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Junior Contributors

Polish, or personality, what really defines professionalism today?

“Professionalism may not be gone, it may just be learning how to breathe a little.”

Photogrpaher: Vitaly Gariev

Growing up, I thought professionalism was non-negotiable. My parents described a world where you dressed sharply, arrived early, and treated every email like a miniature essay. TV reinforced it: offices full of suits, punctual meetings, and people who looked sharp even if the work itself was messy. Now that I’ve spent some time in the workforce, I see something very different. It’s not that professionalism has disappeared, it’s that it’s shifting, sometimes in ways that look like decline, and sometimes in ways that reflect a changing set of values.

Dress Codes: From uniformity to expression

Clothing is the most obvious change. The old rule was simple: a professional wardrobe gave everyone a uniform sense of polish. That kind of conformity made a workplace look sharp and, frankly, made it easier to know how you were expected to show up.

Today, the rules are looser. Social media aesthetics like the “office siren” look complete with hoodies and sneakers in the same meeting room. At first, this feels like a loss of discipline, but on the other hand, it allows people to express individuality, through: fashion, tattoos, or hair color, that would once have been hidden.

Is that individuality making workplaces more authentic, or just more distracting? From my perspective, there’s value in both: I like the sharpness of uniformity, but I also appreciate seeing personality peek through. I think there’s a limit and a balance to it. There is a time to be creative in self-expression to work, but also, I think it maintains a standard, a way to present yourself and act, in certain environments.

Communication: From polished to personal

Emails tell a similar story. Once, they were all formalities, “Dear so-and-so,” carefully structured, ending with “Sincerely.” Now, many are: short, casual, and sometimes riddled with typos, or delayed responses.

This looks sloppy at times, but it also strips away unnecessary performance. A casual “Hey—” might be more genuine than an overly stiff greeting. At the same time, when casualness turns into neglect (emails ignored, tone too careless) that’s where professionalism feels lost.

Does efficiency outweigh polish? Or are we losing something important when formality disappears?

Time: Rigid standards vs. flexibility

Timeliness is another marker. Punctuality once defined professionalism; being early meant being reliable. Today, lateness is more tolerated, and deadlines are seen as flexible. On one side, this reflects compassion: people have lives, emergencies, and competing priorities, but when deadlines slip too often, reliability suffers.

Is flexibility a sign of progress, or just an excuse? My take: structure provides stability, but a little leeway keeps workplaces human. Perhaps giving too much leeway causes an excessive relaxed environment, which can: decrease productivity, efficiency, and overall respect for the job and superiors.

Where does that leave us?

So, is professionalism dying, or just evolving? Are we loosening standards too much, or finally shaking off unnecessary rigidity?

From my own experience, I think it comes down to balance. There’s something nice about everyone looking sharp and being on time, but a little room for individuality and understanding doesn’t hurt either. Maybe professionalism isn’t gone, it’s just learning how to meet us halfway.

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