Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow.
Looks like big changes have emerged as of late.
I would still hire a nanny who didn't carry the prestigious bells and whistles.
Maybe she is a superb nanny, just not able to afford a premium membership since she is unemployed.
Makes sense.
A superb nanny would have money sense and self control and have been saving up and not living paycheck to paycheck. Just a thought.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow.
Looks like big changes have emerged as of late.
I would still hire a nanny who didn't carry the prestigious bells and whistles.
Maybe she is a superb nanny, just not able to afford a premium membership since she is unemployed.
Makes sense.
A superb nanny would have money sense and self control and have been saving up and not living paycheck to paycheck. Just a thought.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So now care.com is trying to make money on both ends of the deal? They really need some damn competition.
They have plenty of competition. They're just testing the waters for increased revenue. Don't bite.
Not really. There's sittercity but they aren't nearly as popular. Care has pretty much cornered the low-mid range nanny industry for people who don't want or can't afford to work with an agency.
Care, craigslist and sittercity all list the same types of positions, sometimes identical postings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So now care.com is trying to make money on both ends of the deal? They really need some damn competition.
They have plenty of competition. They're just testing the waters for increased revenue. Don't bite.
Not really. There's sittercity but they aren't nearly as popular. Care has pretty much cornered the low-mid range nanny industry for people who don't want or can't afford to work with an agency.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So now care.com is trying to make money on both ends of the deal? They really need some damn competition.
They have plenty of competition. They're just testing the waters for increased revenue. Don't bite.
Anonymous wrote:So now care.com is trying to make money on both ends of the deal? They really need some damn competition.
Anonymous wrote:Wow.
Looks like big changes have emerged as of late.
I would still hire a nanny who didn't carry the prestigious bells and whistles.
Maybe she is a superb nanny, just not able to afford a premium membership since she is unemployed.
Makes sense.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure how it works on the nanny side, but I just put a job posting up on the employer side today and there was no mention of Premium vs non-Premium nannies. I can see whether a nanny is Premium when I do a search, but plenty of the candidates who responded to my job posting are non-Premium.