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Goldman Sachs announced a new relaxed dress code. ‘All the men are psyched,’ but for everyone else, it’s complicated.

For women, dressing more casually for work can be fraught, even risky

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March 19, 2019 at 4:18 p.m. EDT

Adapted from a story by The Washington Post’s Jena McGregor and Taylor Telford.

One of the last bastions of crisp-collared, bespoke-suited workplace attire, Goldman Sachs, announced an official “firm-wide flexible dress code” earlier this month.

“All the men are psyched,” as one Goldman Sachs banker in GQ put it.

For everyone else, dressing more casually for work can be fraught, even risky. Over decades, expensive suits have projected power on Wall Street, almost like a piece of “armor,” said Susan Scafidi, academic director of the Fashion Law Institute at Fordham University.

Women at work who feel pressure to prove they deserve to be in the room might be wary of ditching their blazers and pumps.

“We’ve just achieved the parity of the pantsuit, and suddenly we’re told the standard pantsuit is no longer standard workforce attire,” Scafidi said. “Women will need to find another way to achieve parity in attire at business casual or some other lower level of formality.”

Parity, of course, extends not only to power, but to pay.

Attractiveness in the workplace is rewarded differently

Jaclyn Wong, who researches the intersection of gender and professional life, co-published a study in 2016 looking at the differences in how men and women are rewarded for attractiveness in the workplace.

Attractive men and women make roughly 20 percent more than their less attractive co-workers, Wong found. Even so, they are measured by different standards.

This woman wore a crop top on her flight to the Canary Islands. The airline told her to cover up or get off.

For women, perceived attractiveness was based on grooming, like hairstyle, makeup, fitness and clothing. They are rewarded, Wong said, for looking the part.

For men, grooming counts far less. If attractive, they tend to be rewarded whether they are well-groomed or not.

“We know that appearance matters for women and people of color in being seen as competent and worthy of respect,” said Wong, a professor of sociology at University of South Carolina.

Women of color held to different standards

For women of color, issues of image at the office are thornier. In schools throughout the country, girls of color are more likely to be punished for dress code violations, according to a report by the National Women’s Law Center.

Even the freshmen women of Congress — the most female and diverse group ever — have inspired a huge amount of discussion about red lipstick, hoop earrings and ethnic garb. In some cases much more than their actual platforms and ideas.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez put it this way: “If I walked into Congress wearing a sack, they would laugh & take a picture of my backside. If I walk in with my best sale-rack clothes, they laugh & take a picture of my backside.”

A more relaxed dress code means a broader range of choices, and “a broader range of choices means greater possibility for error,” Scafidi said. “So while men will naturally gravitate toward old-fashioned polos and khakis — or possibly to fleece and jeans — women don’t have a business casual uniform in the same way.”

‘Good judgment’

Goldman Sachs is following other firms in a hunt for tech talent that is most comfortable with the sneakers and hoodies of Silicon Valley. Also it is accommodating a growing fraction of its workforce that is made up of millennials — with about 75 percent of its workers under 40, and dressing in a way that fits more casually dressed clients.

The investment bank, which announced the change in a memo, called for employees to “please dress in a manner that is consistent with your clients’ expectations,” but stressed that they should “exercise good judgment.” A spokeswoman declined to comment beyond the memo.

“Good judgment,” of course, is open to interpretation.

“You have to decide: How do you present yourself when you’re often the only woman in the room?” said Jane Newton, a managing partner at RegentAtlantic. Newton spent 17 years at JPMorgan and runs a forum for women in leadership on Wall Street.

Workers tend to take their signals from the top. According to the lore of Corporate America, IBM made its first big leap decades ago when executives such as Louis V. Gerstner Jr. changed up the uniform of suit and tie and white collar — by mixing in a blue button-down shirts.

A 1995 headline in the New York Times read “Black Jeans Invade Big Blue” after Gerstner said he was rolling out casual dress. Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard’s relaxed “Blue Sky Days” on Fridays were said to influence future generations of tech entrepreneurs.

Today, it’s Goldman CEO David Solomon, who performs as a DJ in his spare time and has appeared in interviews without a tie.

In the ’80s and ’90s, there were few role models for women on Wall Street, Newton said, so they tried to blend in. Men in suits cut imposing figures, so women wore blazers with padded shoulders. Men wore ties, so women wore blouses with pussy bows.

Fashion is far more flexible now, she said, but younger women still ask Newton the same questions about how to present themselves to be taken seriously. Sometimes she offers to go shopping with them, or she pages through catalogues to show what works and what doesn’t.

The takeaway from Paris runways? Buy a suit and get to work

Women on Wall Street have adapted to more casual norms. But some still face the possibility that they could be perceived as lacking power when they dress down at work, said Laura Sherbin, managing director of Culture@Work, a division of Working Mother Media that helps companies develop best practices around diversity.

“When a woman is dressed informally, she’s more likely to be assumed to be more junior” or to be someone’s assistant, Sherbin said. The topic of dress codes still comes up all the time in focus groups she does at companies, she said.

Sherbin recalls working with one management consulting client that had a relaxed dress code. She complimented a sharply dressed female executive whose look — black dress, edgy black leather jacket with zippers — was powerful. The executive, who was headed into a tough strategy meeting, told Sherbin she was relieved to hear it.

“I want to walk in the room and be seen as fierce and somebody who’s not going to back down so instantly,” the executive said. “I never would have worn pastels today.”

More freedom

Maureen Sherry worked 12 years on Wall Street and was the youngest managing director at Bear Stearns.

“Women never walked in wearing khakis or athleisurewear,” she said. “Professional women just didn’t do that because we wanted to be in meetings and not have our outfit be a point of discussion.”

She wrote a novel, “Opening Belle,” about a female Wall Street executive, based partly on her experience as well as interviews with other women.

“A friend of mine wore the first pantsuit on the Salomon Brothers trading floor in 1991, and it caused an uproar,” she said. “She still has it” as a kind of trophy.

Today, she said, “if you saw a woman wearing Birkenstocks or loafers, we’d like to think that we’re not taking her less seriously as a result, but I’m not sure if that’s true.”

Although shifting norms add to the litany of micro-decisions women must make before they set foot in the office, they do signal more freedom.

In the past, Newton said, “there were these clear, unwritten rules, but who wrote the rules? The men, so we adapted to them so that we could fit in.”

“Now we can write our own rules,” she said, “to the extent that we’re comfortable.”