What Should I Wear to a Job Interview?

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Don’t write off the cor­po­rate suit quite yet. I under­stand that you want to use every pos­si­ble lever to con­vey who you are to a employ­er in the short time that is avail­able, and clothes are a sig­nif­i­cant unspo­ken part of that, but there is a fine line between wear­ing some­thing that sug­gests con­fi­dence and inde­pen­dence of thought and some­thing that becomes a dis­trac­tion.

Remem­ber that when it comes to , they often make judg­ments between dif­fer­ent in a good way and too dif­fer­ent. Gen­er­al­ly they are look­ing for some­one — be it a senior or a junior staffer — who seems to mesh with the com­pa­ny . Or who will estab­lish a new, pos­i­tive com­pa­ny cul­ture. And some of those judg­ments have to do with whether some­one looks the part.

If you can scout the land­scape first and get a sense of the office “uni­form,” great. That can be your guide. But if not, it may be bet­ter to play it some­what safe — with some impor­tant excep­tions.

, just because the idea of a suit seems yawn­ing­ly famil­iar does not mean it has to be . It is what you wear with the suit — the details — that mat­ters, large­ly because they demon­strate an atten­tion to detail. I think of the suit, espe­cial­ly the trouser suit, as a pro­fes­sion­al can­vas you can dec­o­rate accord­ing to taste. Or, for that mat­ter, to dis­play your taste.

This is where shoes, jew­el­ry, watch­es, scarves — even shirts — become impor­tant. Cather­ine Hol­stein, the design­er of Khaite, said that as far as she was con­cerned “you can nev­er go wrong with a great pair of black pants, a black sweater or a crisp white shirt and a belt with a cool buck­le.”

A state­ment ban­gle can also be piv­otal, Ms. Hol­stein said, though if you are using jew­el­ry as a talk­ing point, keep it to one piece: ear­rings or a neck­lace or a bracelet, but not all of them at the same time. The idea is to sug­gest hid­den depths and out-of-the-box , not to whack your inter­view­er in the with it.

If jew­el­ry is not your thing, Ms. Hol­stein sug­gest­ed wear­ing col­or­ful shoes to pro­vide just a pop of col­or. Sami­ra Nasr, the edi­tor of Harper’s Bazaar, took it one step fur­ther when I asked her opin­ion.

“Real­ly lean in to col­or,” she said. Wear a suit but not one “in a typ­i­cal cor­po­rate shade, like navy, black or beige,” she said. “ a red suit or even a green suit.” That way you have per­son­al­i­ty and pol­ish, too.

What­ev­er you decide, make sure it does not require your atten­tion once you put it on. Few things are worse than fid­dling with your clothes — tug­ging on them, adjust­ing them — dur­ing an inter­view, when the point is to present the most togeth­er ver­sion of your­self.

And you don’t want to wear cloth­ing that is wrin­kled, stained or dan­gling ran­dom threads, for obvi­ous rea­sons.

“I once was inter­view­ing a prospec­tive employ­ee, and she had a stack of ban­gles on one arm,” Ms. Hol­stein said. “Every time she moved, they jan­gled around, and by the end of the inter­view, they were all I could think about.” She did not get the job.

Every week on Open Thread, Vanes­sa will answer a read­er’s fash­ion-relat­ed ques­tion, which you can send to her any­time via email or Twit­ter. Ques­tions are edit­ed and con­densed.

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