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Dress At Work
Hi, I'm interested in peoples opinions about dress at work. If you are customer/client facing then I think formal dress is probably necessary (with some exceptions of certain professions eg media/advertising etc) but if you are just working in an office performing admin duties and never face "outside" people, do you think it is a bit old fashioned to make employees, especially men, where a stiff shirt and tie, shoes, smart trousers etc. I speak as a male, as "smart" for men seems much more limited than "smart" for females, but my issue is not about gender, it's about some companies being stuck in their old fashioned ways. Why should what you wear make you less productive at your work? it doesn't to me, in fact it encourages me... thanks.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I do think your idea is nice bond but some people (women & men) abuse this and I've see it happen once and the company had to revert back as a few employees were wearing trainers and gym wear (men) and women at work in night-club attire -it wasn't nice to work around as some did always look professional even behind the scenes and you need to look smart if attening meetings + what you look like influences others including colleagues. Scruffy says scruffy. Inappropriate says inappropriate and you're impression about the person is unlikely to change then. People have trouble interpreting "appropriate" but it doesn't mean you yourself get it wrong. Business is about making money and impressions count. Unless it is made very clear, you will have headaches. Personally I do not like to see it but I am particular.
I have two sets of clothes in my wardrobe, work clothes and non-work clothes and never the two should meet. I very much dislike turning up to work in jeans or any of the other stuff I knock around in despite much of my role not being patient focused; my personality at work is different (not significantly so but certainly a lot less swearing) to my home personality and I like it that way, I don't want work having the best of me. I don't wear suits to work but do have smart shoes/tops/dresses and nearly always black shoes - a shoe colour I never wear outside work.
I like having my work identity and home identity completely seperate. Plus I think it looks far more professional to be smartly dressed for work and I do think people take you more seriously.
I like having my work identity and home identity completely seperate. Plus I think it looks far more professional to be smartly dressed for work and I do think people take you more seriously.