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What I Learned at Disneyland – Transporting People to a Happier Place Mentally and Emotionally

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happier place emotionally

My family and I just came back from four days at Disneyland.  Christmas to New Year’s is always the busiest time at the Magic Kingdom. But despite the huge crowds, people were smiling and having fun. We all know that Disney Corp. is a master of integration, with classic cartoon characters, movies, theme parks, hotels, and cruise ships woven together into a seamless spectrum of products and entertainment. We also know that Disneyland is a place where the child in us can come out and run free. I watched a couple from Japan, both in their 30s, with no children in tow, behave like little kids at the sight of Minnie Mouse.

But what I realized is that Disney is not only in the integration business. It’s also in the transportation business. Disney makes people happy by transporting them back to a state of childlike happiness. There’s no other place that does that half as well. Whether singing along with audio-animatronic pirates or getting your photo taken with Eeyore, every moment is designed to transport you back to a happy memory from childhood.

It got me to thinking that every company needs a similar “transportation” strategy – a strategy for transporting people to a happier place mentally and emotionally. That strategy will be driven by a deeply ingrained vision of how you want to make people feel.

So ask yourself: “What is our transportation strategy? How do we want to make people feel?” Whether a bank, a restaurant, or clothing store, every company should have one. If not, your customers will see you as a commodity, and value you accordingly. In these economic times, that’s a risk you can hardly afford to take.

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  • I worked in an environment that frowned on any kind of happiness. It became a very macabre place to work. I have also worked in places that foster an attitude of fun and happiness. Guess which place was more productive.

    Our transportation strategy was to allow everyone to help in the transport. We worked together.
  • jm101699
    Great point what we buy is not the product or service but the experience, for example if you buy a nice high-end car you do it becuase of ego, stutus quo, you feel better becuase it was for pure transportation fro point A to B; you mind just buy the cheapest used car. So you pay for the experience, for the feeling. I see most companies and owners of small business donot get it. Also see it at my own company (any other large company) very very few people get the fact that we sell experiences, we sell the feelings to people. If could transport them to Disney or to a difference place and we have the power to DO IT.
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