“Can I Wear My Nose Ring to the Interview? I have an interview at taco bell on Monday, and I have a nose ring (an actual ring not stud). You can find jewelry companies that sell them in packs of 10 on eBay for good prices. Specifically, I think it could be useful to send her an email a few days before you start, saying how excited you are to start, confirming that you’re planning to arrive at (whatever time on whatever day), and adding something like, “By the way, I had asked Jane about any company rules on piercings and she assured me there aren’t any — but I wanted to give you a heads-up that I have a small nose ring that I typically wear daily; it sounds like that’s okay, but I wanted to mention it in advance.”. (I should mention that I’m in NYC, so the tolerance for piercings and tattoos and such is pretty high). Nicole Vulcan has been a journalist since 1997, covering parenting and fitness for The Oregonian, careers for CareerAddict, and travel, gardening and fitness for Black Hills Woman and other publications. Although I do agree with you that plenty of people find them unprofessional (which is what I hope you meant.). Same here, I’m feeling a little bad about the pile-up on Steve precisely because the term “doing pot” is conjuring up images of various older relatives. But everyone has responses to things, if we didn’t respond to how other people look (for good or bad) there is no point in cosmetics, fashion, hair styles, etc. I’m actually surprised that no one has noticed he hasn’t spoken about women at all. But #2 has asked already by verifying the piercings policy. I have a huge CV, pedigree, ample leadership experience in and out of the office and I still have a hard time being accepted by my older peers because I look 24 (35), and this is without piercings — and I dress pretty conservatively. Just as an FYI, many cooks and chefs have nose and lip rings and work in restaurants where the kitchen staff are meant to be invisible. She was dressed professionally but still go told off for a small nose stud. Good call, NK, and one that I’ll hold to in the future. Maybe now that I’ve gotten allergy shots I could try again…. Disguise nose studs with a dot of flesh color nail polish, though make sure … /-: Hee, I actually typed and then deleted a rhetorical question about whether younger employees should dye their hair gray! Hi, Steve, OP#2 here. A frat party? So sorry for the long response, but this discussion got so long. One time in college I had a phone interview with a sleep away camp and the director informed me that they don’t allow counselors to have facial piercings or tattoos (only female counselors could have ears pierced). If I wrote “I’ll help lepers but not into amputees,” in real life, 50% of people would say “good work with the lepers.” Here? Conceal the stud by applying makeup only after the piercing is completely healed. He typically covers them for interviews (because he’s wearing a long-sleeved shirt), but doesn’t for work. Thanks for the update. So I decided I’d rather work at a different camp (where the director himself had visible tattoos) than take out my piercing. In the US for instance there are cities where no one would even think about the piercing/tattoo, and others where any kind at all would become an issue. Appearance matters in the sense of wearing things that are appropriate for your work, it doesn’t matter in the sense of how hot your face is. Well, I don’t in the sense that I couldn’t care less about a woman other than my girlfriend finding me attractive, but I *DO* in the sense that it might have impact on whether I get an offer or not. And unless you’re hiring a professional model, I assume you don’t make hiring decisions based on what you, personally, find attractive on a woman?
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