Case 2 1: The Not-So-Wonderful World of Eurodisney - Things Are Better Now at Disneyland Resort Paris
Case 2 1: The Not-So-Wonderful World of Eurodisney - Things Are Better Now at Disneyland Resort Paris
BONJOUR, MICKEY!
In April 1992, EuroDisney SCA opened its doors to European visitors. Located by the river Marne some 20 miles east of Paris, it was designed to be the biggest and most lavish theme park that Walt Disney Company (Disney) had built to datebigger than Disneyland in Anaheim, California; Disneyworld in Orlando, Florida; and Tokyo Disneyland in Japan. Much to Disney managements surprise, Europeans failed to go goofy over Mickey, unlike their Japanese counterparts. Between 1990 and early 1992, some 14 million people had visited Tokyo Disneyland, with three-quarters being repeat visitors. A family of four staying overnight at a nearby hotel would easily spend $600 on a visit to the park. In contrast, at EuroDisney, families were reluctant to spend the $280 a day needed to enjoy the attractions of the park, including les hamburgers and les milkshakes. Staying overnight was out of the question for many because hotel rooms were so high priced. For example, prices ranged from $110 to $380 a night at the Newport Bay Club, the largest of EuroDisneys six new hotels and one of the biggest in Europe. In comparison, a room in a top hotel in Paris cost between $340 and $380 a night. Financial losses became so massive at EuroDisney that the president had to structure a rescue package to put EuroDisney back on rm nancial ground. Many French bankers questioned the initial nancing, but the Disney response was that their views reected the cautious, Old World thinking of Europeans who did not understand U.S.-style free market nancing. After some acrimonious dealings with French banks, a two-year nancial plan was negotiated. Disney management rapidly revised its marketing plan and introduced strategic and tactical changes in the hope of doing it right this time.
The Paris location was chosen over 200 other potential sites stretching from Portugal through Spain, France, Italy, and into Greece. Spain thought it had the strongest bid based on its yearlong, temperate, and sunny Mediterranean climate, but insufcient acreage of land was available for development around Barcelona. In the end, the French governments generous incentives, together with impressive data on regional demographics, swayed Disney management to choose the Paris location. It was calculated that some 310 million people in Europe live within two hours air travel of EuroDisney, and 17 million could reach the park within two hours by carbetter demographics than at any other Disney site. Pessimistic talk about the dismal winter weather of northern France was countered with references to the success of Tokyo Disneyland, where resolute visitors brave cold winds and snow to enjoy their piece of Americana. Furthermore, it was argued, Paris is Europes most-popular city destination among tourists of all nationalities.
An American Icon One of the most worrying aspects of EuroDisneys rst year was that French visitors stayed away; they had been expected to make up 50 percent of the attendance gures. A park services consulting rm framed the problem in these words: The French see EuroDisney as American imperialism plastics at its worst. The well-known, sentimental Japanese attachment to Disney characters contrasted starkly with the unexpected and widespread French scorn for American fairy-tale characters. French culture has its own lovable cartoon characters such as Astrix, the helmeted, pint-sized Gallic warrior, who has a theme park located near EuroDisney. Hostility among the French people to the whole Disney idea had surfaced early in the planning of the new project. Paris theater director Ariane Mnouchkine became famous for her description of EuroDisney as a cultural Chernobyl. In fall 1989, during a visit to Paris, French Communists pelted Michael Eisner with eggs. The joke going around at the time was, For EuroDisney to adapt properly to France, all seven of Snow Whites dwarfs should be named Grumpy (Grincheux). Early advertising by EuroDisney seemed to aggravate local French sentiment by emphasizing glitz and size rather than the variety of rides and attractions. Committed to maintaining Disneys reputation for quality in everything, more detail was built into EuroDisney. For example, the centerpiece castle in the Magic Kingdom had to be bigger and fancier than in the other parks. Expensive trams were built along a lake to take guests from the hotels to the park, but visitors preferred walking. Total park construction costs were estimated at FFr 14 billion ($2.37 billion) in 1989 but rose by $340 million to FFr 16 billion as a result of all these add-ons. Hotel construction costs alone rose from an estimated FFr 3.4 billion to FFr 5.7 billion.
*The Ofcial name has been changed from EuroDisney to Disneyland Resort Paris.
