It's taken a while for the rest of the population to figure out that tech geeks often have money, despite their often aggressively casual appearance. As in at the least have nice 6-figure salaries and nothing to spend it on, and often are actual literal eccentric millionaires, like the folks who lived down the street from me (and still shared a student apartment together) despite being early employees of ATG and thus all multimillionaires.Denis wrote:And there are surprisingly many who don't...CByrneIV wrote:I have been that kid.Netpackrat wrote:Or as I personally witnessed, the "kid" dressed in a sweatshirt and old jeans...
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There are a surprising number of car salesmen who really do notice and understand these things.
My dress style outside work is usually "eccentric millionaire", i.e. scruffy. I spend more than enough time in work wearing sober suits and expensive ties, so I like to dress casually otherwise.
I once went to a car dealership fully intending to buy two new vehicles, cash on the nail - I had picked out the exact specs I wanted to order, and only wanted to test-drive something similar, to be certain I liked the "feel" on the road. The salesman blew me off, probably because he wasn't impressed with how I was attired. He lost two instant cash sales, and probably never even noticed it.
If he looks a little scruffy and unshaven but is wearing pricey outdoor clothes, like $300 boots and $100 pants, sounds like a geek and seems to know the technical specs of your products better than you do... he's NOT poor.
