Vanguard Allure

Top Menu

  • Vanguard

Main Menu

  • Home
  • Allure Magazine
    • Features
    • Magazine
    • Profiles
  • Allure TV
  • Celebration
    • Fashion & Style
    • Weddings
    • Lifestyle
    • Events
  • Wellbeing
    • Allure Woman
    • Healthy Living
    • Beauty
  • Happiness
    • Food
    • Shopping
    • Travel
    • Relationships
    • Career
  • News
  • Vanguard

logo

Vanguard Allure

  • Home
  • Allure Magazine
    • Favour Erere Eyeoyibo: Many hats one calling

      April 5, 2026
      0
    • Nollywood YouTubers redefining entertainment

      March 30, 2026
      0
    • MISKAY and Hilda Baci Launch Signature Collection in Lagos

      March 27, 2026
      0
    • Must a woman change her surname after marriage?

      March 13, 2026
      0
    • Championing Equity for Women: Chinyere Okorocha

      March 8, 2026
      0
    • Ify Uzokwe’s Call for Collaboration, Courage and Collective Growth on International Women’s ...

      March 6, 2026
      0
    • The Women We Love

      March 5, 2026
      0
    • Silent Scars: When Boys Become Victims of Child Sexual Abuse

      March 5, 2026
      0
    • IS BEING NIGERIAN EMBARRASSING NOW?

      February 27, 2026
      0
    • Features
    • Magazine
    • Profiles
  • Allure TV
  • Celebration
    • Fashion & Style
    • Weddings
    • Lifestyle
    • Events
  • Wellbeing
    • Allure Woman
    • Healthy Living
    • Beauty
  • Happiness
    • Food
    • Shopping
    • Travel
    • Relationships
    • Career
  • News
    • Faith Morey Takes The Grace Circle Beyond Borders with Accra Edition

      April 11, 2026
      0
    • World Autism Day: Foundation calls for early intervention in Children

      April 7, 2026
      0
    • Belaire and Stars Shine at Yemi Alade’s Yem Beauty Launch

      April 5, 2026
      0
    • Faith Morey Introduces The Grace Circle to Lagos

      March 8, 2026
      0
    • Jobberman Pushes Inclusive Hiring at HR Fusion - Pink Edition

      February 25, 2026
      0
    • Application for Lifesaver Intervention Initiative leadership certification course opens

      February 23, 2026
      0
    • Avoid friends who are fame and money hungry — Hilda Baci warns

      February 20, 2026
      0
    • Adebukola Salau's ‘Night of the Royals’ Honours Impact, Advances Leadership and Legacy

      January 24, 2026
      0
    • Adekunle Gold Reopens Wole Soyinka Centre with Grand Orchestral Showcase

      January 12, 2026
      0
  • The Rise of Restful Travel

  • Faith Morey Takes The Grace Circle Beyond Borders with Accra Edition

  • World Autism Day: Foundation calls for early intervention in Children

  • Highs and Lows: Understanding Bipolar Disorder

  • Understanding Stress Load & Emotional Burnout

AccessoryAllure MagazineFeaturesLifestyle
Home›Accessory›Ladies, is it okay to wear your engagement ring to a job interview?

Ladies, is it okay to wear your engagement ring to a job interview?

August 19,2016
Share:

If you are a woman who happens to have a sizable engagement ring, a male recruiter and career counselor has some cold, hard advice for you: “When interviewing for a job, lose the ring!”

This is the title of a veritable gem of a LinkedIn essay written by Bruce Hurwitz last week that’s going viral (by LinkedIn blog standards, anyway). Calling on his extensive experience, Hurwitz says he’s seen that when women come to job interviews wearing big engagement rings, they tend not to get the job.

But when they leave their rings at home, they are more likely to be hired. He cites the example of a qualified woman sporting a “Hope Diamond” who lost out on several interviews; after she heeded Hurwitz’s sage advice to stop wearing the ring, she called him to report that she finally got a job.

Hurwitz has a point here: If a woman shows up to a job interview wearing a 4-carat ring, or similarly expensive statement jewelry, like an armful of Cartier Love cuffs, her perspective employer might assume she’s very wealthy, which could negatively (albeit unfairly) impact her salary negotiations. Or, her giant ring might even lead the employer to presume they can’t afford to hire her at all, and not bring her back for a second interview, which, again, would be unfair, but may be a reality, like pretty people faring better in interviews, rather than everyone being judged on their résumés alone.

But Hurwitz’s advice to women interviewees to “lose the rock” is not financial advice; on the contrary, it’s social, and decidedly sexist. Women with large engagement rings are doing themselves a disservice, he says, because “when a man sees that ring, he immediately assumes you are high maintenance,” Hurwitz, in his infinite wisdom, writes. Not to mention: “When the woman at the office who has the largest diamond on her finger sees that ring, she will realize that if you are hired she will fall to second place and will, therefore, not like you.”

Oh, Bruce Hurwitz, you are a wise one. We working women, 40 percent of sole or primary American breadwinners, (still) fighting for equal pay and paid leave, while raising children, often with no viable options for affordable childcare, are concerning ourselves with the size of our prospective women colleagues’ engagement rings, and subsequently hating those women who have bigger rings than we do. We are that shallow (despite outnumbering men in college enrollment) and have so much ample time on our hands that we are sniffing out the ring sizes not even of our colleagues, but of interviewees, at our companies. Nailed it!

