Vanguard CEO to employees: Let's lose the suits

Vanguard CEO to employees: Let's lose the suits
A few weeks ago, The Vanguard Group Inc.'s chief executive, William McNabb, received an e-mail from one of his sales representatives that a longtime client wanted to have lunch with him.
DEC 03, 2010
A few weeks ago, The Vanguard Group Inc.'s chief executive, William McNabb, received an e-mail from one of his sales representatives that a longtime client wanted to have lunch with him. At the end of the e-mail was a simple request: “Please do not suit up.” “The client actually asked that I not wear a suit,” Mr. McNabb said. “They said it made them feel uncomfortable.” Despite being more than 100 miles away from the formalities of Wall Street, Vanguard always has required its employees worldwide to dress in business attire: a jacket and tie for men, and professional dress for women. Until now, that is. On Nov. 23, Mr. McNabb announced on his blog that Vanguard would go “business appropriate,” meaning that all of its 12,500 employees across the world no longer have to “suit up” unless they are meeting with clients. The blog post received more than 20,000 hits. “I had wanted the blog to outpace the number of hits of the cafeteria menu,” said John Woerth, a spokesman. The menu gets between 100 and 200 hits each day. Last week at Vanguard's headquarters, Mr. McNabb himself was wearing a button-down shirt and pants. “My predecessor, Jack Brennan, felt that business attire was more egalitarian,” he said. “If you walked into a room, you couldn't tell who the boss was.” But after much deliberation — “I won't even tell you how long it took to make this decision,” Mr. McNabb said — the firm has embraced the new dress code. “It just felt it was time,” he said.

Latest News

Bankrupt Inspired Healthcare’s CEO fighting for lawyer’s fees
Bankrupt Inspired Healthcare’s CEO fighting for lawyer’s fees

Luke Lee launched the company in 2016. It eventually issued $1.2 billion high-risk investments.

Edward Jones takes minority stake in personal finance app Quicken
Edward Jones takes minority stake in personal finance app Quicken

The company aims to bring Quicken's budgeting and investment tool tracking to its 20,000-plus advisor network

BlackRock finds growing gap between retirement confidence and reality
BlackRock finds growing gap between retirement confidence and reality

Americans may feel better about retirement, but new research suggests confidence and preparedness aren’t always the same thing.

'Family office' sold $40 million in notes without a broker license, SEC alleges
'Family office' sold $40 million in notes without a broker license, SEC alleges

A $2.97 million commission haul and rolled-over retirement money sit at the center.

SEC alleges unregistered seller raised $10 million from 190 investors
SEC alleges unregistered seller raised $10 million from 190 investors

He sold "safe" notes on his radio show. The SEC says he was never licensed.

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.