Cases 2
The Cultural Environment of Global Marketing in a 350-seat restaurant [at some of the hotels]. The lines were horrendous. And they didnt just want croissants and coffee, they wanted bacon and eggs. In contrast to Disneys American parks, where visitors typically stay at least three days, EuroDisney is at most a two-day visit. Energetic visitors need even less time. One analyst claimed to have done every EuroDisney ride in just ve hours. Typically many guests arrive early in the morning, rush to the park, come back to their hotel late at night, and then check out the next morning before heading back to the park. Vacation customs of Europeans were not taken into consideration. Disney executives had optimistically expected that the arrival of their new theme park would cause French parents to take their children out of school in mid-session for a short break. It did not happen unless a public holiday occurred over a weekend. Similarly, Disney expected that the American-style short but more frequent family trips would displace the European tradition of a one-month family vacation, usually taken in August. However, French ofce and factory schedules remained the same, with their emphasis on an August shutdown. In promoting the new park to visitors, Disney did not stress the entertainment value of a visit to the new theme park; the emphasis was on the size of the park, which ruined the magic. To counter this, ads were changed to feature Zorro, a French favorite, Mary Poppins, and Aladdin, star of the huge moneymaking movie success. A print ad campaign at that time featured Aladdin, Cinderellas castle, and a little girl being invited to enjoy a magic vacation at the kingdom where all dreams come true. Six new attractions were added in 1994, including the Temple of Peril, Storybook Land, and the Nautilus attraction. Donald Ducks birthday was celebrated on June 9all in hopes of positioning EuroDisney as the number 1 European destination of short duration, one to three days. Faced with falling share prices and crisis talk among shareholders, Disney was forced to step forward in late 1993 to rescue the new park. Disney announced that it would fund EuroDisney until a nancial restructuring could be worked out with lenders. However, it was made clear by the parent company, Disney, that it was not writing a blank check. In June 1994, EuroDisney received a new lifeline when a member of the Saudi royal family agreed to invest up to $500 million for a 24 percent stake in the park. The prince has an established reputation in world markets as a bottom-sher, buying into potentially viable operations during crises when share prices are low. The princes plans included a $100 million convention center at EuroDisney. One of the few pieces of good news about EuroDisney is that its convention business exceeded expectations from the beginning.
EuroDisney and Disney managers unhappily succeeded in alienating many of their counterparts in the government, the banks, the ad agencies, and other concerned organizations. A barnstorming, kick-the-door-down attitude seemed to reign among the U.S. decision makers: They had a formidable image and convinced everyone that if we let them do it their way, we would all have a marvelous adventure. One former Disney executive voiced the opinion, We were arrogantit was like Were building the Taj Mahal and people will comeon our terms.
Mistaken assumptions by the Disney management team affected construction design, marketing and pricing policies, and park management, as well as initial nancing. Disney executives had been erroneously informed that Europeans dont eat breakfast. Restaurant breakfast service was downsized accordingly, and guess what? Everybody showed up for breakfast. We were trying to serve 2,500 breakfasts
Part 6
Supplementary Material The root of Disneys problems in EuroDisney may be found in the tremendous success of Japans Disneyland. The Tokyo Park was a success from the rst day, and it has been visited by millions of Japanese who wanted to capture what they perceived as the ultimate U.S entertainment experience. Disney took the entire U.S. theme park and transplanted it in Japan. It worked because of the Japanese attachment to Disney characters. Schools have eld trips to meet Mickey and his friends to the point that the Disney experience has become ingrained in Japanese life. In the book Disneyland as Holy Land, University of Tokyo professor Masako Notoji wrote: The opening of Tokyo Disneyland was, in retrospect, the greatest cultural event in Japan during the 80s. With such success, is there any wonder that Disney thought they had the right model when they rst went to France? The Tokyo Disney constitutes a very rare case in that the number of visitors has not decreased since the opening.
tourists habits around the continent. Separate marketing ofces were opened in London, Frankfurt, Milan, Brussels, Amsterdam, and Madrid, and each was charged with tailoring advertising and packages to its own market. Prices were cut by 20 percent for park admission and 30 percent for some hotel room rates. Special promotions were also run for the winter months. The central theme of the new marketing and operations approach is that people visit the park for an authentic Disney day out. They may not be completely sure what that means, except that it entails something American. This approach is reected in the transformation of the parks name. The Euro in EuroDisney was rst shrunk in the logo, and the word land added. Then in October 1994 the Euro was eliminated completely; the park was next called Disneyland Paris; and now Disneyland Resort Paris. In 1996, Disneyland Paris became Frances most visited tourist attraction, ahead of both the Louvre Art Museum and the Eiffel Tower. In that year, 11.7 million visitors (a 9 percent increase from the previous year) allowed the park to report another prot.
