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It's funny, he was showing me the clothes he bought for the interview and I mentioned that although they were nice, and would be totally appropriate for work, he ought to dress up a bit. Perhaps not an entire suit, but at least his dress pants, shirt and shoes with matching belt. He had forgotten the suit we got him for DD's wedding two years ago--thankfully it all still fits! He found it in his closet with a couple pair of Docker's he'd also forgotten about. He was so excited to find "new" clothes!
He might want to check out Indeed or Glass Door to gauge the level of formality for interview clothes for that company. My DH is a software engineer and dressed a bit too formally for one company, but his suit was appropriate for a stuffier software company. The company that hired him was more informal and he wore Dockers and a collared shirt. Dressing for software interviews was kind of a challenge. And, yeah, those interviews are long with a lot of different people. Good luck to him. Working for a young company would be fun.Originally Posted by alinnell
Yes, DS got his degree in computer science. This interview is with a company whose founders also graduated from the same university (UC Irvine) and is located near Costa Mesa--it's called Meridian Link. They specialize in software for banks and credit unions. It's funny, he was showing me the clothes he bought for the interview and I mentioned that although they were nice, and would be totally appropriate for work, he ought to dress up a bit. Perhaps not an entire suit, but at least his dress pants, shirt and shoes with matching belt. He had forgotten the suit we got him for DD's wedding two years ago--thankfully it all still fits! He found it in his closet with a couple pair of Docker's he'd also forgotten about. He was so excited to find "new" clothes!


