Anonymous wrote:I'm going to take a gander that many families who hire care, especially in an area like this, make quite a bit more than the person they're hiring. $80+ loss to the babysitter will be a bigger impact than for the parent. "Money hungry" is laughable.
Anonymous wrote:My 17 year old daughter is a sought-after babysitter and is working hard to save money for college in September. She will easily get three requests to babysit on the weekends. It’s infuriating how many parents will cancel the day of her scheduled jobs with no thought or compensation. She turned Dow other jobs to accept the cancellers. It’s truly unfair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 17 year old daughter is a sought-after babysitter and is working hard to save money for college in September. She will easily get three requests to babysit on the weekends. It’s infuriating how many parents will cancel the day of her scheduled jobs with no thought or compensation. She turned Dow other jobs to accept the cancellers. It’s truly unfair.
Neighbors never seem to realize that teen babysitters have mothers too. And judgements about how unfair and cheap some younger parents are.
+1.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 17 year old daughter is a sought-after babysitter and is working hard to save money for college in September. She will easily get three requests to babysit on the weekends. It’s infuriating how many parents will cancel the day of her scheduled jobs with no thought or compensation. She turned Dow other jobs to accept the cancellers. It’s truly unfair.
Neighbors never seem to realize that teen babysitters have mothers too. And judgements about how unfair and cheap some younger parents are.
Anonymous wrote:My 17 year old daughter is a sought-after babysitter and is working hard to save money for college in September. She will easily get three requests to babysit on the weekends. It’s infuriating how many parents will cancel the day of her scheduled jobs with no thought or compensation. She turned Dow other jobs to accept the cancellers. It’s truly unfair.
Anonymous wrote:My 17 year old daughter is a sought-after babysitter and is working hard to save money for college in September. She will easily get three requests to babysit on the weekends. It’s infuriating how many parents will cancel the day of her scheduled jobs with no thought or compensation. She turned Dow other jobs to accept the cancellers. It’s truly unfair.
Anonymous wrote:My 17 year old daughter is a sought-after babysitter and is working hard to save money for college in September. She will easily get three requests to babysit on the weekends. It’s infuriating how many parents will cancel the day of her scheduled jobs with no thought or compensation. She turned Dow other jobs to accept the cancellers. It’s truly unfair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. But I might be ok with this for my best sitter, who is truly exceptional. When I cancel with sitters I tend to book a rain check day - "let's do next week instead," etc.
So what? Your sitter still missed income for the day you canceled.
Y’all suck. If I cancel on anyone providing a service for me at a point where they can’t fill that time slot, I pay 100%. Based on folk’s reactions, I am clearly in the minority.
Does this include your Dr?
If I cancel a Dr's appointment after their STATED cancellation period, yes, I pay the stated fee they may charge.
Which is what? $20? Way less than your Dr would bill for should you have shown up. I guarantee you are not billed for the full appointment cost.
While your Dr may not be an hourly employee, they are likely compensated based on their productivity.
I said I pay the stated fee. Which is NEVER $20, btw. And please spare me the sob story for a doctor, vs. the woman who is a small business owner who paints my nails.
There ARE doctors whose stated cancelation fee is the entire appointment charge, FYI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. But I might be ok with this for my best sitter, who is truly exceptional. When I cancel with sitters I tend to book a rain check day - "let's do next week instead," etc.
So what? Your sitter still missed income for the day you canceled.
Y’all suck. If I cancel on anyone providing a service for me at a point where they can’t fill that time slot, I pay 100%. Based on folk’s reactions, I am clearly in the minority.
Does this include your Dr?
If I cancel a Dr's appointment after their STATED cancellation period, yes, I pay the stated fee they may charge.
Which is what? $20? Way less than your Dr would bill for should you have shown up. I guarantee you are not billed for the full appointment cost.
While your Dr may not be an hourly employee, they are likely compensated based on their productivity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What I see here is again, the frustrating notation that caring for other peoples children is not true work, and certainly not work that demands a professional relationship and professional courtesies.
She sounds like he’s smart, and running her business in such a way to weed out clients who don’t take her time or efforts seriously. I would fully support someone like this, because she is also likely to give good care as to not jeopardize that business or reputation.
This. I used to do babysitting as an adult. I treated it like a part-time jon and took it as seriously as my full time job. To my families, I was worth my weight in gold.
If you want to use high schoolers, you can treat them however and they’ll probably just deal. But I was in high demand and could be picky because of that. I never wanted for jobs with great families who treated me with respect.
Ok. And if you end up sick the day before your colonoscopy, please remit $1500 to your Dr for his unfilled endoscopy room time. Otherwise you are cheap and don’t respect his time
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. But I might be ok with this for my best sitter, who is truly exceptional. When I cancel with sitters I tend to book a rain check day - "let's do next week instead," etc.
So what? Your sitter still missed income for the day you canceled.
Y’all suck. If I cancel on anyone providing a service for me at a point where they can’t fill that time slot, I pay 100%. Based on folk’s reactions, I am clearly in the minority.
Does this include your Dr?
If I cancel a Dr's appointment after their STATED cancellation period, yes, I pay the stated fee they may charge.
Which is what? $20? Way less than your Dr would bill for should you have shown up. I guarantee you are not billed for the full appointment cost.
While your Dr may not be an hourly employee, they are likely compensated based on their productivity.
Doctors and babysitters are apples and oranges. Babysitters are not bringing home half a million dollars a year.