Long Lines - Waste of Money

I mentioned that I was in Las Vegas. I stayed at Mandalay Bay. I found it very interesting that my first experience there was to wait in line for better than 30 minutes. I was only the 7th person in line.

I looked around and found something interesting about my situation. If you will notice in the image below, there are a lot of people waiting. There are a total of 26 lines where people can check in. Only 10 of them were manned (or womanned... as the case might be). At the point of taking my first picture, there were approximately 8 people in each line. It may look like there are more, but many people wait in line together. But still, that is about 80 people waiting to check into the hotel if you don't count their associates.

mandalay bay long lines

After I was done checking in, I decided to step back and take another picture. As far as I could tell, the lines doubled in length during that 30 minutes.

mandalay bay long lines

So, for 30 minutes 100 - 150 people (not including those with them) are standing in a line. Not shopping, not eating at restaurants and, more important to the casino's cash flow, not gambling.

It is fascinating to me that as businesses we seem to forget that people standing in line are not spending money. People standing in line aren't happy. People standing in line don't help us to grow. People standing in line tell their friends how long they had to wait in line.




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Sure but look at all the money they save by not hiring another person. They might have a brief slack period and one employee might have a nanosecond of free time. ;-)

I don't like waiting - that's for sure. However, I have to agree with Bill on this as well. Here's an interesting one for you... don't restaurants use this tactic to increase sales? I thought it was a great exercise in human psychology to create a smaller restaurant, make people wait, and have sales increase. Case in point - the Cheesecake Factory... Always 1-2 hours waits in peak markets.

I too, do not like waiting in lines. Especially at a "Premium" hotel - as a matter of fact(and my wife gets uncomfortable with this) I want "top drawer" everything. From the second I drive up - Valet. Get the Bellhop to take the bags, even if there are only two overnights. Talk to the concierge and get him to do stuff for me - it could be anything, information on show, etc. But wait in line? No. And this kills her even more, I won't wait. I will leave. Well, not at usually at a hotel - but I walk over to the concierge and tell him we are leaving, to get my car or get someone to check me in now. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. But, in reality, at these types of establishments, Vegas, the hotels have got you and they know it. I guess you were lucky that they had 10 lines open and not just 3. Great Observation.

It also depends on timing in Las Vegas - We had a positive experience at TheHotel at Mandalay Bay- took us 5 minutes to check in - and check out was a breeze - from room, to airport, though airport security and to gate - only 30 minutes with an hour to spare.
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