Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you getting any good responses? A competitive rate and good ad will attract a range of nannies, from stellar to well below average. You just need one great one, but I think the only way to weed out the 90% of candidates who are just not even close us by hand.
Now, if you are getting no responses from possible candidates, I'd agree, look at your rate, duties, or consider broadening your search to other sites.
With your help, the new ad is getting that range, including some very promising candidates.
Anonymous wrote:Are you getting any good responses? A competitive rate and good ad will attract a range of nannies, from stellar to well below average. You just need one great one, but I think the only way to weed out the 90% of candidates who are just not even close us by hand.
Now, if you are getting no responses from possible candidates, I'd agree, look at your rate, duties, or consider broadening your search to other sites.
Anonymous wrote:Why can't you look after your own kid at night?? An older easy baby??
Anonymous wrote:As a nanny, I have a professional resume, cover letter that I edit for each application, lots of references, and a portfolio detailing my education, experience, and performance reviews. The vast majority of nannies are not professionals, do not have a resume, nor do they read enough English/have the reading comprehension to follow specific instructions. If you expect this (and of course you should!) you eliminate a lot of candidates. To attract the top candidates your ad needs to specify a rate (I completely ignore ads that don't include one, I don't appreciate taking the time to apply only to learn they intend to lowball me on the rate), and it needs to be competitive. Your ad should also be more than a list of demands and what YOU want, as there should be something that makes me want to apply, be it the pay, benefits, hours, etc. I am really turned off by ads with no mention of pay or benefits but have a list of expectations and instructions for me.
Anonymous wrote:I believe most night nannies, regardless of the age of the child, charge $20-25/hr? Those with more experience will weigh in, I'm sure.
Anonymous wrote:I'm sure I'll be flamed for this but here goes...
For whatever reason, but probably $$$, you aren't attracting the right candidates.
I have anything a potential employer could ask for ready to go at any moment - a blurb about my childcare experience, my professional resume, my nanny resume (including parent-authorized photos), my list of references, my history of vaccinations/negative TB tests/etc, background check, and driving report. I know several nannies who are equally well-prepared as well as many who are not; those in the first group charge as much as $5/hr more than those from the latter.