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Showing posts sorted by date for query Body Art. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Employers & Body Art

We've previously discussed the growing number of employees (mostly under the age of 30) who have body art. What can you as an employer do about it?

Recently, a Texas hospital wanted to develop dress code and grooming policy for all employees. The proposed policy required all tattoos to be covered, and piercings to be limited to earlobes and a nose stud only.

The proposed changes sparked vigorous debates among employees and even press coverage. It's a sensitive subject!

Even employers that permit piercings or tattoos should set limits. A detailed dress code and grooming policy should clearly spell out what is permitted.

If you permit tattoos, for example, you should prohibit the display of sexually graphic, violent, or otherwise offensive tattoos, or require employees limit the number of visible tattoos.

Traditional dress code and appearance standards are being challenged today more than ever. Employers still retain wide latitude, but the increase in body art is mandating more careful consideration of requests.

Seek employee input before making major changes to employee appearance standards.

Monday, June 02, 2008

Managing Employees Who Have Body Art

The popularity of tattoos in the "Y Generation" is certain: studies show that up to 40% of people under the age of 30 have body art.

But as this generation enters the workplace, visible tattoos can create issues in the office. According to this report via McClatchy Tribune, more and more people realize that visible body art creates a stigma - for employers and clients alike. And those employees are taking steps to cover their art during working hours.

That's good news - but employers need to take the lead if they believe that tattoos (or excessive piercings, for that matter) are not good for business. Well-written policies should be created mandating what is expected of employees.

Some employers might say, "I don't have that problem now - why deal with it?" The answer is because you don't want to create a policy after your receptionist shows up on Monday morning with twelve rings in her nose, or your sales rep comes back after a weekend in Cabo with a snake tattoo on his face.

Get in front of this issue - like all issues - before it happens.

Monday, March 03, 2008

Managing People with Body Art

Body art - aka tattoos - are not generally accepted in conventional workplaces. In fact, 85 percent of employees believe that tattoos and body piercings impede one's chances of finding a job, according to a July 2007 survey by Vault.com, an online career site.

Yet 25% of Americans have at least one tattoo (up from 1% 30 years ago). The strain to find qualified employees will continue if the perception that body art is counterproductive in the workplace.

The answer for employers is to establish policies before this becomes an issue. Set up an appearance policy in your Employee Handbook. Make a decision - does an employee with visible body art impact your business? (If an employee rarely sees clients, for example, it may not be impactful - but if an employee does see clients, you may want to have visible body art covered for them).

I once worked for a company that required body art to be covered - generally, for business reasons this is completely acceptable. Many of the younger salespeople with tattoos on their ankles wore pants or even used a bandage to cover up the art doing working hours.

The point is - the employees at this company knew the policy before they accepted the job. If you don't have a policy in place, and suddenly and employee shows up with several tattoo's, you're reacting and not being proactive. You open yourself up to potential charges of discrimination.

Managing people is largely about preventing issues before they occur - a body art/appearance policy is a perfect example.

Thanks to Des Moines Register.