Overnight stays are something a lot of zoos appear to be getting into and again I doubt pure nerds / animal enthusiasts are the target market (read the reviews on trust pilot where people say how many people they went with for some indication).
That's a good point, and these are becoming ever more popular, but I would be surprised if many normal families could afford them.
Take a certain park in Kent for example, to stay in some of the lodges you are talking nearly £4000 for a weekend. Granted you can often fit 6 people in (2 double rooms and a twin room) but this is targeting high end cliental, not families looking for a weekend at the zoo. Having stayed over once at the park, most of the people are from abroad and have come on holiday from America, Eastern Europe and so on. The crazy thing is, these lodges are nearly always sold out, but lets be realistic, this is not being aimed at Mr and Mrs Smith from Leicester who work in 9-5 jobs.
The ones at a park in the Midlands are cheaper, but again, very few people could afford one night in these lodges, not your every day working folk.
I appreciate what you say about catering, but I have to be honest, most trips I do to zoos are not at the weekend, but even so, outside of school holidays most zoos are near enough empty during term times especially this time of year.
I was at one zoo on Sunday which is local and there couldn't have been more than 30 people there all day, at another last Thursday and there was 5 cars in the car park, and I don't recall seeing more than 7 or 8 people all day walking around and when I left at 3.30, I was told by the lady in the café, I was the last one in the zoo.
Lets put it like this, entry is say £15, and say you get 20 people on a quiet day, your intake is £300. That wouldn't cover energy costs, staff costs or anything.
I get why certain zoos close in the winter, when this is the footfall, as it probably costs more to open.
I don't doubt holiday turnover of people accounts for massive intake of funds and the Ice Cream trucks are busy, but also a number of Zoos nowadays are outsourcing catering.
Beale Park have given the catering to an outside business. In the summer Highland Wildlife Park had burger vans and so on selling food, all under contracts where they are paying the zoos a fee to do the catering.
If catering in the zoo, was as profitable as you make out, the zoos wouldn't be looking to outsource, but the guaranteed income is probably more beneficial.
I can actually see more zoos going down this route, by offering its café to an outside company, who cover the bills and staffing for it, and are basically paying a pitch fee.
I get what others say about designated marketing teams and the big zoos, do have these, but a lot of the small zoos don't. I know zoos where keepers are put in charge of the socials, because, no one else has the time.
Big zoos are an exception to the rule and they are unlikely to struggle and their name alone brings in punters, but for a smaller collection to survive, they need to be unique.
Experiences, Online presence and good socials, supporters pages and sponsorships, and team building are all effective, but not used by many zoos, big and small.
When I paid a figure for an experience last week, which equated to 20 x entry to the zoo and there was less than 10 people in the zoo all day, I think it's fair to say, that the experience fee probably helped significantly.
I'm not saying I know the solutions or have studied every zoos accounts to see what comes in and goes out, but the pandemic crippled a lot of zoos and the recovery is hard and slow. Bigger zoos have recovered better, and there has been talk of collections closing because of costs spiralling.
Memberships in big zoos will be massive turnover, but at a lot of smaller collections its 5 or 6x the entry cost, so I can't see high numbers of memberships, bigger collections where its 3 x like Chester and Longleat will get a mass of sign ups as that constitutes value. Would I pay £80 to visit a collection any time I wanted when entry is £13.95, probably not, as I'm unlikely to go six times in a year.
I don't think I am alone in my thoughts, maybe I am.
But I think there are a lot of ways that can generate money for smaller collections which aren't covered or considered, which constitutes little in the way of cost to implement.