dropKickMurphy
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Blue Hills, Mass. went RFID this year.
Damn. I was hoping they were using that money to install a new 150 passenger tram to the summit.
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Blue Hills, Mass. went RFID this year.
I'm heading to Jay in a few weeks just for a day, on a two for one coupon. I never had to deal with an RFID. Does Jay charge for the RFID? Is this what you get at the ticket counter now instead of an actual ticket? Having to pay a fee seems like an insult with the price of a walk up ticket most places. I don't ski the any one area more than a few times a year so I agree with the people complaining about the charge. Even though you have to go back into line I like the Stowe idea about getting a refund.
If it was to automate ticket checking why the need for it to be storing data to a marketing data base? They're taking your every scan and determining:
what days of the week you like to ski
what type of weather you like to ski in
which lifts you most frequently ride
if you've taken a lesson
if you've visited the mountain ski shop
what you purchased in the ski shop
I'm sure there is a lot more they're gathering but this short list serves as an example.
I'm not suggesting adding an employee, I'm suggesting they move the employee. At the bottom of the mountain no law has been broken. This in merely an attempt to steal services and violators are ejected from the line before committing a crime. At the top of the mountain, they are GUILTY.
Blue Hills, Mass. went RFID this year.
Well you gotta figure that with a good chunk of Blue Hill's patron so used to using RFID card as they're getting on the T that the same basic thing for getting on a chairlift would be no foreign concept to them
The real reason for RFID is bundling services, attaching a credit card to the RFID card for other resort services, and using it as a loyalty card.
No, no it doesn't. At least at Jay, I see MORE employees at most RFID lifts not less. Maybe other ski areas are doing it differently. But from what I've seen at Jay, they have an RFID operator for all upper mountain lifts who's job is to monitor the turn styles.RFID saves labor. Every employee you don't have to pay goes right to your bottom line.
I get my season pass scanned every time I go on the lift. The mountain doesn't need to install an RFID system to obtain all of that information. It's not like people pay with cash in 2012.
I'm heading to Jay in a few weeks just for a day, on a two for one coupon. I never had to deal with an RFID. Does Jay charge for the RFID? Is this what you get at the ticket counter now instead of an actual ticket? Having to pay a fee seems like an insult with the price of a walk up ticket most places. I don't ski the any one area more than a few times a year so I agree with the people complaining about the charge. Even though you have to go back into line I like the Stowe idea about getting a refund.
I get my season pass scanned every time I go on the lift. The mountain doesn't need to install an RFID system to obtain all of that information. It's not like people pay with cash in 2012.
Regarding labor-saving systems, start up costs are always highest for most technologies.
You are an early adopter, by force or choice. As everyone gets in the groove, and optimize it to their operation, it will eventually result in shorter lines, more volume and less labor. For now, it's growing pains.
I get my pass scanned at the entrance to Disney and they never trouble me again.
In other words, all benefits to the mountain, and not to the consumer, regardless of what we're told.
True
I still for the life of me do not understand this, regardless of how often it's said by the resorts implementing RFID, and by however many RFID believers in this thread.
1) The number of chairs on any given lift is static and not a variable.
2) The speed of chairs on any given lift is static and not a variable.
3) The number of patrons that flow through on X-day is given, and not variable.
So net/net, if the only "time saved" is in the flow of people onto the chairs (and even that's dicey IMO), that's an incremental positive at best, as once the chairs reach their full capacity "choke point", even that theoretical advantage is instantly eliminated.
So at the end of the day, I still believe (as I have from day one) that the entire point of RFID is:
1) Ancillary income to the resort
2) Decreased labor costs (eventually)
3) Increased data collection of consumer activities
4) Increased forward marketing capabilities
In other words, all benefits to the mountain, and not to the consumer, regardless of what we're told. I mean, "I can reload my ticket online?" Well big whoopti-do! Frankly, in my cheap skiing case, I'm far more likely to be using a BOGO or something that needs redemption at the window anyway. lol
Can't say I've noticed fewer employees at RFID resorts myself. Pretty much the same staffing at "normal" scanned ticket lifts. My experience is limited to Jay Peak and Stowe, but both of those areas weren't running less labor because of the RFID.