If you want to understand what great customer experience looks like, go to Orlando.
I recently spent time at Walt Disney World, Universal’s Epic Universe, and stayed at an Airbnb. While these are very different businesses, they all reinforced the same lesson:
Experience is everything.
But it is the small details and clear communication that make it unforgettable.
This is not just about theme parks. These are lessons every agency leader should pay attention to.
Before we even arrived in Orlando, Airbnb set the tone.
The booking process was simple.
The emails were clear.
The expectations were obvious.
No confusion. No guesswork.
What really stood out was the host.
They did not just give us a place to stay. They guided the experience:
Clear instructions before arrival
Easy communication when we had questions
Proactive help with booking dinners and activities
Then we walked in.
It was a basic condo, but the details made it memorable:
Candy for the kids
Fresh fruit on the counter
Beer in the fridge
Water and sodas ready to go
None of that was required.
All of it mattered.
That is what people remember.
That is what people talk about.
You expect Disney to feel magical. That is the baseline.
What stood out was not just the theme. It was the execution.
Speed and Efficiency
We walked into a packed quick service restaurant expecting a long wait.
We had our food in under five minutes.
That is not luck. That is systems. That is process. That is intentional design.
When things are that efficient, you do not think about it.
That is the goal. Remove friction so the customer never has to think.
Disney could just launch fireworks and call it a night.
But they do not.
They turn the castle into a canvas.
They layer in storytelling.
They recreate moments we have all seen growing up.
At one point, they recreate the iconic Disney intro, the star flying over the castle.
That is not required.
But it is unforgettable.
Anyone can do fireworks.
Disney creates a memory.
If Disney is storytelling, Universal is immersion.
Epic Universe takes it even further.
The First Impression Matters
When you walk into Super Mario World, you do not just arrive.
You go up an escalator and suddenly:
You hear the sounds of the game
You see the world come alive
You feel like you are inside it
That transition moment matters.
Most businesses overlook it.
We sat down for lunch.
The kids meal came with corn on the cob.
But it was not just corn. It looked like a pipe from the Mario game, complete with a flag on top.
Again, not required.
But now I am telling you about it.
This was one of the biggest takeaways.
At Universal, you do not fumble with tickets.
You walk up.
Stand in front of a camera.
You are in.
Compare that to constantly pulling out your phone or pass.
The less your customer has to think, the better the experience.
You do not need a theme park budget to apply this.
But you do need to ask better questions:
Are You Overcommunicating in a Good Way?
Is your website clear?
Are your emails easy to understand?
Do customers know exactly what to expect?
Confusion kills experience.
Are You Thoughtful or Generic?
Are your messages personalized?
Are your touchpoints intentional?
Do you sound like everyone else?
Generic businesses are forgettable.
What Are Your Small Details?
What surprises your customer?
What makes them tell your story later?
What do you do that others do not?
Small details drive big loyalty.
Where Is the Friction?
Are customers constantly figuring things out?
Are your systems clunky?
Do they have to think too much?
If they have to think, you have already lost ground.
Every one of these experiences had one thing in common.
They were intentional.
Nothing felt random.
Nothing felt overlooked.
Nothing felt generic.
Because of that:
I will go back
I will spend more
I will tell others
That is what great experience does.
You do not need fireworks.
You do not need a theme park.
But you do need to care about the details.
Because in today’s world:
Experience is the product.
Details are the differentiator.
Communication is what ties it all together.