Hurwitz, as one might imagine, caught some flak for his essay: What about men wearing expensive jewelry, like Rolexes, critics asked? Surely the same rule would apply—that men wearing expensive pieces would be deemed “high maintenance” and categorically, instantaneously hated by other men at the office, right? According to Hurwitz, nope; he perceives no “moral equivalency.”

“When a man gives a woman an engagement ring, he buys the least expensive ring that he believes it will take to get her to agree to the proposal,” Hurwitz explains in a follow-up essay (read: anyone with a large engagement ring would accept nothing less and is therefore a demanding nightmare to work with). “He may be willing to have a high-maintenance woman in his personal life; he doesn’t necessarily want one in his office,” Hurwitz says of potential bosses. A male candidate wearing a Rolex, on the other hand, might hurt his salary negotiations—but a flashy watch could also help boost his status and, especially if he’s a salesman, prove he’s a smashing success. “You see this watch. It’s a Rolex. Look outside, you’ll see my BMW in your parking lot. I like expensive things. I work on commission. I’m good enough to afford this lifestyle. Any questions?” Hurwitz imagines a male candidate saying.

The same couldn’t possibly apply to women with large engagement rings. They couldn’t be hardworking or successful saleswomen like their male counterparts, engaged to similarly hardworking and successful fiancés who might have independently decided to purchase them a large ring, or pluck one from their grandma’s jewelry box.

No, a large ring is an automatic sign of a she-devil—a woman who, according to Hurwitz’s own crack logic, drives a hard bargain and would accept nothing less than the best in exchange for her hand. Let’s pretend he’s right.

A tough woman with high standards and a keen sense of her worth? Sounds like a great hire to me.

 

Source: http://www.vogue.com/

TagsAllure Vanguardemployersengagementenvyhardinterviewsjobringwomen
Previous Article

Woman Disappears With Her Employer’s Children, Turns ...

Next Article

Lassa Fever: Medical doctor, 3 others die ...

0
Shares
  • 0
  • +
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Related articles More from author

  • Allure MagazineEntertainmentFeaturesLifestyleNewsUncategorized

    #Sexdolls: The good, the bad and the ugly

    January 24, 2018
    By allure1
  • Allure MagazineEventFashion & StyleNewsUncategorized

    10 Best looks from the weekend (photos)

    November 28, 2017
    By allure1
  • Allure MagazineNews

     Mr. 2Kay slams Eko Hotels with N500 Million Naira lawsuit for getting robbed and beaten within their premises

    November 7, 2017
    By allure1
  • Allure MagazineNews

    Singer, Runtown expecting first child with American based girlfriend

    March 6, 2017
    By allure1
  • Allure MagazineNews

    South African leader, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela dies

    April 3, 2018
    By allure1
  • Allure MagazineNews

    Singer, Skales gets excited as US Rapper, Nicki Minaj posts his video on Instagram

    May 16, 2017
    By allure1
0

  • Sharon Ooja
    Entertainment

    Covid-19: ‘Don’t be a hero in the streets, charity begins at home’ – Sharon Ooja to celebrities 

  • Allure MagazineNews

    I contemplated suicide- Comedian, Owen Gee

  • LifestyleNews

    I do not discriminate in my pageant brand – Patra Idehen, CEO Face of Beauty Nigeria pageant

  • 5312
    Followers
  • 0
    Likes

Timeline

  • April 12, 2026

    The Rise of Restful Travel

  • April 11, 2026

    Faith Morey Takes The Grace Circle Beyond Borders with Accra Edition

  • April 7, 2026

    World Autism Day: Foundation calls for early intervention in Children

  • April 5, 2026

    Highs and Lows: Understanding Bipolar Disorder

  • April 5, 2026

    Understanding Stress Load & Emotional Burnout

Categories

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Sign up to receive email updates and to hear what's going on with our magazine!

  • Recent

  • Popular

  • Comments

  • The Rise of Restful Travel

    By CHIOMA
    April 12, 2026
  • Faith Morey Takes The Grace Circle Beyond Borders with Accra Edition

    By CHIOMA
    April 11, 2026
  • World Autism Day: Foundation calls for early intervention in Children

    By Temitope
    April 7, 2026
  • Highs and Lows: Understanding Bipolar Disorder

    By CHIOMA
    April 5, 2026
  • Chioma Jesus, Sammie Okposo, Midnight Crew set for #THUGGLA2018

    By CHIOMA
    April 24, 2018
  • American rapper, Kendrick Lamar wins Pulitzer prize for 2017 ‘Damn’ album

    By CHIOMA
    April 17, 2018
  • Afrobeat singer, Seun Kuti drops new album titled ‘Black Times’ 

    By CHIOMA
    April 23, 2018
  • Actor, Yul Edochie declares intention to run for presidency

    By CHIOMA
    April 23, 2018

Entertainment

  • January 3, 2026

    Olajide Ajose, Davido, Omoni Oboli Make Visibility 50 Africa List

  • November 21, 2025

    Evia Simon Unveils New Christmas-Themed Film Project

  • October 22, 2025

    Davido Becomes Osun State’s Chairman of Sports Trust Fund 

  • October 21, 2025

    Iyabo Ojo welcomes daughter, grandson back to Nigeria

  • October 5, 2025

    Imisi crowned winner of Big Brother Naija Season 10

Follow us