Thursday, July 2, 2020
Dress for interview, if you have to ask, you probably already know
Dress for interview, if you have to ask, you probably already know Ask your HR person about your dress for interview dress code Solids always look good. Pepper Potts always had a simple and elegant style Ask your HR person about your dress for interview dress code Because I am in HR, I seem to get a lot of questions about the interview process. Seems lately I have been asked a lot of dress for interview questions like âcan I wear this or can I wear that?â to an interview more and more. My two cents and I always try to drive this point home at the end of the conversation: If you have to ask, you probably already know the answer. You can come to me, HRNasty the all mighty when it comes to job interviews, hoping for some validation and permission to do what you already suspect is out-of-bounds, but I am no pushover. If you have ANY sense of fashion, then prove it by wearing the appropriate ensemble at the appropriate time. That or get a job as a model/rock star. When you dress for interviews your outfit shouldnt be noticed. You want to be remembered for your answers to interview questions and not your outfit. What this means is that you dont want your outfit to stick out in a good way and you really dont want to stick out in a bad way. A Prada bag sticks out. Pants that are too short stick out. Cologne and perfume will stick out and can cause an allergic reaction. Your college athletic backpack with your suit sticks out. Fly under the radar. I try to answer these types of questions with a âwhat makes you think you shouldnât wear that?â or âwhat is your concern?â (Yes, I know it sounds like a counselor, parent or the dreaded HR, but I is what I is!) More often than not, the candidate figures out pretty quickly and on their own that it would be better to ânotâ wear the article in question and upset the dress for interview code. I usually donât have to say anything and isnt that how a good mentor rolls? Some common dress for interview questions: Can I wear my new phat watch? (too much bling) Can I wear a suede skirt? (Suede in Seattle???? Suede to an interview? Are you applying to an SM shop?) Should I take out my 3rd, and 4th earrings? (Are you auditioning for a heavy metal band?) Should I take out my nose ring? (see above) Should I cover my tattoo? (see this blog post) Is my skirt too short? (Id have to see it on first, why dont you model it for me) 9 times out of 10, the candidate seems to talk through it for less than 30 seconds and comes to the right decision. It is almost as if they absolutely KNOW the right answer, but donât want to admit it to themselves, so they ask. If I the professional HR guy like me will give them permission, it is âOKâ and they can blame someone else. I have said this in the past, I donât have children. . . For just a minute, letâs forget about how cool, hip, or Vogue, your sense of fashion is. An interview isnât a fashion show, and it certainly isnât a club. We arenât selling individuality here. 9 times out of 10 we are selling âteam playerâ. Teams have a uniform to be as one. I hear the following arguments on a regular basis when dress for interview discussions come up: âIf they donât want to hire me because of my shoes, then I donât want to work thereâ âIf they donât like my 3rd and 4th earring, then forget themâ Everyone has a tattoo and this means a lot to me personally My argument on the dress for interview questions below: Get the job offer first, then ask if your earrings, flamboyant color, or t-shirt with a blazer are appropriate. If the company isnât for you, YOU are in a position to decline the company and the company isnt declining you. But give yourself the option to be the one doing the declining. Dont give this option to the hiring company. Wearing multiple earrings and a suede skirt may give you confidence, but confidence can also come from the fact that you KNOW you arenât going to get kicked out of the interview loop for wearing what is considered inappropriate. If you want confidence, wear your sexy thong or your Valentine evening panties. Most of us want to have the option to decline the company after an offer is given vs being declined before we get a chance to show off our skill set. At the end of the day, employers want to hire candidates that can be sent out to customers and vendors. Hiring companies want employees they can be promoted to be managers. Managers want role models and employees who can be public speakers on behalf of the company. These employees understand how to interpret the appropriate dress for interview code. Most companies have a dress code. It might be a loose dress code, and it might be unwritten, but they have a code. If they have a dress code, dress one step better. (no shirt, no shoes, no job) We might not like the dress code, but it has been put in place for a reason. Why would a company do that??? Any time you get a number of people in a group, you will have outliers, folks at the extreme ends of the scale. The larger the group, the more diversity. There will always be someone who wants to push the envelope and as soon as one person pushes the envelope, someone else will try to push it further. If we as people didnât have this trait, there wouldnât be improvements in the products and services we produce. Pushing the envelope is what makes us successful. There will be folks who âjust donât have a sense of fashionâ and there will always be folks who will want to try to get away with as much as they can. We all know that stealing isnât right, but we still seem to need a law for it. So, if you find yourself asking Can I wear this?, you probably shouldnt. Ask yourself What would HRNasty say? Good Luck, HRNasty https://www.hrnasty.com/what-to-wear-to-an-interview/ nasty: an unreal maneuver of incredible technique, something that is ridiculously good, tricky and manipulative but with a result that canât help but be admired, a phrase used to describe someone who is good at something. âHe has a nasty forkball. If you felt this post was valuable, subscribe to weekly updates here, or âlikeâ us on Facebook. Thank you! Share this:EmailTwitterRedditFacebookLinkedInPrintMorePinterestLike this:Like Loading... Related share HRNasty Seattle HR exec with SPRH opens the kimono to reveal and tell all in regards to what HR and your manager is really thinking and why. With this insight, you can conquer the job interview and climb the corporate ladder. It's not the candidate that is the most qualified that lands the job offer, it is the candidate that is the most prepared for the interview. previouslyWhy bad job interviews happen to good people, and what we can do about it up nextTell me about yourself - Interview Question Follow us 46,703 Subscribers First time visitorsFind out more hereSubscribers 46,703 Subscribe to HRNastyReceive FREE weekly updates to accelerate your career. No SPAM, I promise.
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