Page 4 of 4 FirstFirst ... 234
Results 46 to 54 of 54

Thread: Inappropriate attire for work

  1. #46
    Join Date
    12th March 2005 - 23:42
    Bike
    2017 Husqvarana FS701
    Location
    South East of Nowhere.
    Posts
    2,326
    I used to work in a very upmarket corporate consultancy and I used to struggle with maintaining a professional image when using the bike to commute to meetings. I always felt that I was not suitably professional for some reason...gear for one is a bugger, I mean at minimum you are trying to deal with a helmet, Jacket, glloves and a backpack for the laptop, minutes etc.
    In hindsight, I should have just used the cage more because the times I did, I actually felt more on my game.
    Nail your colours to the mast that all may look upon them and know who you are.
    It takes a big man to cry...and an even bigger man to laugh at that man.

  2. #47
    Join Date
    2nd May 2008 - 18:35
    Bike
    Big red
    Location
    Under a rock.
    Posts
    552
    Quote Originally Posted by p.dath View Post
    I work in the IT field, and travel from customer premise to customer premise quite a bit. About half the time I don't need to take any "freight" bigger than what can fit in a back pack, so I ride my motorbike.
    I have a work uniform, and wear Cordura pants over the top of my dress pants, and a leather jacket over the top of my shirt (just a t-shirt at the moment as getting a bit warm in my leather jacket). My work uniform is all nicely logo'd, clean, and I think pretty presentable.

    Typically when I get to a customer site I just take the cordura and jacket off, and stash them in a corner somewhere, along with the helmet and gloves.

    Well blow me down, for the first time in 10 years, I had someone complain at my office that my "attire" was not suitable for their workplace. A site I've been to half a dozen times before. They implied they had a problem with the look of my motorcycle gear.

    I told the client the motorcycle provides a greener alternative for using a larger vehicle like a car to transport such a small load (being me), and that the gear I wear is for my personal protection and safety.

    I also told them I would not be changing my safety gear. And I'll interpret their decision by weather they call to book further jobs or not.


    Really. Some people do have a personal perception issue.
    Tsk tsk you silly boy, you should have mentioned the magic words to those people- "Health and Safety". Watch them crumble with fear as the words leave your mouth, throw in "liable" and "risk management" for good measure oh and don't forget "lawyers" and "lawsuit".

  3. #48
    Join Date
    20th January 2008 - 17:29
    Bike
    1972 Norton Commando
    Location
    Auckland NZ's Epicentre
    Posts
    3,554
    My Boss rides a Harley to work and goes on it to meetings.
    He's always on to me to go with him on the Duke.
    I rode the Duke to a job at a Hospital in Hamilton on Friday, parked out the front and walked in....no one even gave me a second look.
    The only 'problem' is I clocked up nearly 400 kms there and back.... via Miranda..... and the west side of the W(h)aikato
    I used the BMW Touring suit as you can pull it up over your day clothes....full leathers look a bit out of place in a HVAC plantroom.

  4. #49
    Join Date
    25th January 2008 - 17:56
    Bike
    Africa Twin! 2018 all the fruit!
    Location
    New Zealand
    Posts
    4,354
    It's only 100K's down SH1 Volly.You obviously took the long root, ah sorry route.
    Every day above ground is a good day!:

  5. #50
    Join Date
    14th July 2006 - 21:39
    Bike
    2015, Ducati Streetfighter
    Location
    Christchurch
    Posts
    9,081
    Blog Entries
    8
    HA - I laughed. Personally I'd be happy for you to arrive in bike gear at my work.

    Mainly because all the IT people I have ever had in there usually arrive in clothing that looks and smells like it spend a week in the bottom of a dirty laundry basket (mums on strike?) and the wearer thinks that masking BO with cheap cologne is acceptable.

    Having said that - when your computers are down you don't give a shit what the fixer looks like as long as they fit it!
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Click image for larger version. 

Name:	girl_frustrated_registry.jpg 
Views:	13 
Size:	48.6 KB 
ID:	142833  

  6. #51
    Join Date
    13th April 2007 - 17:09
    Bike
    18 Triumph Tiger 1050 Sport
    Location
    UK
    Posts
    3,803
    Quote Originally Posted by Brett View Post
    I used to work in a very upmarket corporate consultancy and I used to struggle with maintaining a professional image when using the bike to commute to meetings. I always felt that I was not suitably professional for some reason...gear for one is a bugger, I mean at minimum you are trying to deal with a helmet, Jacket, glloves and a backpack for the laptop, minutes etc.
    In hindsight, I should have just used the cage more because the times I did, I actually felt more on my game.
    Yes, on my last bike, I got the biggest Givi box available. I could fit my helmet and jacket (just about) and then show up at meetings in business attire.

    It was quite funny once as I struggled to get the box lid shut after quickly getting changed by the bike; I arrived in the meeting room to find that I was parked outside its window. So I had a nice audiance whilst getting changed.

    Embarrassed or what

  7. #52
    Join Date
    15th March 2007 - 20:38
    Bike
    BMW R1200s
    Location
    Te Atatu Peninsula
    Posts
    517
    I've been to just about all our clients sites in my bike gear and no-one cares.

    I've even walked around a very flash PR client's office in my socks, short shorts (which I wear under my bike pants) and paint stained T-shirt.
    It was too hot to keep my gear on and it was an emergency call-out straight from home.

    The only thing the people at site (most of whom look like they spend 3 hours dressing for work) cared about was when the systems would be back online.

    I needed to get back to the office for parts and in a car it would have taken me about 25-30 minutes each way.
    Called ahead and had the kit waiting at reception. 10 minutes there - 10 minutes back (in peak morning traffic).

    Client was very pleased - minimal downtime for them -and I didn't take up any of their visitor carparks.

  8. #53
    Join Date
    26th February 2005 - 15:10
    Bike
    Ubrfarter V Klunkn,ffwabbit,Petal,phoebe
    Location
    In the cave of Adullam
    Posts
    13,624
    Nowdays, if the Service Delivery Manager actually managed to get me onto a customer site, he (and they) would be so astonished that they wouldn't care if I wore a loincloth and nose bone.

    But, back in the day when I had to make customers happy (instead of telling them their complete system is trash and needs to be replaced immediately ), I didn't have a problem going by bike.

    If you just need to wear a tie, well thats easy. Dress slacks, business shirt, tie. Boots, jacket over etc. No, I'm not into ATGATT.

    If the requirement is full formal type business suit, the jacket's a bit of a pain. Either carry it in a top box (rest as above), or, what I used to do , was put the suit jacket on, then put a one piece Cordura suit over all. I dunno if you could get such a suit now, it was like one of those one piece rain suits with a zip right down the front, but in Cordura.
    Quote Originally Posted by skidmark
    This world has lost it's drive, everybody just wants to fit in the be the norm as it were.
    Quote Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
    The manufacturers go to a lot of trouble to find out what the average rider prefers, because the maker who guesses closest to the average preference gets the largest sales. But the average rider is mainly interested in silly (as opposed to useful) “goodies” to try to kid the public that he is riding a racer

  9. #54
    Join Date
    30th January 2004 - 18:42
    Bike
    08ZX10, 98 KX250
    Location
    Palmerston North
    Posts
    181
    You guys pretty much said what I did.... and thanks for no Palmy jokes
    Quote Originally Posted by scracha View Post
    Dude, I was riding it home from Hamilton in the pi$$ing rain $hitting myself .... There's no way in hell I could own that bike for a week and still have my license. There...I've admitted it.

    Scracha Loves me ... Know him before you judge me.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •