Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only problem is that it's less than full time.
OP here. We are worried about that and are considering pay for 40 hours/week or $25/hour.
Anonymous wrote:When you advertise, just list the range of hours you are open to as some candidates would love Fridays off and others want full time work. I would also try to increase rate slightly, although the extra weeks of vacation might be a perk for some nannies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only problem is that it's less than full time.
OP here. We are worried about that and are considering pay for 40 hours/week or $25/hour.
Anonymous wrote:The only problem is that it's less than full time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Decent. $23/hour for 45 hours works out to $56810 yearly. As long as you built in room for yearly raises and are clear on boundaries (including tardiness on both sides), you should be fine.
The position is only 36 hours a week, not 45. Monday through Thursday, not Mon-Fri.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s okay but drop the “light housekeeping”. The nanny should do any and all chores related to the child (child’s laundry, cleaning toys, child’s food preparation and bottle washing, keeping play area and child’s room tidy, child’s Linen and towels) No cleaning up after parents at all.
Plus the term “light housekeeping” hasn’t been so abused that it will scare a lot of good nannies away.
OP here. I will but we only expect the nanny to handle things for the baby. We have a housekeeper and do not expect her to do anything for us. We want the main focus to be our our baby.
Anonymous wrote:Decent. $23/hour for 45 hours works out to $56810 yearly. As long as you built in room for yearly raises and are clear on boundaries (including tardiness on both sides), you should be fine.
Anonymous wrote:It’s okay but drop the “light housekeeping”. The nanny should do any and all chores related to the child (child’s laundry, cleaning toys, child’s food preparation and bottle washing, keeping play area and child’s room tidy, child’s Linen and towels) No cleaning up after parents at all.
Plus the term “light housekeeping” hasn’t been so abused that it will scare a lot of good nannies away.