LakerFan
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 13, 2014
- Messages
- 1,738
- Reaction score
- 382
- Points
- 83
What I really don't get is why the U of M is so hesitant to lower prices in response to declining demand. I get that a slight decrease in tickets sold with a large increase in ticket price netted them an increase in revenue early on, but now we are looking at trending towards lower total revenue with larger decreases in demand. It's not like they couldn't raise them again after lowering if we manage to pull off a great season and people start getting interested again.
IMO The people most likely to buy tickets if the price goes up after a good season would be the people who were in the seats for the good season and want to keep the good times rolling. So you lower ticket prices next year, try to make progress against 3 years of declining tickets sales and poise yourself to really take advantage if they have a strong season.
The slippery slope for U is that every year they don't address the inequity of cost of season tickets versus demand more people make the decision that they can buy single game tickets cheaper and sit literally anywhere they want for any game. That happens for a year, then those some of those people start cherry picking 5 good games, then 2 and eventually move on to other interests.
There will always be a core of gopher fans that will pay for season tickets out of loyalty and altruism, for those that rationalize their entertainment dollars, season tickets versus single game tickets keeps getting harder and harder to justify. And I really think that once you allow/encourage someone to move from season to single game tickets your rolling the dice on keeping them.
IMO The people most likely to buy tickets if the price goes up after a good season would be the people who were in the seats for the good season and want to keep the good times rolling. So you lower ticket prices next year, try to make progress against 3 years of declining tickets sales and poise yourself to really take advantage if they have a strong season.
The slippery slope for U is that every year they don't address the inequity of cost of season tickets versus demand more people make the decision that they can buy single game tickets cheaper and sit literally anywhere they want for any game. That happens for a year, then those some of those people start cherry picking 5 good games, then 2 and eventually move on to other interests.
There will always be a core of gopher fans that will pay for season tickets out of loyalty and altruism, for those that rationalize their entertainment dollars, season tickets versus single game tickets keeps getting harder and harder to justify. And I really think that once you allow/encourage someone to move from season to single game tickets your rolling the dice on keeping them.