this stupid illusion for themselves, thinking they can have a subscription business model, and it’s a house of cards.
The breakdown is nonsensical as it attaches "cost" to value added propositions which have no actual cost.Just for me, to describe the issue.
Platinum pass £249
15 visits per season
Normal online gate price 15 x £32 = £480
One fast track per visit 15 x £10 = £150
A guess at F&B and merch savings per visit 15 x £5 = £75
Free parking 15 x £13 = £195
2 stay hotel discounts = 2 x £50 = £100
Value of pass = £1000
Cost to Merlin = -£751
It doesn't cost Merlin £15 for a passholder to use a parking space, they're not paying the passholder to use it. It could only ever be described as lost revenue if that specific "free" parking space were otherwise going to be given to someone who was willing to pay for it. It costs them nothing.
The discounts on merchandise and F&B affect the amount of profit earned by item, but again it doesn't cost Merlin anything. The loss is only there if the item would have been purchased at full price by someone else. This also ignores the fact that F&B sales affect Aramark's bottom line, not Merlin's.
The fundamental distinction lies in the difference between marginal cost and opportunity cost. In reality, the actual cost to Merlin for a passholder to visit is the incremental expense of their presence. It's negligible items like water usage, additional cleaning, or a tiny fraction of a staff member's hourly wage.
The perceived value you're attaching, is a marketing lever used to make the £249 entry price feel like a bargain by anchoring it against prices that many guests would never actually pay in isolation.
