It depends on the job how nicely you dress for the interview, but there's no excuse for showing up dressed like a thug or a skank. I really think some of these kids just don't understand how it works. Maybe nobody's taught them. We saw that at Kinko's.
I usually wear a nice skirt and top ( business casual), and heels no more than 1" or 2" for most jobs.
To get the job at public television, I wore nice khaki pants, a button down blouse, and a nice blazer. Wore my hair back. ( I knew the job entailed unloaded trucks and building sets.)
To get my current job (graphic artist at professional company) I wore a slick black suit, a silk blouse, wore hair up, and carried a portfolio.
I once interviewed for a job in a commercial film processing lab where I overdressed, not knowing what exactly the type of environment I was getting into. I was getting into a truck unloaded, chemical mixing, small nasty lab with a couple of good old boys sleeping in it. I wore the generic job get-up #1. I ended up being forced to take off my shoes and prove I could lift a fifty pound crate of chemistry before they would hire me. Amazingly, they DID hire me.
I guess the rule of thumb is more or less that you should dress one better than the job actually requires, although showing up in a clean, pressed shirt and a pair of clean, new-looking jeans for a job interview at a place like Best Buy (or Kinko's) should be fine (as I think someone mentioned they dressed for a job interview.).
EDIT: I'd like to add this: I have temped. I showed up at the temp agency for orientation wearing a black blazer, a silk shirt, and a longish black pencil skirt. I wore my hair up, and wore spectacles. Carried a briefcase full of notepads, pencils, and whatnot. Basically, I looked like Mary Freaking Poppins.
I'm all about using costuming to influence what sorts of person you want to appear as.
Anyway, here I was dressed like this in a crowd of slobs, skanks, and basically otherwise careless, casually dressed people. They fell all over themselves to place me. I was placed IMMEDIATELY, and if I hadn't escaped when I did, about a month later, I would have found myself staring down the barrel of permanent employment at a company I couldn't stand. I got paid well, treated well, and given lots of perks. I really do think it was because I was viewed as a more valuable than average commodity by the temp agency. If they place you with a company that likes you enough to hire you, they get a nice payment. So since I was the most professional horse in their stable, they saw $$$ when they looked at me.
Certainly something to think about.
I usually wear a nice skirt and top ( business casual), and heels no more than 1" or 2" for most jobs.
To get the job at public television, I wore nice khaki pants, a button down blouse, and a nice blazer. Wore my hair back. ( I knew the job entailed unloaded trucks and building sets.)
To get my current job (graphic artist at professional company) I wore a slick black suit, a silk blouse, wore hair up, and carried a portfolio.
I once interviewed for a job in a commercial film processing lab where I overdressed, not knowing what exactly the type of environment I was getting into. I was getting into a truck unloaded, chemical mixing, small nasty lab with a couple of good old boys sleeping in it. I wore the generic job get-up #1. I ended up being forced to take off my shoes and prove I could lift a fifty pound crate of chemistry before they would hire me. Amazingly, they DID hire me.
I guess the rule of thumb is more or less that you should dress one better than the job actually requires, although showing up in a clean, pressed shirt and a pair of clean, new-looking jeans for a job interview at a place like Best Buy (or Kinko's) should be fine (as I think someone mentioned they dressed for a job interview.).
EDIT: I'd like to add this: I have temped. I showed up at the temp agency for orientation wearing a black blazer, a silk shirt, and a longish black pencil skirt. I wore my hair up, and wore spectacles. Carried a briefcase full of notepads, pencils, and whatnot. Basically, I looked like Mary Freaking Poppins.
I'm all about using costuming to influence what sorts of person you want to appear as.
Anyway, here I was dressed like this in a crowd of slobs, skanks, and basically otherwise careless, casually dressed people. They fell all over themselves to place me. I was placed IMMEDIATELY, and if I hadn't escaped when I did, about a month later, I would have found myself staring down the barrel of permanent employment at a company I couldn't stand. I got paid well, treated well, and given lots of perks. I really do think it was because I was viewed as a more valuable than average commodity by the temp agency. If they place you with a company that likes you enough to hire you, they get a nice payment. So since I was the most professional horse in their stable, they saw $$$ when they looked at me.
Certainly something to think about.
Comment