An invite to London and nothing to wear
There are lots of cues and clues to differing cultures across the insurance industry and it's IT neighbour - one of the most obvious is dress code or at least communal agreement on how one should dress. For a chap in London it should be relatively easy, as the character Harry Hart put it in the film Kingsman, "The suit is the modern gentleman's armour." However, recent changes and external influences in London have left me in something of a wardrobe quandary.
For example - the data scientist community and the digital community. I went to the first Strata event in London in my usual suit and tie and swiftly realised that I looked like I a fish very much out of water. Here jeans, t-shirts and the odd tattoo were the order of the day. My most recent visit to the conference I managed to correct my attire although didn't acquire new tattoos just for the conference (perhaps next year).
Oliver Werneyer's observation at our event in February this year that one needs a good beard to fit in with the start up crowd is also well founded. Also in London we have Lloyd's of London with a strict dress code and a requirement for a tie to be worn at all times. More Kingsman territory, clearly one can't dress for both communities on the same day.
In between we have an increasingly relaxed view of the suit attire or even simply trousers and shirt. Despite having a pretty good collection of ties these are now largely optional (although I still generally carry one around as wearing them varies by client and frankly I quite like wearing a tie to a meeting). What I don't have of course is a pocket square - something I rarely have seen adopted before this year (perhaps I wasn't paying attention) but I'm increasingly seeing a square used to add a splash of colour in the absence of a tie.
Thus, we have the title of this post - I have nothing to wear!
Fortunately, London is unlikely to see the weather required for hawaiian shirts and shorts to become the order of the day (albeit I may have something that might fit that bill should it come to pass). Circling back to culture though, the need to blend these clearly different and shifting cultures together in one organisation is crucial in a modern insurer.
Aviva has gone to the extent of creating a digital garage in Shoreditch - the heart of the jeans wearing community, if I may use such a broad brush - to draw in talent to the organisation. Hiscox too has been going to great pains to attract the right talent, along with many other insurers in London seeking to bridge these cultures. Are you allowing for a varied culture in your organisation? How flexible are you in dress code and working practices across different communities? Have you ever set to preparing for a meeting and realised you simply have nothing to wear? Would love to hear your stories on changing insurance, if only so I know it's not just me.