How Casual Is Your
Business?
It seems that the trumpeted
arrival of the dress code that came to be known as 'business
casual' is making something of a whimpering exit.
With the 'dot-com' boom,
came a new generation of CEOs, mostly in their late 20's or
early 30's who took a more cavalier approach to their business
attire, and turned up for work 'sans-tie'.
In some companies it was
more extreme than others, where the newly minted millionaire
would show up in ratty old jeans and a T-shirt, and before too
long the masses had followed.
So, what became of the
Business Casual dress code?
Well, I for one believe
that it never was a genuine code in the first place.
I can site numerous examples
of HR professionals and senior financial officers dismaying
at how some of their younger people started dressing for work.
If called upon at a minute's notice to attend a client meeting,
it would have been difficult for the client to determine who
had arrived from the Accountants office and who was delivering
the Pizza.
The problem has been that,
unlike the 'IBM unwritten rule of white shirt, dark tie and
suit', the term 'Business Casual' was always open to misinterpretation.
Does one place the emphasis
on 'Business' or 'Casual'?
It seems that if you were
40 or older, you thought this to be a sports jacket and Polo
shirt. The next generation down saw it as an opportunity to
show off their more outrageous designer label purchases, and
the youngest members of the workforce took it to mean 'turn
up wearing what you slept in last night, no one will mind'.
Since the demise of the
largest slice of the 'dot-com' economy, the standard of dress
codes seen in most places of work seems to be on the rise again.
Call it a return to more
traditional values across the board.
Just listen to your radio
on the drive into work. How many 'specialist outfitters' do
you hear advertised which specialize in business suits? I seem
to hear more each day.
Take a look down Bay Street.
How many 'high fliers' do you see not in the traditional designer
suit? Very few upon my own inspection.
Finally, take a look around
your own office. I see more business suits and 'smart casual'
than anything else. It seems we all received an 'Emeril-like'
message to 'kick it up a notch'.
Today business casual,
I believe, means a designer suit with a designer shirt, but
no tie, as opposed to the T-shirt and jeans. Maybe it's because
of the thought that casual attire leads to a casual approach,
and as the economy tightened we had to be anything but casual
in our approach to business.
I still believe there is a place for business casual - with
the emphasis placed firmly on business, and many companies I
work with seem to have got it about right. Many of the people
I see at work would feel equally at home at a family wedding
as at work, based on their choice of wardrobe. And why not?
It seems that what we
came to know as business casual is dead. Long live business
casual
But then again, what do I know?
©2002
Stephen J. McIntyre-Smith, Marketing For Accountants.com. All
rights reserved.