Would You Wear Red Sneakers to Work? Should You?

Sometimes being different elicits positive reactions, but sometimes it doesn’t. Are your free spirit clothing choices working for you or against you?

Reading Time: 3 min 

Topics

It pays to be deliberate.

That’s one of the takeaways of new research from Harvard Business School about how personal style and nonconformity in appearance can affect perceptions. Confidence, it turns out, is often the primary signal people send out when they choose to dress differently or even a bit outrageously.

“Our studies found that nonconformity leads to positive inferences of status and competence when it is associated with deliberateness and intentionality,” write Silvia Bellezza, Francesca Gino and Anat Keinan, in “The Surprising Benefits of Nonconformity,” in the Spring 2014 issue of MIT Sloan Management Review .

“Observers attribute heightened status and competence to a nonconforming individual when they believe he or she is aware of an accepted, established norm and is able to conform to it, but instead deliberately decides not to,” they continue.

One of the most visible examples is Mark Zuckerberg, the 30-year-old CEO of Facebook. As often as not, he has appeared in public (and met with Wall Street bankers) wearing his trademark hooded sweatshirt.

“From a psychological standpoint, intentional deviance from a norm can project heightened status and competence by signaling that one has the autonomy to act according to one’s own inclinations,” write the authors.

(One of the article’s authors taught a class to business executives wearing red Converse sneakers. The effect was positive: executives thought the professor was a well-published scholar and high up in the hierarchy of her department. “The positive status and competence inferences were particularly strong for executives who themselves owned an unusual pair of shoes,” write the authors.)

All this contrasts with how people perceive those who dress differently either because they can’t afford nicer clothes or because they don’t understand the norms. “When a nonconforming behavior appears to be dictated by lack of means, lack of better alternatives or lack of awareness of the dress code, it will not lead to positive inferences from others,” the authors write.

Still, the authors caution against just foregoing suits and ties for hoodies and red sneakers at the office, and to keep in mind that stepping away from the norm takes you out of a certain comfort zone.

Topics

More Like This

Add a comment

You must to post a comment.

First time here? Sign up for a free account: Comment on articles and get access to many more articles.

Comment (1)
Leslie Brokaw
A reader passed this link on to me, apropos of this research -- a recruiter who goes by the name The Red Recruiter, and who always wears red sneakers: 

". . .there are a few reasons that I have chosen to wear red shoes every single day. For starters, I’m The Red Recruiter – so, I figured I would try something different. . . "

http://www.theredrecruiter.com/red-shoe-project/changing-the-world-with-red-shoes/