2005Bankruptcy Pending
In early 2005, Disneyland Paris was on the verge of bankruptcy. The newest park attraction at Disneyland Paris, Walt Disney Studies, featured Hollywood-themed attractions such as a ride called ArmageddonSpecial Effects based on a movie starring Bruce Willis, opped. Guests said it lacked attractions to justify the entrance price, and others complained it focused too much on American, rather than European, lmmaking. Disney blames other factors: the post-9/11 tourism slump, strikes in France, and a summer heat wave in 2003. The French government came to the aid of Disneyland Paris with a state-owned bank contribution of around $500 million to save the company from bankruptcy. A new Disneyland Paris CEO, a former Burger King executive, introduced several changes in hopes of bringing the Paris park back from the edge of bankruptcy. To make Disneyland Paris a cheaper vacation destination, the CEO lobbied the government to open up Charles de Gaulle airport to more low-cost airlines. Under his direction, Disneyland Paris created its rst original character tailored for a European audience: the Halloween-themed L Homme Citrouille, or Pumpkin Man. He has also introduced a one-day pass giving visitors access to both parks in place of two separate tickets. He is planning new rides, including the Tower of Terror, and other new attractions. If these changes fail to bring in millions of new visitors, Disney and the French government might once again be forced to consider dramatic measures. Even though French President Jacques Chirac called the spread of American culture an ecological disaster and the French government imposes quotas on non-French movies to offset the inuence of Hollywood and ofcially discourages the use of English words such as e-mail, Disneyland Paris was important to the French economy. In light of Frances 10 percent unemployment at the time, Disneyland Paris is seen as a job-creation success. The company accounted for an estimated 43,000 jobs and its parks attracted over 12 million visitors a year, more than the Louvre Museum and the Eiffel Tower combined. By 2008 Disneyland Paris was experiencing increases in park attendance, and the turnaround appeared to be working.
Cases 2
The Cultural Environment of Global Marketing To compensate for the lack of awareness of Disney characters and create the mystique of a Disney experience, Disney launched numerous marketing initiatives designed to familiarize guests with Disneyland. One of the rst buildings upon entering the park exhibits artwork and lm footage of Disney history, from the creation of Mickey Mouse through the construction of Hong Kong Disneyland. Tour groups are greeted by a Disney host who introduces them to Walt Disney, the parks attractions, characters, and other background information. For example, the character Buzz Lightyear explains Toy Story and the Buzz Lightyear Astro Blaster attraction. Even though there were complaints about the park size and the unfamiliarity of Disney characters, there were unique features built with the Asian guest in mind that have proved to be very popular. Fantasy Gardens, one of the parks original features, was designed to appeal to guests from Hong Kong and mainland China who love to take pictures. At ve gazebos, photo-happy tourists can always nd Mickey, Minnie, and other popular characters who will sign autographs and pose for photos and videos. Mulan has her own pavilion in the garden, designed like a Chinese temple. Mickey even has a new red-and-gold Chinese suit to wear. Restaurants boast local fare, such as Indian curries, Japanese sushi, and Chinese mango pudding, served in containers shaped like Mickey Mouse heads. All in all, Hong Kong Disney is Chinese throughout. Its not so much an American theme park as Mickey Mouse coming to China. The atmosphere is uncomplicated and truly family oriented. It is possible to have a genuine family park experience where six-yearolds take precedence. However, early advertising that featured the family missed its mark somewhat by featuring a family consisting of two kids and two parents, which did not have the impact it was supposed to have, because Chinas government limits most couples to just one child. The error was quickly corrected in a new TV commercial, which the company says was designed to forge a stronger emotional connection with Mickey. The revised ad featured one child, two parents, and two grandparents together sharing branded Disney activities, such as watching a movie and giving a plush version of the mouse as gifts. Lets visit Mickey together! says the father in the commercial, before scenes at the park set to traditional Chinese music. Many other aspects of the park have been modied to better suit its Chinese visitors. The cast members are extremely diverse, understand various cultures, and, in many cases, speak three languages. Signs, audio-recorded messages, and attractions are also in several languages. For example, riders can choose from English, Mandarin, or Cantonese on the Jungle River Cruise. Disney runs promotions throughout the year. For example, the Stay and Play for Two Days