Rolex Air King Domino's In Stainless Steel Ref: Rolex - 14000m
€7880
Collector Square
Stainless steel rolex air king wristwatch. Round case in stainless steel, screwed caseback, stainless steel smooth bezel, screw-down crown. Silver dial, automatic movement. Applied baton hour marker, luminescent luminescent, baton hands. Second hand central. Stainless steel oyster bracelet, folding clasp signed rolex in stainless steel signed rolex. Dial‚ case and movement signed. Sold with rolex case, original papers rolex. Very good condition: dial, glass and hands in very good condition, superficial scratches on the case. In the early 1980s, domino"s decided to give its american shop managers a crazy reward to motivate them to achieve their targets. For $20,000 in weekly profits, a manager could receive a rolex watch engraved with the logo. A victim of its own success, domino"s then raised the bar a little higher, demanding four consecutive weeks of profits of between $25,000 and $30,000. The practice ended in the early 2000s, as the weekly target had become much easier to achieve.. Steel
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silver
Rolex Air King Domino's In Stainless Steel Ref: Rolex - 14000m
- Farbe
- silver
- Zusammensetzung
- steel
- Details
- Stainless steel rolex air king wristwatch. Round case in stainless steel, screwed caseback, stainless steel smooth bezel, screw-down crown. Silver dial, automatic movement. Applied baton hour marker, luminescent luminescent, baton hands. Second hand central. Stainless steel oyster bracelet, folding clasp signed rolex in stainless steel signed rolex. Dial‚ case and movement signed. Sold with rolex case, original papers rolex. Very good condition: dial, glass and hands in very good condition, superficial scratches on the case. In the early 1980s, domino"s decided to give its american shop managers a crazy reward to motivate them to achieve their targets. For $20,000 in weekly profits, a manager could receive a rolex watch engraved with the logo. A victim of its own success, domino"s then raised the bar a little higher, demanding four consecutive weeks of profits of between $25,000 and $30,000. The practice ended in the early 2000s, as the weekly target had become much easier to achieve.