eAnonymous wrote:Trunk Club
Anonymous wrote:I am at a huge finance company and FWIW, our GC and CCO, both women in their late 40s, KILL IT almost everyday. The GC had this whole cape blazer situation the other day and I immediately found a knock off online and bought it.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"I work in Big 4 consulting in Finance, and let me tell you, the Director/Partner track women are not super well put together. Their personal lives are falling apart (men and women both) and their appearance is also slightly disheveled. Maybe its a different story at McKinsey or something, but if you're at the PWCs of the world you've nothing to worry about."
Same is true for Big Law and places like Bain, at least in D.C. I don't see much beyond Tory Burch shoes, LV Neverfills, and perhaps an occasional St John jacket. And I promise you, no man who will be making the decision to promote you is going to know the difference between Max Mara and JCrew.
I suggest you put a bit of money into leather. Buy some decent shoes - Cole Haan is fine. I like Stuart Weitzman and Taryn Rose. And a bag. Black. Good leather. No obviously designer label. Something in the $300-600 range is great.
I’m a going to agree with you, I’ve worked at a big 4 accounting firms and the women who are either Partners or Directors look a bit dish shoveled. Not all but a lot do. I’m use to seeing partners with a JCrew out fit neat hair but when it comes to shoes it’s more sensible with a nice leather bag.
The women who tend to dress up more are in marketing , hr (going to include recruiting with HR), internal accounting and executive assistants tend to be better dressed than some of the Partners or Directors.
I see exactly the same thing at my company. The marketing, HR, internal accounting (e.g., AP and AR), types dress better than the Partner/Director/VP types.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am at a huge finance company and FWIW, our GC and CCO, both women in their late 40s, KILL IT almost everyday. The GC had this whole cape blazer situation the other day and I immediately found a knock off online and bought it.
I bet they are slim
Yes they are but they aren’t skinny, if that makes sense. Probs a size 8 or 10
These sizes are not slim. And I say that as someone who has been both of them, as well as a 4 and a 6.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am at a huge finance company and FWIW, our GC and CCO, both women in their late 40s, KILL IT almost everyday. The GC had this whole cape blazer situation the other day and I immediately found a knock off online and bought it.
I bet they are slim
Yes they are but they aren’t skinny, if that makes sense. Probs a size 8 or 10
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am at a huge finance company and FWIW, our GC and CCO, both women in their late 40s, KILL IT almost everyday. The GC had this whole cape blazer situation the other day and I immediately found a knock off online and bought it.
I bet they are slim
Anonymous wrote:I am at a huge finance company and FWIW, our GC and CCO, both women in their late 40s, KILL IT almost everyday. The GC had this whole cape blazer situation the other day and I immediately found a knock off online and bought it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But in a previous thread I learned that rich people only wear tattered sweaters and jeans they wear to much out horse stalls. Sometimes Old Navy - tailored! - if they need to dress up.
So hilarious that you think "wear tailored clothes without advertising giant logos" = "wear tattered horseriding clothes."
You must face a lot of challenges in your life.
I think they are kidding.
And three is a “millionaire next door” set that you’d never guess have money.
I was kidding - just playing off the constant hectoring on this website that rich people only wear threadbare clothes (or Old Navy), drive old cars, and ride horses.
Anonymous wrote:haha, another Londoner with no connection to DC here! I work at a Wall St bank in London, and in my experience, the well put together women are generally wearing Reiss/Hobbs/LK Bennett/Whistles. LK Bennett shoes are de rigueur, the wardrobe has a bit more flex. Unless you are really senior, like Partner level making 7 figures, nobody is wearing true designer clothing like Mouret, McQueen, or anything close to that. However the bags will likely all be proper designer, but many women might well be wearing dresses from the Gap.
Definitely no Boden. I guarantee half the women in London wouldn't even have heard of the brand. I generally associate Boden with a mumsy/frumpy look, not sleek and fashionable.
Also at the big 4 consulting level the level of polish will be significantly lower. You could easily get away with head to toe H&M.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in Big 4 consulting in Finance, and let me tell you, the Director/Partner track women are not super well put together. Their personal lives are falling apart (men and women both) and their appearance is also slightly disheveled. Maybe its a different story at McKinsey or something, but if you're at the PWCs of the world you've nothing to worry about.
+1