Having
tattoos is considered taboo in some workplaces, but this has been changing in the 21st century. A
University of Miami survey found that respondents who had tattoos were more likely to be employed than non-tattooed respondents, although the researchers cautioned that this result was correlative. In New Zealand, some businesses have dropped bans on traditional
Māori tattoos. In the United States, some workplaces have "Jean Fridays" where employees may wear
blue jeans to work for free or for five dollars. The allowance of jeans into the
white-collar workforce on
Fridays has led some workplaces to adopt jeans as professional attire for the whole week. Following the
COVID-19 pandemic, professional expectations around
video calls,
work-from-home behavior, and after-hours availability began to change. Video call "camera etiquette" became more widespread and important. Whether cursing in the workplace is a legally protected right in the US or not was a contentious issue between the
US Chamber of Commerce and the
National Labor Relations Board in 2023. == Criticism of concept ==