Please disable your adblock and script blockers to view this page

You're going back to the office. What do you wear?


Watch CBSN Live
the Society of Human Resources Management
SHRM
Hopper
Goldman Sachs
CBS MoneyWatch
Morgan Stanley
Dai
Suitsupply
Riccobono
CBS Interactive Inc.
ICE Data Services
FactSet
The Associated Press.


Megan Cerullo
Robyn Hopper
Joanna Dai
COVID
Fokke de Jong
Chris Riccobono
Untuckit


Americans

No matching tags

No matching tags

No matching tags

No matching tags

Positivity     37.00%   
   Negativity   63.00%
The New York Times
SOURCE: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/how-to-dress-for-the-era-of-hybrid-work/
Write a review: CBS News
Summary

The pandemic accelerated the relaxation of dress codes and the casualization of office attire — trends that have been in motion for some time.Still, most work-from-home attire is hardly acceptable out-of-doors, let alone in any kind of professional environment, and some employers are having to redefine their policies around workwear. Investment bank Goldman Sachs for the past two years has enforced what it calls a "flexible" dress code which it says "encourages our people to use their best judgment on what is appropriate to wear for their work day.""That hasn't changed during the pandemic, whether in the office or remote," a Goldman spokesperson told CBS MoneyWatch. Dai's stretchy trousers with elastic waistbands accommodate body shapes and waist lines that might have fluctuated over the past 15 to 18 months, as many working from home rediscovered their appetite for snacks.Fokke de Jong, founder and CEO of mens fashion brand Suitsupply, said customers are gravitating toward styles that are "elegant but with a touch of relaxedness.""I don't think there have been formal changes in dress codes but there is this 'hybridness' going on right now where you see people playing around with it a little bit more. Chris Riccobono, founder of men's shirt company Untuckit, rode the wave of relaxed dress codes at workplaces and restaurants with button-down shirts designed to be worn tails out — until the pandemic hit and boosted Americans' love of comfort wear.

As said here by Megan Cerullo