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Ask Slashdot: Is There a Professional Geek Dress Code?

First time submitter KateKintail writes "I'm being promoted to be a director of a computer/web services department at work with staff members (not yet hired) working under me. My workplace doesn't have a dress code 95% of the year. Is this the end of my days of jeans and enjoyably geeky t-shirts? Is there a way to dress professionally in the workplace as a boss (the kind that doesn't need to be defeated at the end of a level) while still showing my Browncoat or Whovian love as I crawl under cobwebby desks to check that equipment is properly plugged in?"

16 of 432 comments (clear)

  1. Better learn to dress well because..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    now that you have been promoted to executive management you'll be completely unable to use a computer with in 6 months.

    1. Re:Better learn to dress well because..... by mcgrew · · Score: 5, Insightful

      To the submitter: Is there a way to dress professionally in the workplace as a boss (the kind that doesn't need to be defeated at the end of a level) while still showing my Browncoat or Whovian love as I crawl under cobwebby desks to check that equipment is properly plugged in?"

      You shouldn't be crawling under desks. The people you will be supervising should.

      I'd say, ask you boss what is required for you to wear. If he's ok with jeans and tshirts, go for it.

    2. Re:Better learn to dress well because..... by Razgorov+Prikazka · · Score: 5, Funny

      What my girlfriend used to do cheating her way trough highschool: write imortant stuff on your upper leg, about an inch or so up the end of the skirt. Move the skirt a little up and get your info. Move it back when the teacher comes around patrolling. The teacher (M) cant search you there for that would be inappropriate ;-)
      So, first up on the leg: 1 check all cables 2 try turning it off and on again. Now no one will ever know she forgot how to use a computer!
      Kate is a female name right??

      --
      rm -rf --no-preserve-root / ...and let /dev/null sort them out...
    3. Re:Better learn to dress well because..... by Defenestrar · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'd say, ask you boss what is required for you to wear. If he's ok with jeans and tshirts, go for it.

      No. If you boss recommends jeans and t-shirts, because that's a company culture thing, then and only then go for it. Otherwise dress at least one step up from those you supervise, or better yet at an equivalent step to what your new supervisors are wearing.

      People are visual animals and a very large portion of behavioral queues are completely sub-conscious. The phrase "clothes make the man" may be disturbing from an intellectual standpoint, but it's entirely accurate from a human-reality standpoint. Do some experimentation - attend various service locations in differing levels of dress and pay attention to the body language and other sub-conscious queues you're given.* You should want those you supervise to unconsciously look up to you, and you may also want your new supervisors to think of you as one of their peers. It's the uniform of the professional - it's not very different than the blue coveralls a mechanic wears in the shop. Sorry, but the days of this are gone.

      * You might want to check your jurisdiction's laws before experimenting much with a negative control.

    4. Re:Better learn to dress well because..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Nothing says YOU WILL BOW DOWN BEFORE ME quite like black leather and stilettos. :)

  2. Look to Gene Kranz by amliebsch · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Mission control, 1960's, shall forever be the exemplar of true nerd fashion. However, in a bow to modernity, the pocket slide rule could probably be replaced with a smartphone.

    --
    If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    1. Re:Look to Gene Kranz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      ...but only if the smartphone has the slide-rule app installed

  3. Re:Dress Code by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    If he had common sense do you really think he would be asking a bunch of nerds for fashion advice?

  4. First rule of geek dresscode by sourcerror · · Score: 5, Funny

    The first rule of geek dresscode is that you don't speak about geek dresscode.

  5. Contractor wear by Papa+Legba · · Score: 5, Informative

    In the computer contracting field, which tends to be semi-profesional dress, what you are shooting for is bussines casual Slacks, black shoes, button up shirt (short or long sleeve) with no patterns on it.

    Remember two things, you should not be climbing under things anymore. Directors direct others to do this work. Secondly you are now going to have to play interdepartment politics. this means you are going to have to make sure people take you seriously. this, unfortunatly for humans, means a dominance display in the form of your clothing. You are not going to win a budget fight and be taken seriously wearing clown shoes no matter how correct your argument is.

    So accept that in your new world clothes still donates status and ability. You need to adapt because you are not going to change the course of human evolution overnight.

    --
    Papa Legba come and open the gate
  6. General rule of thumb ... by Spectre · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... for any workplace when it comes to dress:

    Look at how your boss dresses. Your normal, "I'm not meeting with clients" work wear should NOT be dressier than your boss on a typical day, but shouldn't be significantly trashier either, unless you have filthy work duty* that your boss doesn't participate in.

    Actually this rule of thumb applies to behavior, handling of issues, manner of answering the phone, all kinds of things. Check how your boss and your peers around the company do something, assume it to be the corporate norm, and adapt that corporate norm to your specific situation.

    *poking around through a raised floor/dropped ceiling and the like

    --
    "Flame away, I wear asbestos underwear"
  7. Dress for the role you want next by anjrober · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ignore all the "it doesn't matter what you look like" comments you are bound to receive on slashdot.
    Dress like the role you want next
    Yes, you can wear t-shirts and jeans and stay exactly where you are today.
    Dress like an adult. This generally means khakis and a button down shirt or polo shirt.
    Sure, sometimes you can slide in jeans, but have nice ones.
    No t-shirts. no sandals ever.
    go to jcrew, banana republic, etc.
    and stop asking slashdot for clothing advice

  8. Mismatched socks by khendron · · Score: 5, Funny

    To quote the new VP of Development at my company, on the day of his promotion: "I stand here before you wearing one brown sock and one blue sock, demonstrating that you do not need to know how to dress yourself to get ahead."

    --
    Life is like a web application. Sometime you need cookies just to get by.
  9. you need to wear orange* by circletimessquare · · Score: 5, Funny

    1. cheetos stains are ok on an underling's t-shirt, but as a manager, when you wipe your cheetos hands on your shirt, it should blend in, so you appear professional. therefore, ultraviolet orange is the only shirt color you can wear from now on

    2. you should not wear the same jeans more than 3 days in a row. it is ok to set them out and allow the bacterial mass to age for a day or two, and then wear them another day later

    3. when you take your shoes off, the sock odor whiff from the cubicle next door should not exceed 220 ppm particulates of fungal matter. this level for managerial positions is more strict than 660 ppm particulates of fungal matter for underlings. so socks must be changed at least weekly. if you have a your own office now, then by all means, you do not have to change your sock policy, private offices are allowed mushroom growth

    (* you are asking slashdot for clothing advice. SLASHDOT. what do you expect?)

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  10. Re:Appearance matters by alexander_686 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Look at your peers. How do fellow managers dress? If you are meeting external people (clients, vendors) how do they dress. How does your boss dress? I had a point haired boss who gave me 1 good piece of advice, don’t dress for the job you have, dress for the job you want.

    Be neat. Clean, well-fitting cloths go a long way. Some people can pull of a professional look in jeans, t-shirt and jacket. Some people can’t pull this off, but there are a lot of geek polo shirts floating out there.

    Be subtle. Be more like Howard Wolowitz then Sheldon Cooper from the Big Bang Theory. Sheldon’s t-shirts tend to scream. Howard always a little geek around him (belt buckets, pins, etc.)

  11. Re:Dress Code by KateKintail · · Score: 5, Funny

    Strong SUIT. I see what you did there. And better to ask fashion advice from fellow nerds in my industry than from my beauty queen of a younger sister who'd probably have a heart attack looking at my wardrobe :-)