Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, talk to her.
I know a nanny who's been with the same family for over 12 years; both children are now in middle or high-school. She does the basic housekeeping and food prep and is then invited to lounge by the pool, watch tv, etc. Now, that isn't standard, but it is the reason she's stayed so long. She wants to nanny, not garden, so if they didn't need her to do household management she'd just switch to a family with younger kids. Your nanny might have something in mind she'd enjoy doing to help out but you'll have to ask her. Please don't try to compile a list of chores for her, sit down, have a discussion about your needs and her preferences, take some time reflect, then chat again to go over what you'd like her days to look like.
This is about your needs, not hers. Figure out what you need the person in her position to do now that your kids are getting older, write up a new job description, tell her you love her and would like her to stay if she is interested. If she's not, you've outgrown each other and it's time for you both to move on. But no, she doesn't get to select her duties. This is a job, not a country club.
Anonymous wrote:I have a fabulous nanny who has been with me for over 4 yrs. I still need her in the mornings to help my first grader get to to the bus stop and I need her in the evenings for bus stop pick up until I get home. My son is going from a 5 hr school day to nearly 8 hrs out of the house. I need the flexibility of my nanny for 1/2 days, sick care, school holidays, snow days etc... What do I do with her during the days? She already does laundry, light cleaning, can pick up dry cleaning, can do some grocery shopping. I need some more ideas.... Any experience with this would be helpful. Thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, talk to her.
I know a nanny who's been with the same family for over 12 years; both children are now in middle or high-school. She does the basic housekeeping and food prep and is then invited to lounge by the pool, watch tv, etc. Now, that isn't standard, but it is the reason she's stayed so long. She wants to nanny, not garden, so if they didn't need her to do household management she'd just switch to a family with younger kids. Your nanny might have something in mind she'd enjoy doing to help out but you'll have to ask her. Please don't try to compile a list of chores for her, sit down, have a discussion about your needs and her preferences, take some time reflect, then chat again to go over what you'd like her days to look like.
This is about your needs, not hers. Figure out what you need the person in her position to do now that your kids are getting older, write up a new job description, tell her you love her and would like her to stay if she is interested. If she's not, you've outgrown each other and it's time for you both to move on. But no, she doesn't get to select her duties. This is a job, not a country club.
Yes, this is a job but OP also wants the stability of her nanny for her children. She needs the nanny to do pick up and drop off as well as be available for holidays, vacation days as well as sick days at a moment's notice. This is a nanny job - and you cannot ask your nanny to wash your car or mow your lawn just because she has a few hours free.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, talk to her.
I know a nanny who's been with the same family for over 12 years; both children are now in middle or high-school. She does the basic housekeeping and food prep and is then invited to lounge by the pool, watch tv, etc. Now, that isn't standard, but it is the reason she's stayed so long. She wants to nanny, not garden, so if they didn't need her to do household management she'd just switch to a family with younger kids. Your nanny might have something in mind she'd enjoy doing to help out but you'll have to ask her. Please don't try to compile a list of chores for her, sit down, have a discussion about your needs and her preferences, take some time reflect, then chat again to go over what you'd like her days to look like.
This is about your needs, not hers. Figure out what you need the person in her position to do now that your kids are getting older, write up a new job description, tell her you love her and would like her to stay if she is interested. If she's not, you've outgrown each other and it's time for you both to move on. But no, she doesn't get to select her duties. This is a job, not a country club.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, talk to her.
I know a nanny who's been with the same family for over 12 years; both children are now in middle or high-school. She does the basic housekeeping and food prep and is then invited to lounge by the pool, watch tv, etc. Now, that isn't standard, but it is the reason she's stayed so long. She wants to nanny, not garden, so if they didn't need her to do household management she'd just switch to a family with younger kids. Your nanny might have something in mind she'd enjoy doing to help out but you'll have to ask her. Please don't try to compile a list of chores for her, sit down, have a discussion about your needs and her preferences, take some time reflect, then chat again to go over what you'd like her days to look like.
Anonymous wrote:Look up "household manager" positions on agency websites. You might ask her if she's interested in transitioning to that role, too, if those are tasks that would be useful for you.