T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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126.1 | if it's really real, i'm out of luck | DINER::SHUBIN | Go ahead - make my lunch! | Tue Dec 09 1986 16:48 | 36 |
| re: .0 (Liesl)
> One real question here is should we, as women, allow the men's dress
> code rules to force us to conform? Do we all want to be part of
> the little army of suited ants trudging to work?
I hope not. I walked by the Mt Everest conference room here in HLO awhile
back and saw a little army of men and women all dressed alike. I could only
tell the women from the men because the women were wearing skirts and the
men were wearing pants. I realize that it's important (to some degree) to
dress correctly for an occasion but *everyone* doesn't have to wear a grey
suit with a red tie. It gets a little boring.
I'd hate to see women give up the liberty that they do have in fashion to
wind up dressing like men, who all dress alike. Why is it so important that
everyone be the same?
I accept that people's impressions are in part determined by one's dress,
but I don't think that that's a valid criterion, so I don't worry (too much)
about it. I don't flaunt it though: I don't wear overalls or shorts to work,
and I don't wear jeans at presentations, but then I never wear a tie, and
hardly ever wear a jacket, either.
What is considered "acceptable" is fairly arbitrary; wearing the "right"
clothes makes one fit into the mold better, but doesn't make her/him any
smarter or more well-suited (ignore the pun) to do certain work. On the
other hand, I did a project with some people a couple of years ago, and I
heard that one of them said something like, "Hal's got long hair; he must be
smart." I guess that it's not bad to fit into certain stereotypes!
> ... and she told me "Honey, whenever I see them like that I just
> think to myself about all those little penises bouncing up and down...
They must wear jockey shorts.
-- hal
|
126.2 | For The Record, I Despise Business Drag | VAXUUM::DYER | It's Bedtime for Bonzo | Tue Dec 09 1986 21:15 | 3 |
| Those bouncing penises make about much sense to me as the jeans whose
crotches fall to the knees. Explanation, please?
<_Jym_>
|
126.3 | Cutesy as opposed to powerful | HPSCAD::TWEXLER | | Wed Dec 10 1986 08:54 | 15 |
|
It seems to me that men in grey suits gave those suits their (slang)
name: a power suit. If instead of looking at these men and seeing
them as part of a tradition of empowered and powerful men, I consider
the 'penis' story they no longer have the mystique of the power
suit. In fact, the words "little penises bouncing up and down"
has an almost cutesy ring to it which removes the (I can't seem
to come up with quite the right words but) 'power aura' of those
men in their grey three piece suits.
Do you see now, Jym?
Tamar
|
126.4 | Dress for comfort. | ANT::WOLOCH | | Wed Dec 10 1986 09:34 | 20 |
|
I remember several years ago the "Dress for Success" book came out.
Immediately every woman wore the bland suits with the blouse with the
bow tie. This is still considered the "power-look" at I*M.
I always disliked stuctured, stiff looking suits on women. I could never
feel feminine in a suit like that. But there are many different
styles of suits and dresses that look professional without looking
masculine and without looking like every other woman.
I agree that there are different "dress codes" for sales, marketing
and engineering. Being an engineer, I am fortunate to not HAVE
to get dressed up every day. But I like to wear dresses, I HATE
anything cutesy, I wear what I think looks good on me. I hope I
am never put in a position where I have to dress a certain way.
This is my own personal opinion. I feel that a person should
wear whatever she/he feels comfortable wearing regardless of any
norms established.
Just my two cents.
-nancy
|
126.8 | Dressing for Interviews? | ARGUS::CORWIN | Jill Corwin | Wed Dec 10 1986 11:10 | 23 |
| First, an anecdote: My boss started wearing dresses, skirts and blouses, and
suits when she became an official "manager" instead of team leader. When we
were moved from software services into field service, the men were told to
wear ties (several were still wearing the illegal jeans/t-shirts/sneakers)
even in their offices. My boss wore slacks, a shirt, and a tie for the first
week to show the protesters it wasn't so bad, and probably to show her manager
she had guts. :-) It partly worked; it got her boss (and probably his boss)
really mad. No effect on the specialists, though. Personally, I was eternally
grateful to be female and not required to be insubordinate by refusing to wear a
tie. (We did talk about mai tais, railroad ties, and twist ties for a while.)
I started reading my boss' copy of Dress for Success a while back, but got
disgusted and stopped. I don't want to be a marketing or sales type, or
a high-level manager, either. I usually wear slacks and a blouse/sweater and
am perfectly comfortable sitting in my office. I don't expect to change that
when I find a new job, hopefully in engineering.
But I do have a question. Although the "fancy clothes" aren't everyday wear in
DEC engineering, what should I wear to an interview?
(maybe we need a "Digital guide to Dressing for Success" :-))
Jill
|
126.9 | It's all in where you shop | WATNEY::SPARROW | You want me to do what?? | Wed Dec 10 1986 11:25 | 12 |
| At one time, I worked with a group of top field service engineers
and *once* our manager determined that we should look professional
and were ties, suits or sports coats. The guys and I got together
for a surprize for our manager. When he came in the next day, and
cruised through our area, he saw 32 men and myself, all in pinstripe
suits, hair greased back parted in the middle, horned rimmed glasses,
and some of the most *awful* ties I could find. you see, we did
a mass shopping trip to Goodwill (used clothing stores) and we looked
absolutely marvalous. I couldn't believe it, he never commented
on our professional appearance again! ;-}
vivian
|
126.10 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Wed Dec 10 1986 16:39 | 33 |
|
I personally can't stand women's suits (or men's suits for that
matter). I think it's ironic that a lot of the women (managers,
etc.) who finally make enough money to buy all the clothes I'd like
to be able to buy, are forced, in order to play the game, to buy
ugly, plain suits.
