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Correct me if I'm wrong... I don't recall Ron saying it in the podcast but seems I recall him saying it at some point, but you also want to sell as many Season Tickets as possible because it is guaranteed revenue up front. Your FI can fluctuate as the season goes meaning you could see a decline in ticket sales later in the season but having those season tickets sold guarantees you revenue.
Yep, me too. My Season Ticket prices were a little higher this year than last but the prices for tickets on Opening Day and beyond will be much higher. They had to drop some towards the end of last season when we were dropping out of the playoff race and had teams coming in that were doing the same. Went back up when the playoff teams came to town though.7teen wrote: ↑Thu Jun 11, 2020 10:05 amCorrect me if I'm wrong... I don't recall Ron saying it in the podcast but seems I recall him saying it at some point, but you also want to sell as many Season Tickets as possible because it is guaranteed revenue up front. Your FI can fluctuate as the season goes meaning you could see a decline in ticket sales later in the season but having those season tickets sold guarantees you revenue.
It seems I recall that comment being made before which is why I tend to go a little lower on season ticket prices and then raise my ticket prices up when the season starts. Yeah the higher ticket prices in season means I have to share that revenue, but a lower season ticket price means I sell more of those and guarantee my self an early revenue stream.
I also look at it in "real life" way of saying I'm giving fans who buy a season ticket package a discount by buying all 81 games. You don't want season tickets? Fine! But you'll pay extra for that single game ticket after the season starts.
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