cranberry said:
I think it's important to wear clean clothes that don't call attention to you (slogans on shirts/hats, maybe really low-cut tops or too-short skirts for women) and to exercise good hygenic habits (don't smell,for instance). Outside of that, it doesn't matter very much. Unless, of course, you're a television reporter.
Exactly.
I know a local TV sports director who wears the following on-air:
UP WHERE THE CAMERA CAN SEE: Coat. Buttondown shirt. Tie and tack. Sometimes even cuff links. Looks very slick.
TOO LOW FOR CAMERA VIEW: Shorts or jeans; tennis shoes or flip-flops. Looks like he's ready to go to a beach cookout.
The minimum standard for men should be: Collared shirt (polo or button-up, preferably with no commercial logos other than your employer [and maybe not even that]), nice jeans (not too faded, no fraying, no holes, no patches, no phone numbers from Ladies' Night), and some kind of closed shoes. As for those you-have-to-wear-a-tie-and-dammit-denim-at-work-is-the-spawn-of-Satan people ... eh. Whatever. It's entertainment,
not banking.
And for those who claim ties are "professional attire," I can think of quite a few Fortune 500 companies that have dispensed with the tie requirement and more power to them. IBM is one of them.
I still like the way Insight Direct announced that none of its male sales-by-phone staff would be required to wear ties anymore: After studying the sales patterns on "casual days" versus "non-casual days," they made the announcement by having each tie cut in half with scissors by the receptionist as the employees made their way through the lobby and security-pass door. ;D
Yes, neckties are more formal, for whatever that might be worth. But let me point this out: Part of a reporter's job is to get people to relax and open up. A necktie is a constant reminder to the wearer and people around him of formality, which could very well be a barrier to having people relax and open up to you.