From The Times
December 6, 2007
In the fourth and final extract from her book Drop Dead Brilliant Lesley Everett looks at the tricky issue of business casual
Lesley Everett
No matter what your IQ or job title, interpreting the dreaded words “dress down,” “business casual” or “smart casual” gives an added challenge to the working week.
Whatever your culture and whoever you deal with in business, you can make more mistakes with dress down than in suited attire. You need to emanate as much power, authority and credibility and command as much respect as you do in a suit.
For some reason, business casual gives us many problems. I believe the best way to sum up business casual is dressing casually while being appropriate, exuding credibility, personal power and authority and commanding respect – the look of quality.
Let us simplify things. To start with, I am going to stick my neck out and announce that, in business terms, business casual is the same as smart casual. “Smart” in the UK means well dressed and well turned out, so this part goes without saying, but you need to establish what is appropriate for business and what is going to propel you forwards in your career and not hold you back. “Casual” is easy, it’s getting the business balance right that can be tricky.
In many ways, understanding what to avoid for business casual is more helpful than being told what is right for you to wear. Avoiding the definite nonos, dressing appropriately and bringing out your personality make for a pretty safe bet. There are many ways to destroy your casual power. Some of the classic mistakes include: denim jeans; trainers; lack of grooming; white socks; leggings; shirts outside trousers for men; sandals; strappy tops for women.
For men, business casual is: clean, pressed clothes; immaculate grooming; fine knits and jerseys; chinos, cords or moleskins, cotton, cords, linen suits, gabardine or wool trousers; high-quality logo-free T-shirts in summer; sports jackets in softer fabrics than your formal suits; crisp cotton good-quality shirts; and loafer-style shoes, half-boots or slip-ons.
For women, business casual is: clean, pressed clothes; immaculate grooming; softly tailored suits and jackets; casual trouser suits; fine knits and jerseys; accent-colour tops and shirts; high-quality logo-free T-shirts; well-chosen and quality accessories; boots, classic-style court shoes or loafers. Avoid wearing flat shoes or sandals with skirts, because it never looks professional.
Drop Dead Brilliant by Lesley Everett (McGraw-Hill, £9.99)
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/career_and_jobs/graduate_management/article3004219.ece
Last edited by eg (2008-06-02 12:27:56)
What happened to demonstrating class, taste, elegance, and refinement?
Sign of the times I guess...meh.
I have lived through the business casual revolution. It has certainly had an effect on the legal profession. When I started out in the early 80s suits were a requirement for court. You went to court you had to wear a suit. During the decade the ethic deteriorated. I think the first idea was that if you dressed in a sports jacket or blue blazer and tie on a Friday it was a demonstration that you had enough money to go away for the weekend. All through the late 90s and 2000s the dress drill went down. it was OK to be informal at the office. You do still have to wear a coat and tie for court appearances. But if you are really well dressed people will ask you: Are you on trial?
But the legal profession may be the last holdout.
Hmmmm - I suppose that I'm now a country accountant doing the book keeping for small local businesses if I'm really anything. Because it suits me & becasue I happen to like the look I dress rather like a country Vet or a Doctor if I dress up. When I rarely wear a suit it's an old Tweed or an even older Poplin these days depending on the season (worsted is now reserved for any formal occasion I can't get out of like informal weddings & formal funerals). Most of the time I wear Tweed or Cotton jackets with Cords or Khakis.
- But that's only if I 'dress up'.
Today I'm wearing an OCBD & a cotton knit with twill jeans & boat shoes.
My professionalism is a given, but what I find works for me out in the sticks is being approachable and 'normal'. Most people are scared of numbers & mathematics & Tax etc. So I take the sting out of my profession for my clients by looking un-professional. I wonder if that makes sense?
In London I used to dress up in my early days, but working in Adland & Media I soon learned the trick of dressing down or dressing more creatively so that the people around me could relate to me better. I learned that in my industry(s) people didn't like "Suits" - A 'Suit' being a person who is perceived as being just a suit & not a human being.
Just offering another view here, but I must say that I would neve hire a lawyer who dressed like me. How could you trust such a slob to get the work done?