Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hard truth?
A) you don't pay as well as you think
B) you're hard to work for
C) your kids are difficult to watch
One or all might be true.
+1
Anonymous wrote: I don't feel like it's fair to ask professional nannies to do afterschool work, because they need the hours of a fulltime job. What on earth do people do to find someone reliable for the after school hours??
Anonymous wrote:I am a 20-something nanny who doesn't have commitment issues. I have never called out of work and I make myself responsible for my charge. I am also in school getting degree. you make a hasty generalization that all young nannies are out to pull a fast one, when this is far from true. There are plenty of young nannies that love their job and are hard workers.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, and I can guarantee we do pay well. I see the salaries posted on here, and we are on the upper end.
Some more context on my anti millennial stance: nanny #1: applied to work for us full time, quit after three weeks citing emotional stress. Said we were terrific employers, and wept in my kitchen when she came to pick up her last paycheck about how much she loved our kids, but that she just couldn't hack working full time. Gets financial support from her mother while she studies part time to get a teaching degree.
After school sitter, works 18 hours per week for us and another family. Doesn't "need" the money, but likes the extra cash. Works for public schools, has a degree, committed for the school year, and then bailed. Lives at home with her parents.
I'm not at all opposed to hiring professional nannies, just respect that they are busy with full time jobs and aren't usually available for after school work, which leaves only the flakey 20 somethings, it seems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here, and I can guarantee we do pay well. I see the salaries posted on here, and we are on the upper end.
Some more context on my anti millennial stance: nanny #1: applied to work for us full time, quit after three weeks citing emotional stress. Said we were terrific employers, and wept in my kitchen when she came to pick up her last paycheck about how much she loved our kids, but that she just couldn't hack working full time. Gets financial support from her mother while she studies part time to get a teaching degree.
After school sitter, works 18 hours per week for us and another family. Doesn't "need" the money, but likes the extra cash. Works for public schools, has a degree, committed for the school year, and then bailed. Lives at home with her parents.
I'm not at all opposed to hiring professional nannies, just respect that they are busy with full time jobs and aren't usually available for after school work, which leaves only the flakey 20 somethings, it seems.
I think this is the biggest problem. You need to hire someone who needs the money, not someone who just likes extra cash.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, and I can guarantee we do pay well. I see the salaries posted on here, and we are on the upper end.
Some more context on my anti millennial stance: nanny #1: applied to work for us full time, quit after three weeks citing emotional stress. Said we were terrific employers, and wept in my kitchen when she came to pick up her last paycheck about how much she loved our kids, but that she just couldn't hack working full time. Gets financial support from her mother while she studies part time to get a teaching degree.
After school sitter, works 18 hours per week for us and another family. Doesn't "need" the money, but likes the extra cash. Works for public schools, has a degree, committed for the school year, and then bailed. Lives at home with her parents.
I'm not at all opposed to hiring professional nannies, just respect that they are busy with full time jobs and aren't usually available for after school work, which leaves only the flakey 20 somethings, it seems.
Anonymous wrote:Can you pool with another family or two with school aged kids, each family pays $40-50 a day for a professional nanny and she makes a living wage by working 3 hours a day reliably. I'd totally do something like like, caring for 6ish older kids, getting a snack, making sure homework is done etc. Might be worth considering, though I have no idea what you pay per day so maybe this would be more.