promotion was created mainly to give mainland tourists a chance to experience the park for a longer period of time. Because many Chinese tourists cross into Hong Kong by bus, they arrive at Disneyland mid-day. With this promotion, if a guest stays at a Disneyland hotel and purchases a one-day ticket, the guest is given a second day at the park for free. Special Chinese holidays feature attractions and decorations unique to the holiday. For the February 7, 2008, New Year holiday (the Year of the Rat), Disney suited up its own house rodents, Mickey and Minnie, in special red Chinese New Year outts for its self-proclaimed Year of the Mouse. The Disneyland Chinese New Year campaign, which lasts until February 24, features a logo with the kind of visual pun that only the Chinese might appreciate: the Chinese character for luck ipped upside-down (a New Year
not to make the same cultural and management mistakes in China that had plagued Disneyland Paris. Disney took special steps to make Hong Kong Disneyland culturally acceptable. Disney has learned that they cant impose the American willor Disneys version of iton another continent. Theyve bent over backward to make Hong Kong Disneyland blend in with the surroundings. Weve come at it with an American sensibility, but we still appeal to local tastes, says one of Hong Kong Disneylands landscape architects. Desiring to bring Disneyland Hong Kong into harmony with local customs from the beginning, it was decided to observe feng shui in planning and construction. Feng shui is the practice of arranging objects (such as the internal placement of furniture) to achieve harmony with ones environment. It is also used for choosing a place to live. Proponents claim that feng shui has effects on health, wealth, and personal relationships. The parks designers brought in a feng shui master who rotated the front gate, repositioned cash registers, and ordered boulders set in key locations to ensure the parks prosperity. He even chose the parks auspicious opening date. New construction was often begun with a traditional good-luck ceremony featuring a carved suckling pig. Other feng shui inuences include the parks orientation to face water with mountains behind. Feng shui experts also designated no re zones in the kitchens to try to keep the ve elements of metal, water, wood, re, and earth in balance. Along with following feng shui principles, the parks hotels have no oors that are designated as fourth oors, because 4 is considered an unlucky number in Chinese culture. Furthermore, the opening date was set for September 12, 2006, because it was listed as an auspicious date for opening a business in the Chinese almanac. But the parks success wasnt a sure thing. The park received more than 5 million visitors in its rst year but short of its targeted 5.6 million, and the second year was equally disappointing with attendance dropping nearly 30 percent below forecasts. Many of those who came complained that it was too small and had little to excite those unfamiliar with Disneys cast of characters. Disneyland is supposed to be The Happiest Place on Earth, but Liang Ning isnt too happy. The engineer brought his family to Disneys new theme park in Hong Kong from the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou one Saturday in April with high hopes, but by days 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, its just not big enough and not very different from the amusement parks we have in China. Hong Kong Disneyland has only 16 attractions and only one a classic Disney thrill ride, Space Mountain, compared with 52 rides at Disneyland Paris. After the rst years lackluster beginning, Disney management introduced ve new attractions and added Its a Small World, the ride made famous at the agship Disneyland in Anaheim, California. A variety of other new entertainment offerings were due in 2008. Guests lack of knowledge of Disney characters created a special hurdle in China. Until a few years ago, hardly anyone in mainland China knew Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck even existed. Disney characters were banned for nearly 40 years, so knowledge of Disney lore is limited. China was the rst market where Disney opened a park in which there had been no long-term relationship with attendees. It was the Chinese consumer who was expected to understand Disney, or so it seemed. Chinese tourists unfamiliar with Disneys traditional stories were sometimes left bewildered by the Hong Kong parks attractions.
Part 6
Supplementary Material 7. Now that Hong Kong Disney is up and running, will the Shanghai development benet from the Hong Kong experience? 8. Now that Disney has opened Hong Kong Disney and begun work on the Shanghai location, where and when should it go next? Assume you are a consultant hired to give Disney advice on the issue of where and when to go next. Pick three locations and select the one you think will be the best new location for Disneyland X. Discuss. 9. Given your choice of locale X for the newest Disneyland, what are the operational implications of the history of EuroDisney and Disney Hong Kong for the new park?
