How does the pay scale work in your field? Please help us understand this. |
|
Don't you think they're paying her the "best" they can manage? |
It's like any other field - the employer who offers the best salary and compensation package get the most experienced, talented and educated employee. "Best" is a value judgement. You may not need (or be able to afford) a nanny who has a masters in early childhood education, can speak and teach French, can play and teach the piano, and has years of experience as a nanny and a teacher with excellent references but that doesn't mean you can't find a high school graduate who is vigilante about safety and loves your children. |
8:02 here. I agree. To each his own. If all you need is The Babysitters Club, there's NO sense in paying for Mary Poppins! |
This. Well said. |
Exactly. Why pay for things you don't want? |
+1 |
Again, 11:47, please explain how the payscale works in your field. Does everyone earn the same money, regardless of skills, experience, education and accomplishments?
Fess up now... |
NP here. Your question is irrelevant, 11:55. Each nanny job is different. There is no one pay scale rate for the nanny field because there are no accepted measurable standards for excellence in the field. There is no licensing, no standards of education, no concrete set of skills that are guaranteed to be able command a particular salary. Further, nanny rates are affected by location, number of children, and other factors that may not be directly related to a particular nanny's qualifications. Also, as has been pointed out here before, nannying has a low barrier for entry, which means there are plenty of candidates with a wide variety of experiences in the marketplace.
You don't need a college education to be a nanny, although there are families who may pay more for a nanny with a BA. Experience is often worth more, but there is a ceiling to that, depending on individual career paths. And accomplishments are difficult to measure. How one family may perceive your accomplishments is likely different than how another family might perceive them. Comparing the nanny field to any other field ignores the complexity of the nanny job and the hiring challenges inherent in the field. You also sound a little weird and not very reflective with your constant badgering about money. |
What badgering? Mad about $35/hr nannies? |
Notice the silence.... |
It's not who gets the best nannies, it's who KEEPS the best nannies.
Yes, good wages and benefits help, but families who lack respect, empathy, and the ability to manage their nanny well will never KEEP the best nannies beyond a year unless the pay is so mind-bogglingly phenomenal that a nanny is willing to be the family dogsbody. Any fool can offer the most money and find a good nanny. Not everyone can then follow through and make that nanny determined to stay at their job. |
11:47 was a lying fraud. Shame on her. |
|