Anyone notice the mood of the country away from some of the traditional things that have been virtually sacrament to Americans?
Owning a house, for instance. Now the tune of the day is "why locked yourself into 30 years when you can rent wherever you want?"
Applying that general sentiment to timesharing, it goes against the traditional advice of buying where you want to go. Why buy the same week at the same resort, forever? Let's face it, very few are going to want that . . . the same place, the same time, every year, forever.
Of course, there have attempts to make that more desirable>>>the same resort, but pick your week every year . . . but it's still the same resort.
Not the same resort, not the same week, every year . . . but it's still limited to whatever limit limits it.
The ultimate "free" choice, is anywhere, any week, any time, go wherever you want, whenever you want.
It may cost more (or may not), and the money spent is money gone, like renting a house rather than buying, but the consumer gets what they want with no ongoing obligation.
Owning a house, for instance. Now the tune of the day is "why locked yourself into 30 years when you can rent wherever you want?"
Applying that general sentiment to timesharing, it goes against the traditional advice of buying where you want to go. Why buy the same week at the same resort, forever? Let's face it, very few are going to want that . . . the same place, the same time, every year, forever.
Of course, there have attempts to make that more desirable>>>the same resort, but pick your week every year . . . but it's still the same resort.
Not the same resort, not the same week, every year . . . but it's still limited to whatever limit limits it.
The ultimate "free" choice, is anywhere, any week, any time, go wherever you want, whenever you want.
It may cost more (or may not), and the money spent is money gone, like renting a house rather than buying, but the consumer gets what they want with no ongoing obligation.
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