Ns1
No Lifer
- Jun 17, 2001
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ITT: a bunch of managers expounding their usual drivel about something that makes absolutely no difference in actual business function
also ITT, people on a mission to NoLifer.
ITT: a bunch of managers expounding their usual drivel about something that makes absolutely no difference in actual business function
3 of the first 4 responses here mention polos.
Business casual has never included polos notwithstanding any attempted bastardization of the term.
all the blue collar managers i know wear jeans and a t-shirt
Yeah, it'll depend on the kind of company.ITT: a bunch of managers expounding their usual drivel about something that makes absolutely no difference in actual business function
My precious formative years were spent growing up in hick countryso my spectrum of "dressing fancy" starts with "does the shirt have more than zero buttons on it?"
We even had Hawaiian shirts that were color coded and embroidered for the department you worked in and were special made for some Fridays, after winning a global excellence award and handed out, was pretty cool.
Has it been asked what industry you're in? This definitely influences the suggestions you'll get. For reference I wear jeans and a polo 70% of the time. Fridays I typically wear a t-shirt and jeans. I'm an EE in the defense industry.
I definitely agree well fitting clothes make all the difference.
Straight from the handbook "Dress
We are cool with letting employees at _______ dress comfortably and casually,
but keep it business casual and clean. If a client or fellow employee would be
embarrassed or uncomfortable with what youre wearing, then its probably not
appropriate. "
3 out of 4 ATOT nerds agree - not exactly a ringing endorsement. If you want to recognize a category of casual/smart casual, then polos would fit right in. Business casual has never included polos notwithstanding any attempted bastardization of the term.
It's hard to go wrong with slacks or khakis and a button-down shirt.
You can't be as boneheaded as a former underling of mine who showed up to a client site in shorts because he didn't understand what business casual meant... he must have missed that being called out at least twice during training.