In my experience it’s wise to frequently dress as if you’re going to an interview even when you’re not. It makes it less noticeable when you ARE ducking out to talk to the competition.
Ok this part, above all others, shows how clueless you are about dress styles (no offense intended).
One step up from a polo is a button-down shirt. One step up from that includes a tie (or maybe a jacket sans tie). And then one step above that is the full suit and tie.
You are way out of touch with what dress modes are available and acceptable.
The last time I slipped out for an interview, I wore exactly what I usually wear to work and am wearing today.
I realize that different industries have different codes - my son-in-law is a lawyer and dresses a lot better for work than I do.
I haven’t dealt with government people for ages, and when I did it was with a National Labs then administered by Bell Labs, who dressed exactly like we did. But I have given presentations and panels at defense industry oriented conferences, and didn’t wear a suit then either. Not that I get funded by the government, but panelists more closely associated didn’t wear suits either.
I can imagine wearing a suit if I were going to interview for an IT job on Wall Street. For Microsoft or Google. never.
Meh. This reminds me of comments that come up on LinkedIn all the time: look your best, be positive, did you go the extra mile?, things to never do at a job interview, etc. Here’s the deal; the degree to which an employer is concerned about things like whether you tried to impress them with your conformity or ability to tie a windsor knot is proportional to the number of applicants for the position. If they really need an engineer that has x amount of experience doing y, then there are going to care less about whether the whole shoe, or just the toe was polished. If the are filling a position for which they have an abundance of qualified applicants, then they start looking at the tiniest details that have little to nothing to do with the job to eliminate people. The recent recession has been a prime example of this phenomenon.
I would wear a suit…but only because I look GOOD in a suit.
And always take a long lunch at least three times before your scheduled review.