rframe
pǝʇɹǝʌuı
The concept of professionalism seems to be confusing to younger men. I think that flows out of a social condition where increasingly the attitude is "screw you I'll do whatever I want". Professionalism is a moral courtesy, a respect for ones self and ones clients. I dont care if you're making $10/hour or $60/hour as an instructor, your student is paying you to be a professional instructor. You are serving them. That means you should adapt from your own personal preferences to meet the needs of your clients. If your clients are mostly upper-class business people then dress to match them, decent slacks and polo or button down, as that's going to make them more comfortable. If your clients are mostly rural laborers then wearing a tie might make them uncomfortable and you'd be much better off in a pair of jeans and a flannel... regardless; clean, unwrinkled/pressed, tucked-in clothes show self-respect and respect to your customers. I dont see how this is all that hard: be clean and well-kept, dress to match your clients expectations, and provide excellent service through good customized education. What's acceptable wear will vary by your geography and the type of student you are serving, but it's about pulling back on your ego a bit and thinking about your customer.