The HR Podcast | Built for Business
Only 7% of UK workers now wear a suit to work. The era of formal dress codes has largely passed — but employers still have a say in what people wear. The question has become more nuanced, not less relevant. In this episode: whether a dress code policy is still relevant, why guidelines work better than rigid rules, what UK law allows employers to require, how tattoos and piercings fit in, and why having no dress code at all can create as much anxiety as having one. * Guidelines tend to work better than strict dress code policies. "You must wear X" creates a parent-child dynamic and invites pushback. Guidelines that explain the brand standard and leave room for individual expression land better. * UK employers can legally set dress standards — but they must apply equivalently across all employees. You can require professional appearance. You cannot require women to wear heels while men wear flat shoes. The standard must be comparable across genders. * Brand justification is legitimate — if it's proportionate. Requiring client-facing staff to mirror the environment they're walking into is reasonable. But "I personally don't like what you're wearing" is not a policy. The test is whether it reflects a genuine business need. * Health and safety is the clearest legal basis for dress requirements. Closed-toe shoes on a manufacturing floor, hi-vis on a building site — not open to debate. The further you get from safety, the more you need to justify requirements by reference to brand or client expectations. * Visible tattoos and piercings can legally be used as hiring criteria — but apply consistently. Employers can set appearance standards that include body modifications, but blanket bans are increasingly being relaxed as businesses realise they're losing good people over them. * Having no dress code can cause as much stress as having one. Employees new to work often don't know what's appropriate. "Wear what you want" sounds inclusive but leaves people anxious. Even brief informal guidance removes that uncertainty. * Client-facing and office-based roles can legitimately have different standards. A two-tier approach — relaxed in the office, mirroring the client's environment on visits — is increasingly common and well-received when employees understand the reasoning. * [00:05] Does a dress code still matter? * [01:22] Policy vs guidelines: why language matters * [03:48] People are judged on what they wear * [05:43] Two-tier dress codes: office vs client * [11:48] What UK law allows employers to require * [13:13] Tattoos, piercings and employer rights * [15:52] The great crocs debate * [20:33] Why no dress code creates problems too Resources Mentioned 1. YouGov research — just 7% of UK workers now wear a suit to work, referenced at the start of the episode dress code policy UK, workplace dress code guidelines, can employers enforce dress code UK, employee dress code, dress code employment law UK, visible tattoos work policy, client facing dress code, HR podcast, dress code best practices
35 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The HR Podcast | Built for Business!