A manufacturers speaker power rating is pretty much meaningless. The reason being that it never mentions what really counts, which is how much power and for how long, at what frequencies.
Sensitivity is more meaningful unless it is Klipsch who are well known for embellishing their sensitivity ratings.
Basically every 3db increase in sensitivity is equivalent to doubling your amp power. Bit that will not make it twice as loud as the db. loudness scale is a log scale.
Actually making a speaker that reliably achieves concert levels is a formidable task. As a home designer and builder, this is something you get the feel for.
A woofer has a bigger VC and thicker wire in the VC. But when you buy a completed speaker you have no idea how the VC is designed. On the other hand when buying a driver from a reputable manufacturer like SEAS for instance, then you generally do. So you get a feel for it. A tweeter for instance is going to have thin light wire, and so will not take a lot of power. However with a crossover 2.5KHz or above they don't have to take a lot of power. The huge problem is the mid range, where so many, if not all commercial designs are compromised.
There is an awful lot of power, in a lot of music between 80 Hz and 2.5 KHz and actually 3KHz. Although power is really concentrated in the speech discrimination band, between 350 Hz and 4KHz. If you look at where the power of music is, which I can do in real time on my rig, then you really get a feel for where power resources need to be provided. So the big shortcoming of, I would say most speakers, particularly three ways is deficient power handling in the speech discrimination band.
There is a word of warning about Klipsch speakers here. The crossover to the horn is bang in the middle of the speech discrimination band. This is not only a bad plan as it is right in the middle of the speech discrimination band, but the horn tweeter is taking a lot of power and they do burn out if you use monster amps and give them too much power.
Probably the most important take home of what I am telling you, is the chart I will place below.
This is an image you really need to study carefully. You will note the enormous concentration between 80Hz and 2.5KHz and even a bit above.
I honestly think that few designers of speakers really take that chart to hart. It seem to me that so often they must ignore it wantonly, or out of ignorance.
I will tell you, that you can not design a really good, reliable speaker to deliver concert levels without really taking that char to heart. It HAS to be a major focus of your design approach. For far too many, it obviously is not.