tradition), with mouse ears added on top. Inside the park, vendors hawk deep-fried dumplings and turnip cakes. The parade down Main Street, U.S.A., is joined by the Rhythm of Life Procession, featuring a dragon dance and puppets of birds, owers, and sh, set to traditional Chinese music. And of course theres the god of wealth, a relative newcomer to the regular Hong Kong Disneyland gang, joined by the gods of longevity and happiness, all major gures in Chinese New Year celebrations. The Hong Kong park lost more than $170 billion in each of the last two years. However, plans to increase the capacity of the park 23 percent are going forward, with the new attractions to open in 2014. There are broader implications for Disney from the performance of the Hong Kong theme park than just its nancial health. From the outset, executives at the businesss Burbank headquarters viewed Hong Kong Disneyland as a springboard to promote awareness of the Disney name among the mainland Chinese population and cement ties with Beijing. The next theme park is set for Shanghai, and the last thing they want is a turkey in Hong Kong that would undermine their whole China strategy. The new $3.6 billion park in Shanghai is scheduled for completion, also in 2014. Disney will hold a 43 percent stake there.
This case was prepared by Lyn S. Amine, Ph.D., Professor of Marketing and International Business, Distinguished Fellow of the Academy of Marketing Science, and President, Women of the Academy of International Business, Saint Louis University, and graduate student Carolyn A. Tochtrop, Saint Louis University, as a basis for class discussion rather than to illustrate either effective or ineffective handling of a situation. The original case appearing in prior editions has been edited and updated to reect recent developments. Source: An American in Paris, BusinessWeek, March 12, 1990, pp. 6061, 64; Asahi Shimbun, Tokyo Disney Prospers In Its Own Way, Asahi Evening News, April 22, 2003; Chester Dawson, Will Tokyo Embrace Another Mouse? BusinessWeek, September 10, 2001; Euro Disney Gets Its Rights Issue Thanks to Underwriting Banks but Success in Balance, Euroweek, February 11, 2005; EuroDisneys Prince Charming? BusinessWeek, June 13, 1994, p. 42; Saudi to Buy as Much as 24% of EuroDisney, The Wall Street Journal, June 2, 1994, p. A4; Bernard J. Wolfson, The Mouse That Roared Back, Orange County Register, April 9, 2000, p. 1; Disney Applies Feng Shui to Hong Kong Park, AP Online, June 27, 2005; Michael Schuman, Disneys Great Leap into China, Time, July 11, 2005; Michael Schuman, Disneys Hong Kong Headache, Time, May 8, 2006; A Bumpy Ride for Disneyland in Hong Kong; Despite Fixes, Some Observers Say Troubles Could Follow company to Shanghai, The Washington Post, November 20, 2006; Dikky Sinn, Hong Kong Government Unhappy with Disneylands Performance, AP Worldstream, December 4, 2007; Elaine Kurtenbach, Reports: Shanghai Disneyland May be Built on Yangtze Island; City Ofcials Mum on Talks, AP Worldstream, December 4, 2007; Lauren Booth, The Wonderful World of Mandarin Mickey . . . The Independent on Sunday, July 22, 2007; Mark Kleinman, Magic Kingdom Fails to Cast Its Spell in the Middle Kingdom . . . The Sunday Telegraph (London), February 25, 2007; Paula M. Miller, Disneyland in Hong Kong, China Business Review, January 1, 2007; Jeffrey Ng, Hong Kong Disneyland Seeks New Magic, The Wall Street Journal, December 19, 2007; Geoffrey A. Fowler, Main Street, K.K.; Disney Localizes Mickey to Boost Its Hong Kong Theme Park, The Wall Street Journal, January 23, 2008; A Chinese Makeover for Mickey and Minnie, The New York Times, January 22, 2008; Mickey in Shanghai, BusinessWeek, November 16, 2009, p. 6; Chester Yung, Hong Kong Says Loss at Theme Park Shrank, The Wall Street Journal, January 20, 2010, p. B4.
QUESTIONS
1. What factors contributed to EuroDisneys poor performance during its rst year of operation? What factors contributed to Hong Kong Disneys poor performance during its rst year? 2. To what degree do you consider that these factors were (a) foreseeable and (b) controllable by EuroDisney, Hong Kong Disney, or the parent company, Disney? 3. What role does ethnocentrism play in the story of EuroDisneys launch? 4. How do you assess the cross-cultural marketing skills of Disney? 5. Why did success in Tokyo predispose Disney management to be too optimistic in their expectations of success in France? In China? Discuss. 6. Why do you think the experience in France didnt help Disney avoid some of the problems in Hong Kong?