If you want to stay in Marriott and DVC timeshares, it compares great.Seems to be going down hill! Fewer sites, less accommodating rules. Anyone else seeing this?
How dies it compare to RCI
I'm curious though, what does making exchanges harder for those junk resorts really do? II gets the same exchange fee from those owners as they do owners who have the high end stuff. In fact you could say they get a higher exchange fee given the internal exchange discount for Marriott to Marriott and the like. II hasn't really been in the business of doing cash rentals of units given for deposit unless it is truly excess inventory in places like Orlando, Williamsburg, Vegas, Palm Desert, etc. Perhaps they may try that path that RCI did over a decade ago?II have been missing their financial targets and there are now activist investors on the parent company board so expect costs to continue to increase and benefits squeezed.
Still plenty of value to be had if you have a decent deposit. The sun has started to set on really low cost junk resorts dramatically out-performing, but still lots available, just not as good as it was. Like so much in life......
Makes it more likely someone trading something good can get something good — and want to keep trading with II.I'm curious though, what does making exchanges harder for those junk resorts really do?
I am relatively new to TS, starting in 2023. I only got II access in the last year. So keep that in mind. I've had RCI since I started, but only though corporate accounts so far. (I think I should do a video on this similar to my timeshare value proposition) Here's my current impressions:Seems to be going down hill! Fewer sites, less accommodating rules. Anyone else seeing this?
How dies it compare to RCI
Right there with ya!II is still as good for me as when I first switched from RCI to II in 2008. I won't ever go back to RCI.
There is that, but I was replying to a post that put it into the context of it making more revenue for II, but it doesn't seem to do that.Makes it more likely someone trading something good can get something good — and want to keep trading with II.
It does make sense to make good stuff easier to trade into once the check in date is getting close so it will be used and they will go ahead and get the exchange fee.
I'm not party to the revenue models for II, but I expect them to have contracts with the various companies that have revenue streams associated with them. The move to adjust (downgrade) the trading value of Hyatt, Welk and Diamond etc can only have had a financial reason behind it, or they wouldn't have done it as it reduces transaction volumes. So I'm making the leap that there are revenue streams that exist that are outside of what we the depositers and exchangers see. I'm then making the leap that the revenue per member KPI is higher for an MVC weeks owner (or similar) than per junk resort owner. That additional revenue based on member ownership might be derived directly from their usage and/or indirectly from the usage that flows from them depositing decent inventory and/or from the revenue streams that flow between the resort/system and II. It could be a link to Guest or Owner satisfaction that owners are vocal enough about encountering people at the resorts who got there for a lot less than "owners" pay, and GSI is an indirect revenue indicator.There is that, but I was replying to a post that put it into the context of it making more revenue for II, but it doesn't seem to do that.
Isn’t it just owned by Marriott Vacations Worldwide? (Yes, I recognize that MVW is a publicly traded company).Forgetting all of the above, II is a business in a group that is stock market listed in the US
Thanks for your detailed thoughts. I think in the case of what I quoted above, at least for Marriott and I am sure many other properties, II doesn't pay anything to acquire the inventory they are dumping via cheap getaways and ACs. Owners paid the maintenance fees and deposited the weeks. Marriott can also reserve a lot of unreserved inventory at 75 days out and put it up on Marriott.com for rent. Someone likely already paid the maintenance fees on that but just never made a reservation. If it comes from defaulted inventory, then owners again are paying the maintenance fees through the Bad Debt line item of the resort budget. So for II and Marriott, they get to rent stuff out for cash that they paid nothing to acquire.I also haven't worked out how the resorts/systems make money from so much deeply discounted inventory such as low value trades, Accom certs, getaways or availability on Bonvoy that is below the maint fee costs, but someone clearly thought it was a good idea and crafted the numbers accordingly.
I struggle to believe that there is no revenue stream between the resorts/systems and II, even if its the kind of stream that is a reconciliation based on usage volumes, which is commonplace in the travel sector. Why would Hyatt have been downgraded if there wasn't some form of saving to Hyatt in doing so, all II sees is fewer exchanges from Hyatt members, why would MVC Club points be so dreadfully poor value to use in II if there wasn't some form of cost attached to MVC, all II see is next to no usage from Club points only members? Just my speculation and business perspective.Thanks for your detailed thoughts. I think in the case of what I quoted above, at least for Marriott and I am sure many other properties, II doesn't pay anything to acquire the inventory they are dumping via cheap getaways and ACs. Owners paid the maintenance fees and deposited the weeks. Marriott can also reserve a lot of unreserved inventory at 75 days out and put it up on Marriott.com for rent. Someone likely already paid the maintenance fees on that but just never made a reservation. If it comes from defaulted inventory, then owners again are paying the maintenance fees through the Bad Debt line item of the resort budget. So for II and Marriott, they get to rent stuff out for cash that they paid nothing to acquire.
