This is cynical, short sighted and unwise.
https://www.pafc.co.uk/news/2324-ticketing-update
I understand the Club is try to maximise revenues but this could come badly unstuck if we don't get promoted and then if for one reason or other (e.g. Schumacher leaves in the summer), there was big drop in demand. It's transferring that risk from the club to the fans in that I believe as a season ticket holder you can off load match day tickets you can't use and get some money back, that is going to be a lot harder if we're back to 10,000 gates (or less).
It's bad news for us particularly because we've got early starters here, so mid-week matches have always ruled out weekday evening games, of which there are more and more as the published fixture list is changed by more and more extraneous factors.
What's worst of all is that it's a massive slap in the face for fans from further flung places. Perhaps the Janner Song has convinced the club that the fanbase are all Plymothians. They are not. There is a big diaspora of fans as far into Cornwall at least as the old Carrick district and into West and North Devon, many in disadvantaged areas, who cannot attend every game or anything like it, but regularly come half a dozen times a year, bringing their kids with them.
If the number of season tickets is increased still further, supplemented with those that can afford an Evergreen subscription and priority match day tickets, those people will be shut out. There's a bigger population in those areas than there is in Plymouth itself and ignoring it is NOT in the club's long term interests. Skip one generation of kids being dragged to Home Park by their dad's and their kids will in turn all be in Chelsea and Liverpool shirts for life.
This is the wrong way to do it. Increase prices sensibly. I'm sure we all expect quite a big increase if it's the Championship but an increase in any event. Cap season ticket numbers at something not a lot more than they are now. Make sure you continue to engage the widest fan base so that when you do have more seats to fill, you can find bums to put on them. Once lost to Sky and the Premier League, they're lost forever.
I can give you a somewhat related example. My neighbour two doors down, although Irish, had for several seasons been taking his two sons to Argyle on season tickets. Even then, his eldest has now apparently succumbed to arsenalitis, possibly as they have relatives in North London. If they can afford to go to Arsenal even a few times a year, then money can't be a huge barrier, but they can't go to Argyle even occasionally, then they're lost forever.