StonehamPark
#Brighton-Nil
Tattoos always look unprofessional or common, there is no escaping that. It's obvious why some employers would prefer their staff not to have them. Not saying it's right, but we live in a superficial society.
Is it?
Tattoos always look unprofessional or common, there is no escaping that. It's obvious why some employers would prefer their staff not to have them. Not saying it's right, but we live in a superficial society.
Not to be picky but :"Unless you work with children" does not tally up with "As an employee you should be judged on the quality of your work not on how you look."
Not to be picky but :"Unless you work with children" does not tally up with "As an employee you should be judged on the quality of your work not on how you look."
Tattoos always look unprofessional or common, there is no escaping that. It's obvious why some employers would prefer their staff not to have them. Not saying it's right, but we live in a superficial society.
Working with suggestable and easily influenced kids is a bit different to working in an office or a shop. Being someone who works with kids and has tattoos I have no problem with covering them up if I have to.
What if the tats say C***, or depict images of sex and bestiality?
It is perfectly easy to have a tattoo in a place that is non-visible at work
I think the OP is incredibly ignorant. Unless you work with children what does it matter that you have a tattoo(s)? Not having tattoos doesn't make you any better at your job. As an employee you should be judged on the quality of your work not on how you look.
Entirely fair. But someone who works with children should still be judged on their work and not their appearance, with the below exceptions taken into account!
As far as I can see it's no different from agreeing to go to work in a shirt and tie, trousers and shoes. It's a corporate image that you buy into when you go to work for certain employers. Turning up for work in shorts and flip-flops doesn't impede your ability to work either but a lot of employers would take a very dim view of affairs if you did.
If you really want to work in flip-flops and shorts find a job that it's okay to do so, likewise visible tattoos. But the onus surely must be on the employee to be flexible here about appearances and not the employer?
Of course they should. I don't think my tattoos make me any worse or better at my job but I have to accept that children look up to me and I have a duty to make sure I am the best role model I can be. I make no excuses, I don't hide the fact I have them, the kids in my class know I have them and often ask about them (what they are, did they hurt etc) but I don't flaunt them about.
It's an admirable way of handling it
You can still be smartly dressed with tattoos on show. At the end of the day surely an employer should hire the best person for the job regardless of how they look.
What about if your job is a Pirate
Ultimately, whether you like it or not, in many, many roles, how you look is very much part of what makes you the best person for the job. Or not.
Tattoos are like clothes, in that they are a fashion and people choose to wear them. In no way can they be compared to race for those reasons.
In many jobs it is important to dress professionally, if someone has chosen to "permanently" wear a tattoo, I don't think employer can be accused of discrimination, because that person will always dress unprofessionally by wearing them.
Is it any different from turning someone down because they looked too BLACK?