@@guilherme7394 how about not assume and just do your fucking job servicing ANYONE who comes through that door? they stand doing nothing 50% of the time anyway. My conglomerate friends from Singapore would walk in there with basketball shorts and flipflops and could've bought the whole store's inventory.
@@chrisjon8563 When you work in sales, you get used to pre-judging because 99% of the time your assumption is correct within the first few seconds what kind of customer they are, and the 1% are times like this.
@@AfterlifeAnubis as a former employee I understand what you mean and how tiring it is to give a 100% to a customer that you know isn't going to buy. But as a store owner I HATE seeing my employees act rude to customers. There is good reasons for that. 1. Even poor/uninterested customers have friends, 2. Service is what differentiates offline and online shops, they might change their mind or they can recommend to others etc. 3. Knowing my store got an unecessary bad rep just because you are lazy/rude is enraging.
@@amitmistry9207 OMG. Everywhere. It's like asking "Where do they sell food?". But Thailand is a better choice if you don't like living 'rough'. World famous hospitals there too.
If you're a multi millionaire, almost everything is "free" because the price don't matter anymore. That is unless you chose to live frugally and use your well earned money to serve others more than yourself.
@@koeber99 He's a lawyer. I'm not. It's ok for him to wear a very nice suit. For me, it would be excessive and unreasonable, considering how dress code for my job is basically "wear clothes that aren't pajamas".
I was probably making 12k a year when i watched it. 😂 Now i make close to 120k a year and i im pretty fookin sure if i made 1.2 mill I STILL WOULDN'T PAY 2K FOR A SUIT let alone 12k 🤣
@@nolansteffek7202 I have relatives who work in this field and have over 20 years of experience. My siblings work for a luxurious brand in Los Angeles and they've told me that anyone can surprise you by their appearance, so treat everyone nicely because you never know who that person is. There are high rollers who look like vagabonds but turn out to be loaded and spend like there's no tomorrow. I've watched another video where Mr Beast walks in a Ferrari dealership dressed up as a homeless dude and got treated properly, the dealers didn't know who he was.
@@nolansteffek7202 because it’s a horrible way to do business. If you base your business upon what people look like you’d be turning Away a ton of people. When I went and got my 3k grad suit for highschool I’m pretty sure I walked in there with like sweats and a hoodie and nobody batted an eye, I walk into expensive and cheap stores wearing whatever cause it doesn’t matter, even if I wasn’t there to buy, it’s pretty fucked to kick someone out of your store and will honestly only cause a bad reputation through word of mouth.
@@nolansteffek7202 Waiters pretend to be nice for a $5 tip. Are you really too stupid to understand that these people would never throw away a multi thousand dollar commission by blatantly being rude to customers?
That's not how this place treat you lol. I've been to the huntsman at the savile row with Nike t-shirt and they still treat me as any other guests would.
This happened at Brioni in beverly hills, I can purchase upwards to 10K of dress shirts and trousers, but keep in mind they are going to defend their brand and kick anybody out for not dressing casually, I was an exception as long as I showed them the money
Reasonable assumption, but not how it’s done. What happens is that they take a lot of measurements, then you pick your fabric, liner, buttons and a number of other small details. For a MTM suit, they build it and then you go back for the detailed fitting. That’s going to be around $2000, give or take $500 or so. Takes about 6-8 weeks. $12,000 is is serious bespoke territory. At that price level the cost is kind of gratuitous and is more about exclusivity than value. It starts off the same, but instead of a shop building the suit and then you come in for fitting, they build it right on you piece by piece. Takes about half a year. You can get a good Saville Row bespoke suit in the $3,500-$7,000 range. Depends on the shop and fabric. Prices are in the same range for other places in Europe and N.A. Honestly, a good MTM shop will get you a really nice suit for $2000. If you’re spending six times that much, you’re not doing it for you, you’re doing it for everyone else. But honestly, if you wear a suit for work, a nice MTM suit is worth it. Shirts too. The fit of custom clothing is worth the money
@@EchoTangoSuitcase so you literally described the process of them building it for you after picking materials from a display. Thanks for wasting several paragraphs to agree with me, lol
You’re not talking about him checking her ass out are you? But I agree, pretty sexist in terms of all the speeches of “being a man” and not being a “little girl”