Dresscode: Going Tieless? | DW English

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 26 авг 2024
  • Business leaders without ties? DW's best-dressed business presenter Gerhard Elfers is appalled. He says, "A suit without a tie is like a frame without a picture."
    For a related story, go to: p.dw.com/p/2anFD

Комментарии • 21

  • @wotanmituns33
    @wotanmituns33 17 дней назад

    I agree, to add insult to injury people are using sneakers with suits and foregoing not only the tie but the belt as well.

  • @jorgelein1
    @jorgelein1 6 лет назад +5

    There´s something really weird about going o wearing tieless in Chile, specifically in business environment. Most people who don´t wear ties pretend to demonstrate to other business people that they have the permission of not to wear it, specially for showing that they have more money. For example, most clients of an architecture studio i was working till last year, attended almost every meeting tieless, just beause of that liberty wich gives you of having much money.

  • @ncondeg
    @ncondeg 5 лет назад +3

    No, we don't follow trends, we develop a personal style.

  • @alchemicvisuals3695
    @alchemicvisuals3695 Год назад +1

    I love this!

  • @royalbuff123
    @royalbuff123 6 лет назад +1

    Serious handlebar bro. Almost a merv hughes

  • @dianauhlman56
    @dianauhlman56 6 лет назад +2

    What about bow ties?

  • @ncondeg
    @ncondeg Год назад

    We don't follow trends, do we?

  • @klefusmcdonald2644
    @klefusmcdonald2644 5 лет назад +1

    Tie it is.

  • @Fantastic_Timez
    @Fantastic_Timez 2 года назад

    Nah, it depends (in my humble opinion). At my workplace (I'm an accountant at one of the "Big 4") no one really wears a tie unless they're meeting a client for the first time or the client's workplace happens to be very formal. Most wear business casual. I wear a suit every day but without a tie unless required. I tend to look more formal than my co-workers and just as formal as the partners. So, it's important to check your surroundings. Having said all that, wear what you wish in the end.

  • @apocalypsisrex
    @apocalypsisrex 7 лет назад +1

    Tsipras intensifies

  • @nafsanchowdhury6702
    @nafsanchowdhury6702 5 лет назад +1

    What about tie clip ?

  • @cockroachv
    @cockroachv 2 года назад

    Wearing a tie is a trend

  • @kemarp3949
    @kemarp3949 7 лет назад +5

    I disagree

  • @vanshookme6531
    @vanshookme6531 4 года назад

    This man talks sense...However I think you will find that most men in the uk can't tie a tie (even though most schools in the uk have school uniform and ties and would have been a compulsory item as you were growing up? The mind boggles indeed)! Also Menswear as a whole (across the globe) has become sloppy because of how americans dress unfortunately. Dress down Fridays being the main culprit/export.

    • @FLMKane
      @FLMKane 4 года назад

      its not just about how americans dress. Suits have become too impractical for a working man.
      They have become uncomfortable due to being too heavy (for certain weathers), too restrictive and too expensive (for a given quality level)
      Thats my subjective opinion (I admit) but there is evidence to back it up.

  • @loxlix123
    @loxlix123 7 лет назад +5

    You sound pretentiously trendy.

  • @panoramapresents9433
    @panoramapresents9433 6 лет назад +1

    I need translation to Arabic language please

    • @ShabanOmar
      @ShabanOmar 6 лет назад

      اتعلم انجليزي

  • @rovercoupe7104
    @rovercoupe7104 6 лет назад

    When you put up two fingers, have the back of your hand towards you. In the UK, putting up two fingers with the back of the hand outwards is an insult to the viewer. M.

  • @1danw3
    @1danw3 6 лет назад

    You put 2 fingers up there Gerhard. That’s a definite no, no. Very rude in British circles Best turn your hand around the other way when raising 2 fingers like Churchill.