The Stars of Shark Tank on How to Dress for SuccessClass, comfort and swagger. Some things never go out of style, except for this big business fashion faux pas that Kevin O'Leary and Daymond John say you should avoid.

ByKim Lachance Shandrow

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

When it comes to dressing for success, you'd better look the part or you might not get the part at all. Because people definitely do judge a book by its cover, especially in business.

That's the basic but wise common thread of business fashion advice from celebrityShark TankinvestorsKevin O'LearyandDaymond John. It's simple: Dress strictly according to your profession and position, and always dress to kill. Both sharp-dressed Sharks agree that this is the single most important rule to follow when suiting up for the work day ahead, and for your career overall.

"Your look really needs to be true to your profession, head to toe," John recently told Entrepreneur.com on the set ofShark Tank. The millionaire founder ofFUBUwas dressed to the nines at the time, rocking a black velvet ultra-formal, peak-notched suit coat over a wine shirt buttoned to the top and a meticulously folded matching maroon pocket square. Surprisingly, the menswear mogul went without a necktie. He did, however, don his trademark marble-sized diamond earrings.

Related:Daymond John of 'Shark Tank' on the No. 1 Thing Entrepreneurs Need

"Don't come as a construction worker dressed in silk. I need to see you in some overalls with a hard hat on. If you're a coder in the tech world and you walk into the room in a nice three-piece suit, I won't believe that you're in a dark room for four straight days coding. I'm just not buying it. Always dress to what is accurate to who and what you are."

John said the same doubly applies if you work in the financial arena. If you're "in a suit that's not fitted and you have a bunch of jewelry on," he'll suspect "you'll also be also loose with my money. Not good."

Fellow Shark Kevin O'Leary, clad in a classic black suit and tie, and a crisp white shirt adorned with elegant silver ball collar pins and cufflinks, shares John's traditional views on dressing for business success. "You have to dress as your clients expect to see you, to their expectations," he told us betweenShark Tanktakes.

Related:Shark Tank's Daymond John on Lessons From His Worst Mistakes

The shrewd Canadian mutual funds magnate, who also goes by the moniker "Mr. Wonderful," said the days of dressing down in the financial sector are dead and gone, and he doesn't miss them a bit. "In financial services, for a while during the tech boom, it was cool not to wear a tie, or to dress down with jeans and a coat. It was awful."

Now, he said, people respect "a crisp, clean, unfettered disciplined look, like what I wear every day." We couldn't describe O'Leary's day to day business apparel better. "That's my uniform. My look is what I am, who I am. I'm very comfortable that way and it works."

John said you can still look good, even if you're a newbie entrepreneur on a shoestring budget.

Related:Shark Tank's Daymond John on Thinking Big

"It's not about having money," he said. "If you have a suit that only cost $150, go the extra mile and get it tailored. Shine your shoes. Make sure you manicure your nails. It's the simple things that people notice, that take you far."

Watch Daymond John and Kevin O'Leary in action, and dressed for success, no doubt, on the premiere of Shark Tank Season Six, airing this Friday, Sept. 26, from 8 to 10 p.m. ET/PT on your local ABC station.

Related:How Russell Simmons Plans to Style and Inspire Millenials Through Fashion

Wavy Line
Kim Lachance Shandrow

前西海岸编辑

Kim Lachance Shandrow is the former West Coast editor at Entrepreneur.com. Previously, she was a commerce columnist atLos Angeles CityBeat,a news producer at MSNBC and KNBC in Los Angeles and a frequent contributor to theLos Angeles Times. She has also written forGovernment Technology杂志,LA Yoga杂志,theLowell Sunnewspaper, HealthCentral.com, PsychCentral.com and the former U.S. Surgeon General, Dr. C. Everett Coop. Follow her on Twitter at@Lashandrow. You can also follow her on Facebookhere.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Business News

How One Couple Became Multi-Unit, Multi-Brand Franchise Owners

When Matt and Anne Evers took the leap to buy a franchise, they never imagined they'd grow to 13 locations across two brands just eight years later.

Thought Leaders

So, You've Been Hacked. These are the Best Practices for Business Leaders Post-Hack

The lasting effects of a cyber incident can impact an organization's reputation, customers, workforce, databases and network architecture.

Business Process

This Department Might Be Holding Your Business Back. Here's How to Change That.

Human resources has become too often disconnected from the bottom line. Here's how to deftly integrate the two to address 21st-century challenges.

Data & Recovery

Store More With 20TB of Cloud Storage Space, Just $99.99 for Life

Keep more of your data organized in the cloud for a one-time fee.

Money & Finance

Want to Become a Millionaire? Follow Warren Buffett's 4 Rules.

企业家是不能过度指狗万官方望太多a company exit for their eventual 'win.' Do this instead.