Chris Skinner's blog

Shaping the future of finance

Bankers battle over dress code

Chris Skinner Author Avatar
by

I recently encountered an interesting conversation between two CIOs of two major
European banks.  I won't say anything more than one was a major French bank and
the other a major Dutch bank who both share the same building.

The first and second floor are occupied by the I.T. operations of the major
French bank, whilst the Dutch bank has the next three floors, using the top
floor as their customer hospitality suite because of the fantastic views up
there.

The trouble is that you can see everything in all the offices on all the
floors as you go up in the lifts / elevators, because the building is all
glass.

That is why the Dutch bank's CIO was lamenting the fact that the French
bank's I.T. folks were giving the bank a bad image.

Why?

Well, the Dutch bank has a dress-down Friday.  All other days the bank
requests staff to wear formal business attire and formal dress is mandatory for
anyone working or visiting the top floor: the customer hospitality suite.

Meanwhile, the French bank's dress code is dress-down every day, as they do
not entertain any external hospitality.  Just technical folks getting on with
running the bank's data centre.

As a result, some of the nerdy Frenchie techies had taken the dress code to the
extreme by wearing ripped jeans and t-shirts with scruffy trainers.  In fact,
some were even wearing the fashionable low-waist jeans that hang just beneath
your bum so that everyone can see your cool backside in all its naked or barely
covered glory.

This was causing much consternation for the Dutch bank who had no control
over what the first and second floor were wearing.   As a result, you would
proudly entertain your top corporate clients to your hospitality suite
overlooking the Thames, whilst travelling through a reception and glass
lifts with a parade of scruffy staff in ripped jeans exposing builder's
bums.

Trying to explain that it was actually another bank's staff
apparently did little to pacify the customer's displeasure.

Vive la Résistance!

UncategorizedCategories
Chris Skinner Author Avatar

Chris M Skinner

Chris Skinner is best known as an independent commentator on the financial markets through his blog, TheFinanser.com, as author of the bestselling book Digital Bank, and Chair of the European networking forum the Financial Services Club. He has been voted one of the most influential people in banking by The Financial Brand (as well as one of the best blogs), a FinTech Titan (Next Bank), one of the Fintech Leaders you need to follow (City AM, Deluxe and Jax Finance), as well as one of the Top 40 most influential people in financial technology by the Wall Street Journal's Financial News. To learn more click here...

Intelligent Money: Our Future Is Where We Do Not Think About Money, As Our Money Thinks For Us

What is the future?

Learn more

Learn more about Chris

About Chris Skinner

The Past, Present And Future Of Banking, Finance And Technology

Fintech expert Chris Skinner: countries need digital transformation to remain competitive

Join me on Linkedin

Follow Me on X!

Hire Chris Skinner for dinners, workshops and more

Learn directly from from one of the most influential people in technology, gain insights from the world's most innovative companies, and build a global network.

Chris’s latest book

Order now

Chris Skinner’s ‘Digital For Good’ Book Launch Event – CFTE

Top 50 Global Thought Leaders and Influencers on FinTech 2023

Chris Skinner
Commentator, CEO of The Finanser and best-selling author at The Finanser

Thinkers360 Thought Leader

Contact Me

Global Awards

Lifetime Achievement Award

Global 100 - 2024 Winner

Chris Skinner - Financial Markets Advisor of the Year - The Finanser - UK 2023

Best Financial Markets Advisor of the Year 2023

30 Best Regtech Blogs and Websites 2023

Kids creating the future bank | TEDxAthens

Captain Cake and the Candy Crew

Captain Cake Winner of a Golden Mom’s Choice Award

TWO-TIME WINNER OF A MOM’S CHOICE GOLD AWARD!

Alex at the Financial Services

Gaping Void's Hugh MacLeod worked with the Finanser