j ingevaldsson
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- Aug 24, 2011
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In a way we are saying the same thing. What you describe about Berluti is the expense of marketing a luxury good. My point was if you are a luxury good, people are going to expect robotic objective perfection. As far as the wages go, I will say that the $60/hour you described is 1.5x (or more) what most prosecuting attorneys get (and they also work many uncompensated hours), so I would consider that no longer a workman's wage (I'm not ignoring that you referenced expenses coming out of that, except for the taxes all regular people pay and salary-earners pay without any deductions, but I don't think $60/hr carries the expected shock value).
I'm sorry, but no, we don't say the same thing at all. TBH, it's clear that you don't understand, despite me and many others trying to explain things the best we can for you.
As stated by others, billing rate and wage is two very different things. Good luck finding a decent attorney that bills you $60 an hour... On top of that, bespoke shoemaking can be considered to be both a service and production, which is one of the reasons it's extra difficult to make good money of it.
Since these things seems hard for you to grasp, I would recommend you to reach out to a shoemaker and talk to them, maybe that can make you understand things better