Anonymous wrote:
I ended up giving her a heartfelt card, gift (set of knives she admired that I had bought for myself) and a cash bonus. She seemed happy and appreciative.
What else could a well mannered person have done? She is probably looking for a new job, I hope so. Maybe you should save up enough money to have your tubes tied.
Look. Another constructive and helpful response from a nasty nanny.
The ridiculous behavior of one a**hole is not representative of the character of an entire group of people.
Please stop with the "oh look, it's just one more horrible nanny."
Anonymous wrote:I ended up giving her a heartfelt card, gift (set of knives she admired that I had bought for myself) and a cash bonus. She seemed happy and appreciative.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I ended up giving her a heartfelt card, gift (set of knives she admired that I had bought for myself) and a cash bonus. She seemed happy and appreciative.
What else could a well mannered person have done? She is probably looking for a new job, I hope so. Maybe you should save up enough money to have your tubes tied.
Look. Another constructive and helpful response from a nasty nanny.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I ended up giving her a heartfelt card, gift (set of knives she admired that I had bought for myself) and a cash bonus. She seemed happy and appreciative.
What else could a well mannered person have done? She is probably looking for a new job, I hope so. Maybe you should save up enough money to have your tubes tied.
Look. Another constructive and helpful response from a nasty nanny.![]()
Anonymous wrote:
I ended up giving her a heartfelt card, gift (set of knives she admired that I had bought for myself) and a cash bonus. She seemed happy and appreciative.
What else could a well mannered person have done? She is probably looking for a new job, I hope so. Maybe you should save up enough money to have your tubes tied.
Anonymous wrote:I ended up giving her a heartfelt card, gift (set of knives she admired that I had bought for myself) and a cash bonus. She seemed happy and appreciative.
Anonymous wrote:I expect to have her for 2 more years, until #4 is old enough to go to preschool. I should be able to give her at least one raise next year. She is welcome to look for another job, but in this area, most shares pay about the same rate, so its not like she would start out any higher. She just might have longer hours.
Anonymous wrote:
You cannot afford a nanny or a 2nd child
Well, our 2nd child is actually our 4th child and our nanny is very happy with us. I am sure she'd appreciate a raise but we gave her the salary she requested, so we can afford her. I'd just like to show her how amazing I think she is.
Geez....sew it up already! 4 kids?!
Anonymous wrote:Ignore the nasty nannies on this forum, OP. Sadly, they are bullies that rule the roost and you can't trust anything they say. They are truly awful.
Raises are earned, and you should schedule your nanny for a performance review every year and have her detail her successes and you detail the goals. If you feel her successes have earned her a raise, you should offer her a raise of 3-5%. This is typical in the professional world. Yes, you can offer more, but only offer what you can afford. Most workers in most industries have not seen a raise in years. If she walks, she walks. She likely won't because for all their complaining, nannies know it's a saturated market and you can find a new nanny easier than they can find a new job.
All that said, if she is deserving of a raise and you can't afford one, you can offer a good bonus or some extra perks (PTO and or health insurance).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You cannot afford a nanny or a 2nd child
Well, our 2nd child is actually our 4th child and our nanny is very happy with us. I am sure she'd appreciate a raise but we gave her the salary she requested, so we can afford her. I'd just like to show her how amazing I think she is.