IT Consultant by day, gamer by night 🎮 MTF trans 🏳️‍⚧️ | Sydney based | 420 🌿

Currently spending way too much time in World of Warcraft, fragging in Counter Strike 2, and absolutely obsessed with Sea of Stars. Always down to connect with fellow gamers and fediverse wanderers 👋

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Cake day: April 6th, 2026

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  • I tend to find through my work experience that it depends on a couple of factors, which industry, which department, and how senior they are.

    For example when jumping on calls or attending client meetings, the IT peoples, Engineers, anyone technical really is pretty much never in a suit. I don’t have much to do with HR departments, but I to find their 50/50, could be the “chill” HR department where the HR lady is passing off active wear as work clothes, or the strict HR department where they are 100% in suits.

    The more senior you get, especially in sales and marketing roles, C-Suite, etc. the far more common suits become again, the only industry I don’t see this so prevalent in is the tech industry, however I don’t work with tech companies too often as they typically have their own people lol.

    I know in my role, I only wear a suit or a blazer 3 times a year, and that’s my companies conferences where we have a dress code for the first day.