After working in a pizzeria for a few years 14 years ago, I always wanted to own my own pizzeria and I’ve finally decided to actually open a small pizzeria tavern. We will actually be opening next week

I have been baking at home for quite some time now with several different methods but after following a ton of info offered by home and commercial bakers online and networking with friends, family, etc… I’ve gotten to the point with my home baking that I can make a consistent dough, baked in a variety of ovens, resulting in a fairly consistent pizza crust the way I like it.
Two very common procedures that I have adopted at home is the autolyse period and a bulk rise/ferment (prior to scaling and balling for a 2nd and final fermentation period).
The autolyse procedure I’ve used is usually the same… simply a 15-20 minute resting period after a few minutes of mixing 75% of the total flour weight with 100% of the hydration, yeast, salt and whatever else I may be using (except oil). Then I add the remaining 25% flour (and oil if so), mix additionally, knead, etc. As I understand it, it assists in the development of gluten structure… I’ve just rolled with it LOL.
The bulk rise varies… I have done everything from a 1 hour to a 12 hour bulk rise, cold and at room temperature, sealed in a container or covered with a towel. I’ve paired a bulk rise usually with a 24-48 hour cold fermentation after scaling and balling. All basically the same, i.e., mix/knead dough, bulk rise, knock down, scale/ball, retard, then acclimate to room temp and bake … all resulting in (what I would consider) a great flavor and texture and crumb (using ADY btw). As I understand it, it helps in developing the flavor character of the crust… again, just rolled with it.
Why do I not see these procedures performed in commercial applications?
Is is unnecessary?
Is it too difficult to manage? (bulk rise)
Are they more of an artisan bread bakers procedure to have crossed over into pizza dough commercially?
Is it just a procedure commonly used when baking within a few hours of dough batch prep to help develop a flavor when a long cold fermentation is unavailable? (bulk rise)
Is it replaced by a proper long cold fermentation? (bulk rise)
Are there physical and chemical properties of a larger commercial batch of dough that prevents these from functioning beneficially?
Has the internet Neapolitan pizza popularity and blogging highlighted these procedures to be of biblical importance out of thin air? (joke mostly…)
I’ve just been researching so many dough procedures here lately that I’ve noticed the omission of them in the commercial world and the importance of them in the home bakers world.
Care to share your take on these?