My wife and I are considering seasonal work at WDW after we retire in about 5 years. Does anyone here have any background with this?
. . . seasonal employees are employed in almost every part of WDW
. . . however, mostly in resort, park, merchandise, food areas
. . . very few in office/technical areas
. . . you must work 150 hours to retain your status (new requirement)
Are you limited in the areas where you would work?
. . . you must be trained in a position to work it
. . . you will be scheduled at that location
. . . or, you could be "deployed" to another location, same job title
. . . folks get trained in several areas, so they can work lots of places
. . . plus, there are lots of jobs where little training is needed
. . . so, picking up extra shifts in other departments is possible
Average number of hours per week?
. . . you tell Scheduling how many hours you have available
. . . could be 10, 20, 40, whatever
. . . if you are needed, you will be scheduled
. . . remember, you are the lowest-of-low on priority scale
. . . frequently, you can chose your days but not hours or shifts
. . . if crowds are low, you might not get any hours
. . . however, you can go to the Hub and look for extra shifts
. . . if work is available, you can get to about 60-hrs per week