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Dress for the Role You Want
by Patricia Fripp, CSP, CPAE
Edith Head, the famous costume designer for Hollywood movies
said, "You can have everything you want as long as you dress
for it!" She had a point. Costumes are as essential for the
movie of your life as they are for a Hollywood film.
Before you open your mouth, your appearance speaks for you.
How you dress affects how others perceive you and how you
perceive yourself. Once people get to know you, they may
change their opinion of you despite how you look, but why
risk it? Make it easy for them.
Even before actors are cast, they dress themselves for
auditions (AKA job interviews). A dozen or more actors may
"read" for a part, so the competition is keen. If they know
the part is that of a farm worker, they don't come dressed
in the hottest new fashions. If they hope to be cast as a
biker, banker, pharmacist, or athlete, they buy or borrow a
"costume" -- street clothes that will subtly suggest the
character they want to play. When Estelle Getty auditioned
for "The Golden Girls", they said she was too young. She
returned, dressed as the character she was to play, and was
hired on the spot. Theoretically, casting directors should
be able to look at someone dressed like a Wall Street broker
and imagine a trucker, or vice versa, but why make them work
so hard?
Once they've got the part, all actors know how important it
is to create the right visual look for the character. You
also should be aware of the intended and unintended messages
that your clothes can send to your audience. Different
groups have unspoken "musts" and "no-no's" that indicate
"this person is one of us" or "this person should be ignored
or even shunned."
Just like film costumes, well-chosen clothes can conceal
figure flaws, elevate your mood, and affect how you stand,
sit, and walk. More conservative outfits usually dictate the
restricted, subdued movements more suitable for formal and
business situations, while soft, loose clothes allow
dramatic gestures and more athletic strides. Depending on
the scene being played, your star may require clothes that
are wildly memorable or subtle and discreet.
In my business, part of my marketing strategy is to be
noticed. Although I would never wear a hat on stage, hats
are part of my costume at networking events. First, they get
me noticed, and second, total strangers initiate
conversation and remember me afterwards. "Yes," they say, "I
know Patricia Fripp. She's the one who always wears hats."
Several years ago I delivered a speech wearing a custom-made
Wonder Woman costume. I posed the question to the audience
Whether Wonder Woman was a fictional character or a state of
mind. We concluded she was both. I then suggested that
everyone needs their own version of a super-hero costume,
something you wear to guarantee you'll feel so good you know
you're going to succeed in making the sale or get the
promotion.
So be sure you dress for the part you want to get as you
produce the screenplay of your life.
(527 Words)
Patricia Fripp, CSP, CPAE is a San Francisco-based executive speech coach, sales trainer, and award-winning professional .She is the author of Get What You Want!, Make It, So You Don't Have to Fake It!, and Past-President of the National Speakers Association. She can be reached at:PFripp@Fripp.com, 1-800 634-3035, http://www.fripp.com
We offer this article on a nonexclusive basis. You may reprint or repost this material as long as Patricia Fripp's name and contact information is included. PFripp@Fripp.com, 1-800 634-3035, http://www.fripp.com

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