Master Thesis in Economics
[QUOTE=SsStuntCock;7363395]Let's start with a hard truth:
[B]Premium price is never about premium service.[/B]
It's not a reward for skill. It's not a marker of generosity, attentiveness, or emotional presence.
In this hobby, [I]price[/I] doesn't measure [I]experience[/I] it measures [B]perceived desirability[/B].
You're paying for the illusion of rarity, not the delivery of care.
Sometimes, you're not paying for what [I]she does[/I] you're paying for what she [I]withholds[/I].
Simply put: there are two dominant economies at play [B]Service[/B] and [B]Perceived Scarcity[/B].
Service is pretty straightforward. It's delivered by the queens who leave you with your knee shakey, stupefied and slack-jawed, with a sense of being seeneven if only for 30 minutes. You don't have to squint or project. The value is delivered, not implied.
But [I]Perceived Scarcity[/I] is trickier.
It's not about what's done. It's about how rare you're made to feel the moment is.
And in this scene, the most common shorthand for scarcity has been boiled down to three letters: [B]HYA[/B].
Hot suggests she doesn't need to be here.
Youth implies she won't be around long, so you could be her first, or even betterthe first to unlock something. Limited availability, tough booking, aloof energythese all stack to signal: [I]youre lucky you even got an appointment[/I].
[B]Service Queens[/B] intentionally keep lower all-in rates not because they're underselling, but because they thrive on consistency. They know the illusion doesn't need to be perfectjust real. With enough regulars, the reality sustains itself.
Meanwhile, the Scarcity Queen (aka HYA) is out front curated, distant, and efficient. She doesn't need to give much. Just enough to keep the fantasy fantasizing.
So while premium doesn't equate to performance, maybe it just means you paid more to feel lucky she opened the magical door.
Both models offer reliefjust in different ways.
[B]Service brings you home.[/B]
[B]Scarcity makes you believe youve already arrived.[/B][/QUOTE]This feels like an excellent summary of someone's thesis regarding an industry's business model. Should definitely be posted in the newcomer's section. Thanks for putting in the effort, this was spot-on.