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The
Clothing Chronicles
February 26,
2004 #130
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In This Issue:
Message
From Diana
Feature
Article: The Importance Of Maintaining A Consistent Image
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>>
MESSAGE FROM DIANA
Now that I've
made the big switch on mailing list servers, I'll be able to turn my
attention to some of the other projects I've been putting on the back
burner of late, including some new ebooks and new resources for you
to use. Keep your eyes peeled for those announcements over the next
few months.
In the
meantime, this week's article takes a look at why it's important to
maintain a consistent image. The answer may surprise you.
Enjoy!
Diana
diana@fashionforrealwomen.com
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>>
FEATURED ARTICLE:
The
Importance Of Maintaining A Consistent Image
Think for a
moment about the handful of well-dressed women you know. Do you
consider them well dressed because they show up looking great
sometimes? Every other Thursday? On good hair days? Why?
No.
It's probably
because they ALWAYS look good. Whether you see them at work, at the
grocery store, at church, at their son's soccer game, or wherever,
they're always dressed appropriately and looked pulled together for
the occasion. In fact, you may wonder if they ever look bad.
Now think
about everyone else. They can pull themselves together when it
counts, like a job interview or a wedding, for example, but they're
borderline during working hours and unrecognizable come the weekend.
Do you
consider them well dressed?
Probably not.
Hit or miss dressing does not a well-dressed woman make.
So where do
YOU fall in this spectrum?
Are you always
pulled together, or do you have your moments of looking good? Do you
usually look okay, but drop the ball when you think no one's looking?
Here are the
typical behaviors I've seen most women fall into:
1. Usually
Casual, Occasionally Dressy for The SAME Activity
I once worked
in a very business casual organization where everyone usually wore
khakis, corduroys, and jeans. Every now and again someone would show
up wearing a suit. It was a clear sign that they had something else
going on that day, usually a job interview elsewhere. Since the group
as a whole was very nervous about any change, the prospect that
someone might leave always sent them into a tizzy. The sudden change
would "upset the apple cart," as it were.
2. Hit Or
Miss Dressing For the SAME Activity
One of the
easiest ways to get everyone you work with to take you seriously is
to consistently wear the same level of dress everyday. If you wear
suits at work, wear suits or coatdresses. If you wear slacks and a
jacket, don't stray too far from that uniform. How you dress is a key
component in being perceived as an authority figure.
Conversely,
the easiest way to throw people off balance is to dress all sorts of
different ways: business person one day, soccer mom the next, rock
star the day after that, fashion plate the day after that, and so
forth. No one knows where they stand with you. Are you their friend?
Their boss? Just stopping by on your way to someplace else? What? The
inconsistency is very confusing to people, particularly to any
subordinates who may be trying to model themselves after you.
3. All or
Nothing Dressing
Many of my
clients are notorious for pouring most of their clothing budget into
their work clothes. They look like a million because of it, but ONLY
at work. After hours, they look like ragbags. Which is fine in the
comfort of their own homes, but again, very disconcerting to anyone
they known whom they run into when they're out and about after hours.
Similarly, if
a woman usually dresses sloppily 95% of the time but pulls out all
the stops only on occasion, what sort of message does THAT send? That
she wants something enough to get dressed for it? So what's going on
the rest of the time? That she doesn't care enough to be bothered?
People notice
how you're dressed, whether you realize it or not or even whether
THEY realize it. If you've properly engineered your wardrobe and have
filled it with functional, good-looking pieces that enable you to
always be occasion-appropriate yet consistent in your style - whether
you're at work, socializing, running errands, or cheering your
daughter to a softball victory - you'll not only garner respect
wherever you go, you'll also instill a sense of confidence in others
who will both know where they stand with you at all times and admire
you for being so pulled together.
Conversely, if
you're hit-or-miss with your appearance or spend your entire clothing
budget in only one area, you'll throw others off kilter. They'll
wonder why you look so good at work and so bad after hours (or so bad
at playgroup and so good a the school board election) and question
which one is the REAL you. Why such wildly different looks? Are you
only "on" when you think someone is looking?
If you're a
success at work, aren't you also a success when you're NOT there?
After all, that's why you work so hard, isn't it, to achieve a
certain level of lifestyle? Then show it. Don't look like the Cat's
Meow at work and something the cat dragged in come quitting time.
Be consistent
in your image. Not only will you always look pulled together, you'll
be delighted by how many doors it suddenly opens. And I'm not just
talking about the kind with accommodating men involved, although
that's always nice. I'm referring to opportunities. You never know
what may come up when you always look like you can handle anything.
Try it and you'll see what I mean.
Need some help
pulling together a consistent image? Download a copy of WARDROBE
MAGIC
http://www.wardrobemagic.com
to see how
easy looking good can be.
**************
Until next time,
Diana Pemberton-Sikes
diana@fashionforrealwomen.com
http://www.FashionForRealWomen.com
http://www.FashionSavvy.com
http://www.WardrobeMagic.com
http://www.FashionJobReview.com
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Published by:
Top Drawer
Publications, LLC
256 S. College Ave.
Newark, DE
19711 USA
Copyright
© 2004 by Diana Pemberton-Sikes All rights reserved.
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