I recently visited Tokyo Disneyland and it brought into
stark relief just how difficult it will be for Shanghai to deliver a quality
Disney experience. The Shanghai Disney
Park is scheduled to open in November 2015.
I have visited the two parks in the US as well as Hong Kong Disney so I
should know what to expect of a Disney Park. Two areas that will be difficult
for the Chinese to sustain are the cleanliness of the park and the cheerful environment
for visitors. Here’s why.
The next part of this problem is the person who cleans a
public space. Often this is an older
person who has retired from another job. Because the retirement age is 50 for
women and 55 for men, there are many middle aged people who must find work to
survive. Street sweepers make the
minimum wage dictated for each area, about 1100 rmb a month. This beats the 100-300 rmb that the
government gives for retirement. Each
person cleans several blocks of street gutters and picks up trash. Many supplement their income by separating
recyclables. These people aren’t expected to work too hard and so don’t. Disney will need to be especially careful
about this ingrained attitude to hire good cleaning people.

In summary, Disney cannot assume that a cleaning person
actually knows how to clean, nor how to use modern cleaning products. Fortunately, in the three years I have been in
China, more restaurants and stores are putting toilet paper in their bathrooms
so I feel confident that Disney will help reinforce this new trend in China.

employees. It makes you feel superior. I expect that the Shanghai Disney will need employees willing to enforce the “rules” consistently and not allow line cutting etc. All while keeping their smile. The Japanese are a rule driven people so this is something they do very well. We could count on exactly the same answer and behavior from each employee at the Tokyo Disney Parks. The Chinese are also likely to raise a loud fuss if they think you have dented their dignity. Disney should hire “behavior monitors” who can help people learn how to cue and also defuse conflicts.
Chinese employees who interact with the public do not
usually greet you with a smile. In general, people work because they have a
work ethic, not because they love their job or feel rewarded by it. They will
do the job and exactly that job. Which is why tipping is not part of the
culture here. I’m sure Disney does cheerfulness training at other parks so
should be prepared to handle this component of the new cultural challenge that
China represents.
While China is used to crowds, paying to enter the park and
then getting in a 2 hours line is not a quality Disney experience. Chinese are very money conscious and will
expect value for their entry fee. I hope that reasonable crowd controls are
enforced so that visitors can have a good experience. If too many people are let into the park – in
the name of greed, it will quickly get a bad reputation and discourage both
Chinese and foreigners from visiting.