Ask HN: Proper attire for a startup interview?
I have previously worked for an 8 person startup, and the general atmosphere was very casual. I am interviewing today for a 15 person startup and was wondering what the proper attire was when you don't know ahead of time the atmosphere of the company.
19 comments
[ 843 ms ] story [ 404 ms ] threadhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_casual
Shirt with a collar, slacks, belt, non-athletic shoes.
If you don't get the job because of wearing something like that, to an interview with a startup, you don't want to be working there anyways.
"Hi. I understand you're a start-up. I'd wear a suit to a job interview with a big, conservative corporation, but I don't want to make you uncomfortable if that's not how you roll. Is office casual acceptable?"
This puts the ball in their court, and also tells them you're flexible and you prepare for interviews in advance rather than running on autopilot.
If I got a note from a prospective candidate like this one, it would probably be a point against them because it broadcasts insecurity and helplessness neither of which is an attractive trait in a prospective employee. This is the part where resourcefulness and self-motivated behavior starts.
Wait, you suggest that they "swing by the office" instead of just sending an email? This is madness.
I used to wear suits every day (and still do on occasion), so I'd invariably wear a suit to an interview. Once I outgrew the notion of wearing suits, I quit wearing them.
It sets the tone for what they can expect of me in the future, and doesn't give any false impressions. I'd rather they hire 'me' than some notion of how appropriately I ticked their boxes.
I remember interviewing for a fairly conservative defense contractor, and the interviewer commented on it -- saying something like "So, I noticed you're not wearing a tie," to which my response was "Yeah -- I didn't want to give you the impression that I was willing to ever wear a tie."
I got that job, and never wore a tie when I worked there (though I did 'dress up' in a casual suit where appropriate.)
The point, in a roundabout sense, is that if you aren't comfortable wearing a tie to work every day, don't wear one for the interview.
I'm sure this changes if you really need this job, or are willing to do anything to work for this particular company or something, but it's a decent piece of general advice.
If you want to err on the side of caution, step up to khakis and non-sneakers, but certainly no higher than that. I remember reading a general rule that you should dress one step up from the dress code where you're going to make a good first impression, but never more than that, otherwise you risk alienating your audience.
I've found with smaller teams they'll do due-diligence and double check that you can do what you say you can do. If I know you're good, I don't care how you come in dressed for an interview, so long as you're dressed and take care of personal hygiene like a normal person.YMMV
I'd go with a dress shirt and tie, at the very least.
if you underdress, and they give you a hard time about it, you might not fit in well at that company and you dodged a bullet.
if you overdress, there is a chance you will make your interviewer uncomfortable and not get the job.
dress in what you like to wear. its as simple as that. let them hire the real you, and not a front you put on based on some perceived image you have of the company.
When you go to an interview, you want to show the person respect and it is a special situation, its not just another day at work. You aren't part of the company yet so I don't know why you should have to wear exactly what you would when you actually start the job.
I don't wear a tie, or a suit, but I do tend to dress up a bit. If you don't want to, thats fine, but there's no reason to deride someone for thinking they should treat an interview a little differently than they would just another day at work.