I have no studies to refer to, but I can tell you what I've seen in my own call center. Bear in mind, I'm just a lowly CSR, so my views are from the very bottom level.
The company I work for has a "business casual" dress code. In Canada, this means khakis are allowed, ties are not required, hats, jeans, shorts, running shoes and sandals are strictly taboo as are t-shirts with ANY writing on them at all.
We've been having a serious attendance issue in recent months. In fact, attendance has always been a serious issue. We're an outsourcer, and we seldom meet our attendance metric. In July, management adopted casual dress for the month with the incentive that if attendance metrics were met for July, we would continue to be allowed casual dress for the month of August. The only real difference is that we were allowed to wear jeans, shorts of a reasonable length and running shoes, even sport sandals (though no flip-flops for safety reasons).
We met our attendance metric for July, the first time this had happened since I started there in March. We've since met our attendance metric for every month, and are still maintaining our "casual dress" allowance. Granted, we're just barely squeaking by on the metric, but it IS an improvement.
There had been, and still remains in effect, a monetary attendance incentive of $100 for every CSR who makes it through 4 consecutive weeks with no more than one attendance occurance. I cannot for the life of me fathom why the casual dress incentive worked where the monetary incentive failed, but it did. It seems people in this town are more likely to come to work if they can wear jeans. Go figure. Personally, I'm still wearing dress clothes to work, though I have taken advantage of the casual allowance to wear jeans on laundry day a time or two, hehe.
So there you have it. The view from the bottom. |