Of course. But let’s define 1 “guest” as each unique person that enters through the gate. They can enter the gate multiple times.They pay less gate, but they also cost the park far, far less, they're more likely to buy addons, food, drinks, merch, etc, and they're probably more likely to come alongside a group of other non-pass-holders (who are all more likely to behave like them). That group pays less for admission, but the margin on that customer overall is far more desirable than the simple admission dollar value.
Strong pass holder bases are crucial to the health of regional parks nowadays, don't get me wrong, but non-core-season operations depend heavily on non-season-long ticket holders to justify their excess budgets.
1 guest is a one-time buyer that goes once or twice or infinity times.
1 guest is one season passholder.
A one-time buyer can go in the summer. But they still exist in the winter, and don’t automatically know or care enough to buy a season pass. So they could buy another ticket for Winterfest if they are enticed.
One person can be incredibly stupid and go 18 times a year, buying a gate ticket at $55 average, and they will have almost spent $1000 over the course of a year. This person is insane. Or rich.
The goal of a season pass is to maximize how much 1 guest spends per year. One passholder is 1 guest. He pays $1000 on just the yearly add-ons, so we can assign $1000 to him too.
One guest could go to Winterfest only, bring three others and provide a meal for all of them. They buy tickets online for $35, and each meal was $25. All together our primary guest has spent $240 on this visit. That’s a family.
How about another family of four, who bought season passes for everyone because they were enticed by the All-Parks deal. They don’t get meal plans, and assume they don’t buy anything extra at all during any visit. We can assign $400 to them.
It’s reasonable to assume a season-pass family will buy something additional at some point. A meal, drink, ice cream, whatever. But even if we consider the cheapest individual, who just wants the free meals for their vacations, they were still duped into giving up their money.
At minimum they want one guest who spends $40 a year. $40 or whatever the cheapest online gate ticket is. Every market is made up of individual people who can be enticed to go at any time throughout the year.
I guess my point is that often times @Thriller focuses too hard on the daily metrics with his analysis. It’s not wrong to consider the daily, but it, the quarterly, or yearly can be highlighted at any point throughout the year. Every year they want to convince a person in the market to go.