>According to studies, blue and grey are the best colors to wear to an interview
I wore my blue dress shirt and tie to an interview, only to find out it was preliminary, and the real interview is to be later.
What color do I wear to the second interview? The company all has blue uniforms, but I've already done blue. Would a different shade of blue work, or should I go grey or black? Should I wear a blazer?
Go different blue.
Same blue shows lack of wardrobe, different blue but similar to the companies uniforms. They'll subconsciously see you as one of them. Grey will alienate you.
>>17405123
>>17405116
Excellent. I will do this. Same pants OK? Different tie too?
>>17405129
Pants color? And yes, different tie but stay professional.
>>17405129
>>17405131
Actually what type of tie do they wear as far as design? Find one similar to theirs.
>>17405138
I only have one pair of dress pants (black). Is it OK to wear the same pair or should I get a different pair?
>>17405131
The company style is navy blue short sleeved polo shirts. I can match the color, but I'm not sure I can match the style without dressing down.
>>17405154
Make sure pants are clean and freshly ironed. Match the color not the style.
>>17405115
What kind of a faggot are you?
Fuck "I've already had blue" shit. Wear what you WANT. Not what you THINK you need. Steve Jobs spent the latter part of his life in the same turtleneck.