HeyMoe
Practically Family
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Looks like a wedding photo from my first marriage
Looks like a wedding photo from my first marriage
Over the years I've dealt with some rather well-dressed people who were largely ineffective at whatever job they'd been hired for. Except for specialized work gear, dress codes in the workplace have little to do with functionality--it's all about the image the company wants to project for it's customers and potential customers. And even companies that have instituted some form of "casual" Friday will usually still enforce a different dress code for those days--Hawaiian shirts, jeans, and tennis shoes are acceptable, but show up in a stained tee shirt, cargo shorts, and beach sandals, and they'll send you home....The only logical reason for some sort of dress code (whatever it may be) at work is that it somehow improves your function at a job...
Over the years I've dealt with some rather well-dressed people who were largely ineffective at whatever job they'd been hired for. Except for specialized work gear, dress codes in the workplace have little to do with functionality--it's all about the image the company wants to project for it's customers and potential customers. And even companies that have instituted some form of "casual" Friday will usually still enforce a different dress code for those days--Hawaiian shirts, jeans, and tennis shoes are acceptable, but show up in a stained tee shirt, cargo shorts, and beach sandals, and they'll send you home.
That said, I've occasionally wondered about companies that employ some form of "Casual Friday" policy, specifically with regards to their motivation. Does it really help the overall morale of the employees to allow them to wear semi-casual clothing one day out of the work week? Does it present a "better" image for their customers? "See? We have Casual Fridays; we're not always hard-nosed taskmasters." I've had jobs that required me to wear actual uniforms, but otherwise have never had a job that required anything "dressier" than a tee shirt and jeans, so I'm sincerely curious.
Here are some future billionaires. So I guise it's not the suit that makes the man! When I think about it, most of the times I have been ripped off in my life, it was some guy in a suit.
Example : in my office when I moved to this location it was typcial business casual with casual friday.
I used to work with someone who wore a tie everyday and always bemoaned that it wasn't required anymore, as he'd noticed a dramatic decline in overall professional behavior (and work ethic) among his co-workers when they removed the requirement for engineers to wear ties. That was well before my time, so I can't comment, but always thought it was interesting.
I used to work with someone who wore a tie everyday and always bemoaned that it wasn't required anymore, as he'd noticed a dramatic decline in overall professional behavior (and work ethic) among his co-workers when they removed the requirement for engineers to wear ties. That was well before my time, so I can't comment, but always thought it was interesting.
This is an oxymoron. A remnant of the fact that too many out there think that khakis and a polo shirt or jeans and bowling shoes are "business casual". Apparently many guys now think just remembering to put pants on qualifies as "business casual".
This observation is spot on. You used to be expected to behave differently in a professional office than you did hanging out in the backyard drinking beer with your buddies. That line is almost completely gone now, and it's direct result of people losing the sense of "this is a place of business".
Exactly! It sets the tone of the business and environment.
Not to mention that objective studies have clearly shown that in offices with "business casual", employees are absent more often, tardy more often, have more disputes with coworkers, spend more time goofing off, and are decidely less productive than in offices with traditional business attire.
I could have told them that without all that wasted study money. All you have to do is be part of a few different business environments and you know the difference ASAP.
Most of the writers I know say they feel most creative in pajamas and a bathrobe. I knew one gal who swore the only time she could ever actually produce anything was when she was naked in the bathtub.