Before doing taxes myself, the preparer I went to came out from behind her desk in her bedroom slippers. I know she was good at what she did, but didn't like that she could not look better for her clients. (and I have never worn slippers to work)
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Does anyone here wear a tie?
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Wear a what?
A tie is an equal score in an athletic event. As a kid, I remembered the game of the century in 1966 with Notre Dame and Michigan St, both of whom had each steamrolled 9 consecutive opponents. The result was a 10-10 tie which made nobody happy.
A tie with the University of Arkansas was known as a "hog-tie."
Around here they say a tie is "like kissing yore sister." No particular fulfillment in that useless exercise unless maybe your sister is Miss South Carolina. Also, what few millionaires we have in rural Tennessee wear overalls and laugh all the way to the bank. Ties are for yuppies who act like they have money but are upside down in everything from their houses to their Volvos.
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Rural Community
I live in a rural community. I dress the same as my clients....blue jeans...oxford cloth shirt if the weather is mild...sweatshirt if the weather is cold. The only clients that don't come back are the deceased ones so I guess I'm not offending anyone. I LOVE my clients and they would wonder "what's up??" if they saw me in something other than my jeans.
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I like it
Originally posted by DTS View PostThere is a minister I like to watch every Sunday that says, "Look your best, do your best and be your best" and I repeat those words to myself every morning, without a tie of course!
Chip guy was wearing khakis with a collared shirt tucked in.Last edited by RitaB; 03-31-2014, 09:46 AM.If you loan someone $20 and never see them again, it was probably worth it.
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Originally posted by buzzardbreath View PostA tie is an equal score in an athletic event. As a kid, I remembered the game of the century in 1966 with Notre Dame and Michigan St, both of whom had each steamrolled 9 consecutive opponents. The result was a 10-10 tie which made nobody happy.
When no clients have appointments, it's flannel jammies and fuzzy slippers. With clients, it's poly slacks, sweater, and loafers. At biz clients' sites (recurring clients) it's often jeans. Summer, nice tees replace the sweaters and sandals replace the loafers.Last edited by Lion; 03-31-2014, 10:46 AM.
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Originally posted by Uncle View PostI am in Hawaii. I do not own a tie. I have not worn shoes in over a year. An aloha shirt and clean trousers easily outclasses most of my higher end clients. Most of my clients are in t-shirts and shorts for their office appointment.--
James C. Samans ("Jamie")
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My wealthiest, highest-income client wears jeans and a T-Shirt to work. People like Bill Gates almost never wear a tie.
Look at the old movies from the 1940s or 1950s; everyone was wearing a coat, tie and a hat. Now you almost never see hats of the type you would wear with a suit. In a few more years, ties will become an anachronism.
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In the corporate world (before Silicone Valley) we learned "to dress for the job you want, not the job that you have." It was established that you were judged (at first glance) by the way you dressed, as that is how you chose to present yourself to the world. I was even told when I had training on how to interview prospective employees, to remember that "when you meet a possible new hire, that is the best they are ever going to look." If it wasn't good, it was only going to go downhill from there. How one dresses speaks volumes about how one sees oneself. I guess I am old-school. If I were a computer geek who never had to go out, I wouldn't care. But when you have to meet the public, impression is important, IMO. And the higher-income clientele will notice.
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Wearing a tie
The only lawyer in Madison County Illinois worth a penny wears a tee shirt and jeans in his office. Suit and tie in the court room. I would say most people don't care but I know a few who would complain. As far as I am concerned they could go somewhere else. Since I work for a company I do have to dress up but I think it is not necessary.
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