Disneyland:
The happiest place on earth?
by Michael Schuman
 Disneyland is supposed to be "The happiest place on earth," but Liang
Ning isn't too happy. The engineer brought his family to Disney's new
theme park in Hong Kong from the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou one
Saturday in April with high hopes, but by day's end, he was less than
spellbound.
"I wanted to forget the world and feel like I was in a fairytale," he
says. Instead, he complains, "it's just not big enough" and "not very
different from the amusement parks we have" in China. His seven-year-old
daughter Yaqin disagrees, calling the park "fantastic," but her father
grumbles: "If she wants to come again, "I'll send her with somebody
else."
Hong Kong's Magic Kingdom has so far been a little short on magic.
The $1.8 billion theme park, which opened in September, 2005 was touted
by Disney executives as its biggest, boldest effort to build its brand
in China, a potentially vast new market for its toys, dvds and movies.
The Hong Kong government which aggressively wooed Disney and is the
park's majority owner "hoped Disneyland would help secure the city's
reputation as one of Asia's top tourist destinations.
However, the conservative approach of Disney and its partner has
produced a pint-sized park that so far hasn't matched visitors' lofty
expectations. Hong Kong Disneyland has a mere 16 attractions only one a
classic Disney thrill ride, Space Mountain compared to 52 at Disneyland
Resort Paris.
Meanwhile, management glitches involving everything from ticketing to
employee relations have further tarnished the venture's image. In a
recent survey conducted by Hong Kong Polytechnic University, 70% of the
local residents polled said they had a more negative opinion of
Disneyland since its opening.
"Disney knows the theme-park business, but when it comes to
understanding the Chinese guest, it's an entirely new ball game," says
John Ap, an associate professor at the university's School of Hotel and
Tourism Management.
Nonetheless, Disney executives insist the park is on track. Jay
Rasulo, chairman of Walt Disney Parks and Resorts, says: "I feel great
about how Hong Kong Disneyland is doing."
Disney's own surveys of park visitors show an 80% satisfaction rate,
among the highest of any of the company's parks, says Rasulo: "People
feel this is a great experience." The Burbank, California, headquartered
company knows what it is talking about; it welcomed its 2 billionth
visitor last week.
And it is no stranger to tempestuous beginnings at an international
park, at times caused by imposing a very American sensibility on foreign
guests. When Disneyland Paris opened in 1992, Disney famously banned
wine from park restaurants, much to the dismay of European bons vivants.
In Hong Kong, Disney went out of its way to tailor the park to local
tastes.
Its "imagineers" installed Main Street's first Chinese eatery, along
with Fantasy Gardens where Mickey Mouse, local favourite Mulan and other
Disney characters reside so tourists can readily snap pictures with them
a priority for many Chinese visitors.
Ironically, Disney's most high-profile stumble resulted from being
too local. When executives decided to serve shark-fin soup, a Hong Kong
favorite, environmentalists howled and Disney ignominiously yanked it
from the menu.
'Special days'
Another embarrassment came over the Lunar New Year holiday beginning
in January, a popular vacation time in China. Disney neglected to block
off the entire week as "special days" for which visitors required
specific tickets.
Tourists with valid tickets got turned away at the front gates after
the park quickly filled up; the jilted travellers screamed at park
employees, while TV cameras filmed one family trying to pass a child
over the fence.
Henry Tang, the city's Financial Secretary, voiced concern that this
disarray "might affect the image of Hong Kong's tourism industry." Bill
Ernest, Hong Kong Disneyland's managing director, says the company "had
no idea" that demand would spike so sharply at that time and adds that
Disney has since expanded the number of "special days" to improve crowd
control during holidays: "We don't make the same mistake twice."
Disney has also strained its relationship with Chinese travel
agencies, which play a crucial role in funnelling tourists into the
park. Victor Yu Limin, a general manager at China CYTS Outbound Travel
Service in Beijing, complains that Disney originally demanded several
weeks' notice when the agency wanted to reserve a guaranteed number of
rooms"a nearly impossible deadline, he says, as Chinese travellers often
don't finalize trips more than a few days in advance.
Agents also say they make so little money organizing Disneyland trips
that they don't have any incentive to market the park. Disney has tried
to improve its ties to travel agents by, for example, boosting the
commission they earn on selling tickets and reducing the advance notice
needed to secure hotel bookings.
"We're listening to everything they have to say and adjusting where
we can," says Josh D'Amaro, Hong Kong Disneyland's vice president for
sales and travel-trade marketing. But, Yu says, Disney is "still far
from understanding the real market in China. They started off doing
business the American way, so they have encountered problems."
Some workers assigned to play the parts of supposedly cheery
characters like Mickey and Tigger have also complained.
In April, the Hong Kong Disneyland Cast Members' Union made public a
litany of gripes over poor pay, excessive work hours and, most of all,
the sweltering conditions inside their costumes. Disney counters that
the complaints are an "inaccurate representation" of the work
environment at the park, that staffers have been granted extra rest days
beyond those mandated by their contracts, and that their costumes are no
different to those worn at its hot park in Florida.
Given the complexity of the Hong Kong operation, such "teething
pains" are hardly surprising, says Rasulo. What may be tougher to solve,
though, are the yawns the miniature park is generating among tourists.
Rasulo says the park wasn't built on a grand scale because the
Chinese didn't grow up with Disney and don't know the characters as well
as Americans and Europeans do, which acts as a constraint on its
potential audience.
Ernest calls it a "great introductory park." They also point out that
the company plans to keep adding new attractions at Hong Kong
Disneyland, including an updated version of Disney's classic Autopia
racing game, scheduled to open this summer.
The government is reclaiming land on an adjoining site to expand the
park further. But James Zoltak, editor of Amusement Business, a trade
magazine for the theme-park industry, says Disney isn't moving quickly
enough: it needs to "get on a crash course in terms of expansion. The
rate of building it up has to be swifter than anything they've done at
any of their parks."
While Ernest concedes that attendance is "a little behind"
expectations, Disney is sticking to its target of 5.6 million guests in
its first year. To hit these numbers, Disney is running aggressive
promotions.
Behind expectations
Last month, the park offered free tickets for 50,000 Hong Kong taxi
drivers, says Susan Chan, Hong Kong Disneyland's director of publicity,
so they "can experience the Disney magic themselves [and] better share
it with their passengers." And even if attendance lags for a while,
Disney says the park is already benefiting its other businesses in Asia.
Andy Bird, president of Walt Disney International, says there's been
"a noticeable lift in our brand and character awareness" in China since
the park's opening for example, sales of Buzz Lightyear merchandise have
jumped, in part because the character features in Disneyland's popular
Astro Blasters ride.
David Miller, an analyst at investment-banking firm Sanders Morris
Harris in Los Angeles, agrees: "Hong Kong Disneyland has been a solid
success in terms of opening up the brand in China." Indeed, Disney
continues to bet that its long-range investment plans in China will pay
off, regardless of the recent headaches in Hong Kong.
The firm is still in talks with Chinese officials about opening a
mainland theme park, possibly in Shanghai, says Rasulo.
"Have we made some mistakes" he asks. "Absolutely. We are in a
brand-new market. We have to keep listening and keep learning."
Restoring Tinkerbell's health only requires a round of applause, but
Hong Kong Disneyland will need a bit more work. |