MVC Sales have been touting for 15 years that II inventory will dry up, and its not changed noticeably in that time for me. There are MVC resorts, like Aruba, that are markedly easier to get via II than via Abound and I don't understand why they would let that persist if it didn't work for them, as they can shuffle inventory across all the systems then manage if they want to. Clearly there isn't tight enough correlation between killing off II and selling more Abound for them to do that at scale.How much of an incentive does Marriott have to make II worse to try to get more people to sign up for abound points? I guess they have to juggle how much they can scrap out of II without giving up that golden goose while also not making II too easy or cheap so that no one would ever want abound points. Clearly they can raise the getaway prices for all the premium MVC properties and people will still pay up.
I think we also need to consider that there was some reason they decided to keep using II for internal exchanges instead of just issuing everyone including resale a points value like HGVC did and doing their internal exchanges that way. So MVC is a draw, but I question how many people would go for a world where the choices are pay up to get Abound or just have a fixed week fixed resort you can use and no other way to exchange? They might get a lot of people walking away in that case (or maybe not IDK). To the extent dots on a map sell (and I guess we're really debating that with the recent Wyndham news) having the location options II has to expand MVC over their necessarily limited locations seems like it really helps. I know having RCI in addition to HGVC really helped me decide to buy resale HGVC originally, though I know MVC isn't as location limited.How much of an incentive does Marriott have to make II worse to try to get more people to sign up for abound points? I guess they have to juggle how much they can scrap out of II without giving up that golden goose while also not making II too easy or cheap so that no one would ever want abound points. Clearly they can raise the getaway prices for all the premium MVC properties and people will still pay up.
Artifucual intelligence is getting better and better and I’m sure they are already wanting to analyze all the data to maximize revenue. Such a dinosaur like II is ripe for adjustments, and they typically won’t be in the members favor just like the flex change to 30 days. Why would they give members more time for those last minute deals when they can try to use that extra 30 days to first maximize their own gains
As TUG members years ago, when Hilton announced a new resort, and it was another one in Orlando or Vegas, we were all, "Of course, same place!" Taking over Diamond and Bluegreen was a step in the right direction, but how many of those resorts are not going to fit the Hilton model enough to keep them in that system.I think we also need to consider that there was some reason they decided to keep using II for internal exchanges instead of just issuing everyone including resale a points value like HGVC did and doing their internal exchanges that way. So MVC is a draw, but I question how many people would go for a world where the choices are pay up to get Abound or just have a fixed week fixed resort you can use and no other way to exchange? They might get a lot of people walking away in that case (or maybe not IDK). To the extent dots on a map sell (and I guess we're really debating that with the recent Wyndham news) having the location options II has to expand MVC over their necessarily limited locations seems like it really helps. I know having RCI in addition to HGVC really helped me decide to buy resale HGVC originally, though I know MVC isn't as location limited.
I'll give you those, butI love II way more than I do RCI due to the overall better quality resort options, cheaper exchange fees,
Really? Really? Maybe the Corporate RCI accounts have a much better UI than normal RCI, but if not, I strongly disagree that II has a better UI. I'm making a video, but am stymied right now due to II being down lol. I want to highlight the II UI deficiencies.preferable UI, etc.
I can't speak to TPUs, but hope for next year to have points to compare. I also think there's something to be said for quantity/availability in mid range resorts - there's a lot of times, especially for driving resorts for me in upstate NY where having something that's 6/10 is better than having nothing that would theoretically be 8/10 ... if it existed for me to book.However, I do like RCI's TPUs, particularly for low MF / high trading power resorts like one I have.
Really? Really? Maybe the Corporate RCI accounts have a much better UI than normal RCI, but if not, I strongly disagree that II has a better UI. I'm making a video, but am stymied right now due to II being down lol. I want to highlight the II UI deficiencies.
Yes, really, more aptly UX. Just my personal preference, I really do not like the RCI site. I do wish II had the functionality of RCI.
Well, I finally got my video together giving my opinion.Yes, really, more aptly UX. Just my personal preference, I really do not like the RCI site. I do wish II had the functionality of RCI.