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Does Casual Dress Affect Productivity?

September 10th, 2008 @ 2:29 pm

7 Comments

Categories: Productivity, Work Life

Tags: Dress, Productivity, Professional Development, Workforce Management, Training And Certification, Career, Human Resources, CC Holland

1343735207_b7253754a5_m.jpgIf you’re dressed in formal businesswear, will you be more productive than your more-casual co-workers? Depends who you ask.

One side of the debate holds that sloppy dress leads to sloppy work. Laura Harris described how her nonchalant dress led to a decrease in company enthusiasm and productivity. Some studies have found that executives believe attire affects productivity and can hinder career advancement.

And a few years back, a poll found that tardiness and absenteeism increased at companies that adopted dress-down policies. There’s also the feeling that sloppy or skimpy dress can be distracting to co-workers, can lower productivity and negatively affect customer service.

However, most of these assertions come either from opinion polls or are anecdotal, and there is little hard evidence in the way of earnings reports or declining stock values to support these conclusions.

On the other side of the coin, this summer’s FPC Workplace Web Poll of 9,015 employees across all industries indicated that 60 percent of senior managers think going back to corporate dress would be a step backward and would actually hurt productivity.

Other surveys found that casual dress improved employee morale, that dress-down days had a beneficial impact on employee performance, and that a low-key dress code would be received by employees as an added benefit.

Presumably, another perk is that workers would have to spend less money on their wardrobes. More take-home pay saved might mean more warm fuzzy feelings about your job, hence more motivation.

What’s your take on this? Post a comment, or participate in the poll below.

How does a casual dress code impact productivity?

View Results

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(image by ninjapoodles via Flickr, CC 2.0)

CC Holland is an award-winning writer and editor whose work appears in several national publications and Web sites.

 
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  •  
    1

    Enrico Pallazzo

    09/10/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Does Casual Dress Affect Productivity?

    I work in an office where the upfront expectation is that you'll be in business casual clothes, but you later find out that fully casual dress isn't exactly frowned upon in practice. I don't think the clothes I'm wearing alters my productivity, but wearing jeans occasionally does alter my morale for the better. And in turn, I'd expect that is affecting my productivity for the better.

  •  
    2

    ChrisMac416

    09/11/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Does Casual Dress Affect Productivity?

    Biz casual is the way to go in my company. Most of us are at our desks all day. However, we work with large corps where Senior Mngt always wears a tie - even in the height of summer heat waves (this seems insane to me) so when client facing events or meeting happen you've gotta dress to meet your audience. It's some strange ritual that I believe is spill-over from the 20s to 40s when men and women showed their "class" by their dress. I for one feel the tie/noose is for board meeting, weddings and funerals!

  •  
    3

    GinaD

    09/11/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Does Casual Dress Affect Productivity?

    I think it all depends on how it's packaged. If you announce casual dress as a reward for a job well done, the attitude is different. If it just happens because people are not being reminded of the dress code, or because the boss' attitude is less than enthusiastic, "since he's dressing down, I will too". I think it's the attitude that leads to complacency and not the attire.

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    4

    Ramses the Great

    09/11/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Does Casual Dress Affect Productivity?

    I believe that you should dress according to the situation you are. I do not see that wearing always the same formal or casual clothes is very much motovating or stimulating. Diversity is always the key. The way you dress shows the respect and consideration you have in any situation.

  •  
    5

    ndlicht1

    09/11/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Does Casual Dress Affect Productivity?

    In sales, I mostly see business casual. Dressing like your targeted contacts puts them at eas as well.

    I see business casual at the office as quite natural. Street play time dress, well thats a little too casual because you never know when a prospect or customer may want to come by and "see" your facility and people.

    It also is guided by the job. For instance, if you are in manufacturing, accounting, why dress up.

    For men in sales, Ties seem to convey a subtile "I am worthy of being heard" but jacket is not needed.

    In my travels, I do see a lot of different environments. Dressed well, although business casual says to me that folks care and take pride in themselves and their work. Dressed in a tee shirt doesn't quite get that across.

    And yes i know that clothes do not make the man or woman but projected image, now thats another story entirely. Consider that if public contact is part of the job.

  •  
    6

    Gustavo.Clorus

    09/12/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Does Casual Dress Affect Productivity?

    I am an IT Manager for a med-size business in England. I have adopted the Friday-Dress-Down-Day (FDDD) and have worked quite well.
    - Hands on jobs are done - that way we can get dirty!
    - We try to avoid meetings with clients/suppliers.
    - The mood is excellent and so are productivity levels, rather than staff coming to work already feeling tired and waiting for the 17:00 bell!
    - It simply makes a change!

    As Ramses said 'Diversity is the key.'

  •  
    7

    Girsang

    09/12/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Does Casual Dress Affect Productivity?

    What about the environmental impacts of dry cleaning? It seems to me that any environmentally responsible company would ban suits.

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