Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I negotiate for a weekly salary, and any hours beyond what we contract are paid at OT rates. There is always a breakdown in the contract for what the base and OT rate is, but the contract explicitly states that I am paid $X every week that I work, am available to work but the family is away and weeks that I take vacation/PTO. I've never had a single employer quibble about my rates because I ask what my competition wants during the final discussion, and I make sure that I'm the most qualified and then lower the rate for the second-most qualified by $0.25-0.50/hour.
Would you share your hourly rate? Do you ask for annual raises?
Anonymous wrote:I negotiate for a weekly salary, and any hours beyond what we contract are paid at OT rates. There is always a breakdown in the contract for what the base and OT rate is, but the contract explicitly states that I am paid $X every week that I work, am available to work but the family is away and weeks that I take vacation/PTO. I've never had a single employer quibble about my rates because I ask what my competition wants during the final discussion, and I make sure that I'm the most qualified and then lower the rate for the second-most qualified by $0.25-0.50/hour.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only nannies would think they deserve to be paid overtime for time they don't work, especially on vacation!
Can someone explain the rationale for this, beyond simple entitlement?
P.s. we all have bills, we all need a certain guarantee in income, before that excuse is thrown out.
OP here. I am looking at this from an annual salary stance. If they want to rightfully pay me less for several weeks out of the year, I would raise my hourly rate to accomodated the loss. Or they could find someone cheaper, that is always an option. I agree with you that OT shouldn't be paid, but again, I have to look at my annual salary.
Anonymous wrote:Only nannies would think they deserve to be paid overtime for time they don't work, especially on vacation!
Can someone explain the rationale for this, beyond simple entitlement?
P.s. we all have bills, we all need a certain guarantee in income, before that excuse is thrown out.
Anonymous wrote:Only nannies would think they deserve to be paid overtime for time they don't work, especially on vacation!
Can someone explain the rationale for this, beyond simple entitlement?
P.s. we all have bills, we all need a certain guarantee in income, before that excuse is thrown out.
Anonymous wrote:Guarantee the wage in your contract, not the hours, but phrase it like this: nanny is guaranteed $xxx per week (40hrsx$ + 5hrsx1.5x) for M-F, 8-5 (or whatever your regular hours are). Any additional hours outside of this time will be paid at the overtime rate of 1.5x.
This says you still receive ot in a week with a day off.
Anonymous wrote:dont go the overtime route. just negotiate a weekly salary that you are happy with and agree on your 50 hours you will work. this way you will get your normal salary every week, no arguing about overtime, just a flat salary.