Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My salary doesn't have a cap so I cannot imagine imposing one on our nanny. Nanny is at $27 an hour now. This year, in lieu of a raise, we covered her health insurance.
OP: I like the idea of offering other benefits too.
Some positions do have salary caps -- like some government jobs, there are ranges and levels.
I guess my question was more -- does everyone end up paying $35/$40/$40/hr by the end? And then, when nanny gets another job, does she charge that or start over (as a career nanny, if you start at $30/hr -- do you then expect raises every year?)
As to your bolded question, it just depends on what they can get. In our market, $15 after tax is a standard starting rate. When I interviewed nannies, a lot of them were making more than this because they had been with their family for a while and had gotten raises, but were willing to accept $15/hr at a new job with the expectation that they would get yearly raises. I also interviewed one nanny who had a lot of families interested in her and she flat out told me that she would not accept a pay cut from her current rate.
[b]Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I started at $30/hr and have never gotten a raise and I've been there for years.
And you were smart.
Our nanny has ended up earning less money in total because she were so focused on bonuses and raises that I had to start her lower to be able to add on. If she hadn't made it clear out of the gate that she expected a raise every year, she'd have been making her current rate for the past three years!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My salary doesn't have a cap so I cannot imagine imposing one on our nanny. Nanny is at $27 an hour now. This year, in lieu of a raise, we covered her health insurance.
OP: I like the idea of offering other benefits too.
Some positions do have salary caps -- like some government jobs, there are ranges and levels.
I guess my question was more -- does everyone end up paying $35/$40/$40/hr by the end? And then, when nanny gets another job, does she charge that or start over (as a career nanny, if you start at $30/hr -- do you then expect raises every year?)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My salary doesn't have a cap so I cannot imagine imposing one on our nanny. Nanny is at $27 an hour now. This year, in lieu of a raise, we covered her health insurance.
OP: I like the idea of offering other benefits too.
Some positions do have salary caps -- like some government jobs, there are ranges and levels.
I guess my question was more -- does everyone end up paying $35/$40/$40/hr by the end? And then, when nanny gets another job, does she charge that or start over (as a career nanny, if you start at $30/hr -- do you then expect raises every year?)
Anonymous wrote:My salary doesn't have a cap so I cannot imagine imposing one on our nanny. Nanny is at $27 an hour now. This year, in lieu of a raise, we covered her health insurance.
Anonymous wrote:I know the standard raise is $1/year then $1-2 for an additional child (if say you have one now then have another baby).
But, does it ever end? Otherwise let's say....
Year 1 - $17/hr ($20 including taxes)
Year 2 - $18/hr ($21 including taxes)
Year 3 - $20/hr ($23 including taxes) -- add one child +$2
Year 4 - $21/hr ($24 including taxes)
Year 5 - $22/hr ($25 including taxes)
Year 6 - $23/hr ($26 including taxes)
Year 7 - $24/hr ($27 including taxes)
Year 8 - $25/hr ($28 including taxes)
I mean, should it stop at a certain point? I imagine that if I'm paying my nanny $25/hr by the end, then she will either have to charge that with a new family, or start again at the bottom? Then, with a new family if she does charge the higher end, then how do you go up from there? Is she then making $30-$40/hr?
When older child goes to kindergarten, are you still then paying the higher rate even though now she's back to mainly one full-time? (I do pay for the couple days a week one of both are in preschool)
Just wondering what others do, or if after say $25/hr do you stop giving an annual $1/hour raise?
Anonymous wrote:I started at $30/hr and have never gotten a raise and I've been there for years.