Anonymous wrote:this. I would not agree to 5 weeks of no stores. What if she needs tampons or deodorant last minute.... I would agree to two weeks max, five weeks is too much.Anonymous wrote:Why 5 weeks? Two is sufficient.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks, PPs. This was definitely our plan - to talk to her. We have a very good, open relationship. I was trying to gauge a number to throw out in the initial conversation. My guess is she’ll say yes to anything I suggest, but I can ask her to go home and do the math to see what works for her family. I also wanted to see how many people thought this was a good vs bad idea.
You mention she has a family. Would you also expect her family to stay home and refrain from in person stores and grocery shopping?
Without sharing her family details - all you need to know is this isn’t an issue. Will not impact her in any other way than shopping, which is the only time she goes out.
Then a monetary incentive on top of it would be helpful but again it’s outside of work and personally I see that as an intrusion onto her personal life but other people see it different ways. I would also like to add that I do a lot of my grocery shopping at Latin markets and Asian markets because the ingredients are not available at American stores. As far as I know those places do not offer delivery or Instacart. I recognize my comment makes a huge stereotype about a nanny but I just wanna put it out there for you to consider That it may not be possible to do exclusive online grocery shopping.
this. I would not agree to 5 weeks of no stores. What if she needs tampons or deodorant last minute.... I would agree to two weeks max, five weeks is too much.Anonymous wrote:Why 5 weeks? Two is sufficient.
Anonymous wrote:You are definitely paying more per item using a delivery service, it's not just the actual fees and tip. If you can afford it, be super generous. If she shops at Aldis normally it's going to be a lot lot more. I totally understand why you don't want her to be in the stores and I don't think it's unreasonable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks, PPs. This was definitely our plan - to talk to her. We have a very good, open relationship. I was trying to gauge a number to throw out in the initial conversation. My guess is she’ll say yes to anything I suggest, but I can ask her to go home and do the math to see what works for her family. I also wanted to see how many people thought this was a good vs bad idea.
You mention she has a family. Would you also expect her family to stay home and refrain from in person stores and grocery shopping?
Without sharing her family details - all you need to know is this isn’t an issue. Will not impact her in any other way than shopping, which is the only time she goes out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks, PPs. This was definitely our plan - to talk to her. We have a very good, open relationship. I was trying to gauge a number to throw out in the initial conversation. My guess is she’ll say yes to anything I suggest, but I can ask her to go home and do the math to see what works for her family. I also wanted to see how many people thought this was a good vs bad idea.
You mention she has a family. Would you also expect her family to stay home and refrain from in person stores and grocery shopping?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks, PPs. This was definitely our plan - to talk to her. We have a very good, open relationship. I was trying to gauge a number to throw out in the initial conversation. My guess is she’ll say yes to anything I suggest, but I can ask her to go home and do the math to see what works for her family. I also wanted to see how many people thought this was a good vs bad idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not just include her purchases in your order, and then she can take them home on the days they are delivered to your house?
OP here, this feels more intrusive to me into her personal life and I doubt she’d agree to let me buy all her food. But sure, I could do this.
OP, I think your instincts are right on this one. I've worked as a housekeeper and it would be way too intimate to have my employer looking at all my items!
I would just have a conversation. "We would like you to do this, would $400 make it worth your while in terms of increased cost/inconvenience. Are there problems with this proposal that we haven't foreseen?"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not just include her purchases in your order, and then she can take them home on the days they are delivered to your house?
OP here, this feels more intrusive to me into her personal life and I doubt she’d agree to let me buy all her food. But sure, I could do this.