I've been told by a friend who was being "groomed for management"
(not at DEC) that women should never wear pink to a meeting, or
when giving a presentation, and that women should never wear dangling
earrings or white stockings when wanting to "dress for success."
She said that women in business should dress to be taken seriously
by the men, and should not dress as though they were looking for
a date. I think this whole concept is ridiculous. I don't see
why any type of clean, neat clothing shouldn't be acceptable for
any job. People should be able to enjoy dressing to suit their
own tastes and personalities and not to show upper management they're
willing to play the game by all dressing the same in ugly, expensive,
little suits.
I'd like to see a rebellion by professional women, product managers,
etc., who dare to show up for presentations wearing stylish dresses,
colored stockings, long earrings, or jeans, and force upper management
to take them seriously for what they have to say regardless of dress.
It's just a fantasy I have, like no more wars. I don't really expect
it to happen. It's one of those issues where people say, "But,
that's the way it is. You just have to go along with it." But,
the point is, it's wrong. That's not the way it should be! People
should be able to wear whatever they want!
Lorna
|
126.11 | perception and reality | CSC32::KOLBE | Liesl-Colo Spgs- DTN 522-5681 | Wed Dec 10 1986 20:30 | 25 |
| Jym, .3 hit it on the nose. It's easy to be intimidated by someone's
appearance if you don't remember that they are just people underneath.
That's one of the reasons "power suits" exist. I can use my mental
image to remind me that clothes do not really "make the man".
As I typed the above statement I realized there is no statement
like "clothes make the woman". Not sure if that means anything or
not.
Notes is special in that we all form our opinions of each other
through written communication. I have noters that I really like
and I have never seen them. Maybe if I had seen them first I would
have an entirely different opinion of them. Would they be any
different then they are without my seeing them? No. But I probably
would have an opinion formed by what they wore and what body type
they have.
I would hope that women in the business world would help change
the image of what business people should like rather than accept
what men have set up. It's discouraging to have to dress in certain
ways so that men will not think you are too sexy/dumb/not serious
and so on and so forth. It really does look like the military when
you see a group of men all dressed alike. The grey suit and red
tie are a cliche. Besides, if everyone is wearing a power suit who
has the power? Liesl
|
126.12 | | LOGIC::SHUBIN | Go ahead - make my lunch! | Wed Dec 10 1986 20:40 | 23 |
| re: .10 (Lorna)
It's just a fantasy I have, like no more wars. I don't really expect
it to happen. It's one of those issues where people say, "But,
that's the way it is. You just have to go along with it." But,
the point is, it's wrong. That's not the way it should be! People
should be able to wear whatever they want!
Right, and as long as nobody changes anything, nothing will change. If you
don't like wearing suits/skirts/ties/heels/whatever, but you do it anyway
because you're "supposed to", then that perpetuates the problem. I always try
to dress nicely for presentations or important meetings, but I never wear a
tie or jacket to work because I consider it to be irrelevant.
This is certainly not the first note that I've written with this message
(nor even the first in reply to this base note!), but I feel very
strongly about it. The important issue isn't dress, or hair-length or
make-up, but personal freedom and choice, and whether or not to let others
make decisions for you, explicitly or otherwise.
Perhaps I lucked out by falling into the computer industry. I've always
wondered if I'd be able to break the rules like this if I were in another
job. I certainly hope so...
-- hal
|
126.13 | Click! | VAXUUM::DYER | It's Bedtime for Bonzo | Thu Dec 11 1986 02:41 | 4 |
| I see. Of course, now that both sexes are wearing power suits, we'll need
to change things a bit. Perhaps the image of buns bouncing around, or lint
in the bellybuttons, or something . . .
<_Jym_>
|
126.14 | | CSSE32::PHILPOTT | CSSE/Lang. & Tools, ZK02-1/N71 | Thu Dec 11 1986 11:04 | 23 |
|
Several years ago, I worked for a rather staid company in the
shipping business as an ops manager. The company didn't actually
have a dress code -- until one day I was sent for by the company
chairman (equivalent to the president of an American company) who
told me in no uncertain terms that one of my operators was
improperly dressed, and that I must send her home immediately to get
changed into proper clothing. The following day a dress code was
promulgated, that specifically only applied to the female employees.
When asked why the chairman said that the men all wore respectable
clothing and didn't need a code to enforce what they did naturally.
The code was still in place when I left...
/. Ian .\
Oh yes in case your wandering what the hapless teenager was wearing
that so upset the chairman on this hot summer's day... she was
wearing a white blouse and a dark gray knee length skirt, stockings
and black shoes.
The problem was that she wasn't wearing a bra!
|
126.15 | HUMOR ME | OURVAX::JEFFRIES | | Mon Dec 15 1986 15:30 | 10 |
| I too recieved The Woman's Dress for Success book several years
ago, but get upset? I read it with a sense of humor. Even now when
I need a good chuckle, I read a chapter or two of the book.
I have been color analyzed and feel much more comfortable wearing
colors that look good on me. One of my colors is red, and I now
own two red suits. My wardrobe is basically red, grey, black and
white. I feel good in those colors, I get more complements in those
colors, and my wardrobe is easy to mix and match. I have a couple
of other colors that I use for accent. I feel most powerfull when
I wear red.
|
126.16 | If Career Success is the Name of the Game... | GRECO::ANDERSON | | Mon Dec 22 1986 20:26 | 3 |
| Just a reminder from any Marketing 101 class. Differentiation is
the name of the game. If it applies to products, it applies to
people and the way they dress for business success.
|