By serious I mean let's try to keep the personality conflicts out of this.
We cut our timeshare baby teeth on the older Orlando mega-resorts. Our first tour was Orange Lake when it wasn't much more than an Olympic pool, a clubhouse, and a cluster of golf villas, all sparkling and new.
Our second tour, later that day, was Westgate, which was a clubhouse, a cluster of sparkling new units with names like A, B and C, a lot of mud, and an exit tent.
By the end of that week we bought into the Westgate family, at a lesser CFI resort we thought maybe we could work into the budget. We eventually wound up with three weeks.
We were way too early for the newer breed of timeshares, the Marriotts and the alphabet ones, HGVC, DVC, etc.
Over the years we have stayed at and/or toured Westgate and OL many times. We are reasonably informed and familiar with both resorts.
Both are similar. They were founded by men with strong personalities. The developer has stayed active/invoilved/controlling in both. Sales and marketing continues at both. The new projects/acquisitions are the focus of both.
Could it be that there are flaws in their concept, flaws which assure that every week a certain percentage at each resort will not receive a quality vacation.
Complaints at both are similar: Sales pressure intervering with vacations, Westgate more than OL. Cleanliness, condition of older units. Inconsiderate, unresponsive staff.
Could it be that that is just the way it is going to be?
Even if the area was only those two resorts, they are near each other, and each week the equivalent of a small city moves in and out. Add to that, of course, the fact that Disney is right there, and all the other resorts, restaurants, attractions, etc., and it means all of those groups are dipping into the same pool of close-to-minimum-wage employees.
Could it be that there are just not enough people who care, at the lower pay scales, to clean units, maintain units, or deal with unhappy guests in a cordial manner? Could that be why management focuses on the bright new projects, knowing there is little they can do about the older bottom falling out of their resorts, if it is?
We have been to a lot of older resorts in our 90 exchanges. The smaller ones seem to be able to handle providing a quality vacation much better than the older mega resorts.
The Holiday Inns replaced the motor courts and now the Holiday Inns are being replaced by newer, spiffier hotels and motels. Why would timeshares be any different, except, of course, for the fact that someone owns those older units?
And how do you find enough staff who cares and is willing to work for next to nothing?
Do you think you can't please everyone has become the official policy?
We cut our timeshare baby teeth on the older Orlando mega-resorts. Our first tour was Orange Lake when it wasn't much more than an Olympic pool, a clubhouse, and a cluster of golf villas, all sparkling and new.
Our second tour, later that day, was Westgate, which was a clubhouse, a cluster of sparkling new units with names like A, B and C, a lot of mud, and an exit tent.
By the end of that week we bought into the Westgate family, at a lesser CFI resort we thought maybe we could work into the budget. We eventually wound up with three weeks.
We were way too early for the newer breed of timeshares, the Marriotts and the alphabet ones, HGVC, DVC, etc.
Over the years we have stayed at and/or toured Westgate and OL many times. We are reasonably informed and familiar with both resorts.
Both are similar. They were founded by men with strong personalities. The developer has stayed active/invoilved/controlling in both. Sales and marketing continues at both. The new projects/acquisitions are the focus of both.
Could it be that there are flaws in their concept, flaws which assure that every week a certain percentage at each resort will not receive a quality vacation.
Complaints at both are similar: Sales pressure intervering with vacations, Westgate more than OL. Cleanliness, condition of older units. Inconsiderate, unresponsive staff.
Could it be that that is just the way it is going to be?
Even if the area was only those two resorts, they are near each other, and each week the equivalent of a small city moves in and out. Add to that, of course, the fact that Disney is right there, and all the other resorts, restaurants, attractions, etc., and it means all of those groups are dipping into the same pool of close-to-minimum-wage employees.
Could it be that there are just not enough people who care, at the lower pay scales, to clean units, maintain units, or deal with unhappy guests in a cordial manner? Could that be why management focuses on the bright new projects, knowing there is little they can do about the older bottom falling out of their resorts, if it is?
We have been to a lot of older resorts in our 90 exchanges. The smaller ones seem to be able to handle providing a quality vacation much better than the older mega resorts.
The Holiday Inns replaced the motor courts and now the Holiday Inns are being replaced by newer, spiffier hotels and motels. Why would timeshares be any different, except, of course, for the fact that someone owns those older units?
And how do you find enough staff who cares and is willing to work for next to nothing?
Do you think you can't please everyone has become the official policy?
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