Anonymous wrote:I think you can and should be much more direct so she isn’t confused. Not “we are sadly going to part ways” but “the job will end on XX date. I would like your last day to be YY. I will pay you for an extra week if you stay till then. I will give you a great reference. We will miss you.”
You owe her clarity. It’s her job.
Anonymous wrote:I dunno, you might shoot yourself in the foot if you give her notice. It might be better just to tell her the day of and let her go. This is how most jobs do it or else you face she quits before August or half asses the whole time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I dunno, you might shoot yourself in the foot if you give her notice. It might be better just to tell her the day of and let her go. This is how most jobs do it or else you face she quits before August or half asses the whole time.
What a terrible person you are. If she lets her go with no notice I hope she gives her a couple of months worth of severance. Otherwise, let her know that she needs to start looking for another job.
What do you mean “no notice”? The nanny has literally had notice since August of last year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I dunno, you might shoot yourself in the foot if you give her notice. It might be better just to tell her the day of and let her go. This is how most jobs do it or else you face she quits before August or half asses the whole time.
What a terrible person you are. If she lets her go with no notice I hope she gives her a couple of months worth of severance. Otherwise, let her know that she needs to start looking for another job.