Vacation Ownership What Is It Really

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Vacation Ownership: What is it, really? Topics Concept of vacation ownership Various vacation ownership products Resort life-cycle theory

Transcript of Vacation Ownership What Is It Really

Page 1: Vacation Ownership What Is It Really

Vacation Ownership: What is it, really?

TopicsConcept of vacation ownershipVarious vacation ownership productsResort life-cycle theory

Page 2: Vacation Ownership What Is It Really

Concept of Vacation Ownership

• Timesharing = the act of sharing vacation time at a luxurious resort facility

• Timeshare consumer purchases the right to occupy a vacation-type home/unit for a set period of weeks

• Home-type unit but no day to day maintenance usually associated with home ownership

• Resort offers high quality recreational and leisure services

Page 3: Vacation Ownership What Is It Really

Timeline of vacation ownership industry

1964 – Ski resort in the Alps

1970’s – converted hotel projects in USA

1980’s – lots of unethical developers selling non-existent properties

1983 – first timeshare law passed in Fla, USA

1984 – Marriot entered timeshare industry

1990’s – public trading of timeshare companies

1992 – Disney and Hilton enter industry

Canada Timeshare Act, 1992

1999 – Alberta Fair Trading Act (Timeshare contracts regulation)

2005 – Ontario Consumer Protection Act, 2002

2003 –Timeshare companies publically traded

Page 4: Vacation Ownership What Is It Really

Vacation Ownership Product Mix

By Time By Legality By FacilityTimeshare Deeded Mixed-Use Timeshare

Resorts

Fixed Week Right to Use Fractional Timeshare Resorts

Float Week Leasehold Private Residence Clubs

Point

Purchase

Page 5: Vacation Ownership What Is It Really

Vacation Ownership Product Mix

• Timeshare– Consumer has access to

vacation accommodation sold by weeks, allowing access to a specific unit and all resort common areas

• Fixed week– Consumer has access to

vacation accommodation and resort useage for a set week each year for duration of contract

• Float Week– Consumer has access

rights to a specific unit for a specified range of weeks within a year

• Float unit– Consumer’s usage period

(week) is fixed but the actual unit used may vary, but must be of same class/type (i.e. one bedroom) as per contract

Page 6: Vacation Ownership What Is It Really

Vacation Ownership Product Mix

• Points Purchase– Consumers purchase points not weeks– Each point has a predetermined value which is used for vacation

club usage– Points can be used for various vacation club products e.g.

cruises, golf– Highly customer focused but complex to manage

Page 7: Vacation Ownership What Is It Really

Vacation Ownership Product Mix

• Deeded– Owner receives title for the property– Has legal ownership for period of use– Can use property in perpetuity– Can will the property– Can sell the property

Page 8: Vacation Ownership What Is It Really

Vacation Ownership Product Mix

• Right to Use– Owner is given

contractual rights to use facility for specified period (e.g. 20yrs) at which time the contract terminates

• Leasehold– Similar to Right to Use– At end of lease

property reverts back to developer

– Leasehold period of use is shorter than Right to Use

Page 9: Vacation Ownership What Is It Really

Vacation Ownership Product Mix

• Mixed Use Timeshare– Combination of a traditional

resort and a timeshare resort

– Part of facility operates as a traditional resort with full amenities e.g. restaurants, spa, gym

– And another area operates as under an ownership model

• Fractional Timeshare Resorts– Upscale product where

owner owns high number of weeks e.g. 3 – 12 weeks

• Private Residence Clubs– Offer services similar to

country clubs– May have golf courses, pro

shops, dining– Larger accommodation

units

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Vacation Ownership Design

Campus style resort with 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms

Golf oriented resort units have 2 bedrooms with 2 beds each to accommodate foursomes

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Vacation Ownership Design

1990’s townhouse units in clusters around small pools. Smaller resorts

2000’s large resorts developed in phases900 units or more

Page 12: Vacation Ownership What Is It Really

Butler’s Product Life Cyclefor

Tourism Product Development

Exploration

Involvement

Development

Consolidation

Stagnation

Decline

Sustainable Growth

Rejuvenation

Page 13: Vacation Ownership What Is It Really

Butler’s Product Life Cycle

• Exploration– Interest in new travel area

emerges– Product brands and service

quality levels are established

– Pricing is set to ensure consumer interest

– Distribution is selective and focuses on the primary target markets

– Promotion techniques are geared to the early adopters of the product

• Involvement– The developer refines their

marketing and sales approach to increase the identified potential customer to the area

– Includes onsite and offsite marketing programs

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Butler’s Product Life Cycle

• Development– High level of product and

service development– Developer drives consumer

demand by moving the price point upward

– Marketing and sales is high but now uses market penetration strategies relevant by each target market

– Rapid increase in sales and profits

• Consolidation– Market has now matured in

both level of competition and consumer demand

– Marketing is key to developer’s success

– Tactics include product differentiation, lower pricing

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Butler’s Product Life Cycle

• Stagnation– Very low cost and product

delivery– Sales have peaked– Profits begin to level off

• Decline– This phase can be

impacted both positively and negatively depending on previous competition levels

– Developer may introduce new versions of product, new distribution methods, price reductions to rejuvenate interest

– If these are not successful then arrival levels to area will drop

Page 16: Vacation Ownership What Is It Really

Levels of Timeshare Products

• 5 levels– Luxury

• $20,000 per interval

• Penthouse, 1,500 sq ft +

– Up-market• $15,000 - $25,000

• One room unit 1,000 sq ft or two room unit 1,800 sq ft

– Quality• $9,000 - $17,000

• One room unit, 800 sq ft or two room unit, 1,400 sq ft

– Value• $7,000 - $10,000

• One room unit, 800 sq ft or two room unit, 1,000 sq ft

– Economy• $5,000 - $8,000

• Studio, 600 sq ft, one room unit, 900 sq ft