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I'm starting a new job next week after being at the same place for 7 years.
It's exciting, but naturally I'm nervous.
Before I went on the interview, I was told that it would be a "business casual" meeting. I wore a 50's gabardine shirt, 40's wool slacks and black loafers. The man interviewing me on the other hand was wearing a hooded sweatshirt, jeans and sneakers. This is what the company sells, but it hardly seemed business like at all. Like I said earlier, I got the job, and now I am going away for two weeks for a training course with 30 other new hires.
What should I bring? I mean, if they say it's business casual, that obviously doesn't mean much.
Just a little background here: all my clothes are vintage, or vintage repros. I don't have a polo and a pair of chinos to throw on (let alone 2 weeks worth of them). My casual dress is what most might think of as "dressed up".
This training is in the corporate offices, so it will be good to stand out, but I don't want my fellow trainees thinking "Who IS this guy?" either.
Advice? Ideas?
**Let me add also that when I'm officially on the job, the dress code is "collared shirt with jeans or chinos".
It's exciting, but naturally I'm nervous.
Before I went on the interview, I was told that it would be a "business casual" meeting. I wore a 50's gabardine shirt, 40's wool slacks and black loafers. The man interviewing me on the other hand was wearing a hooded sweatshirt, jeans and sneakers. This is what the company sells, but it hardly seemed business like at all. Like I said earlier, I got the job, and now I am going away for two weeks for a training course with 30 other new hires.
What should I bring? I mean, if they say it's business casual, that obviously doesn't mean much.
Just a little background here: all my clothes are vintage, or vintage repros. I don't have a polo and a pair of chinos to throw on (let alone 2 weeks worth of them). My casual dress is what most might think of as "dressed up".
This training is in the corporate offices, so it will be good to stand out, but I don't want my fellow trainees thinking "Who IS this guy?" either.
Advice? Ideas?
**Let me add also that when I'm officially on the job, the dress code is "collared shirt with jeans or chinos".