Anonymous wrote: This is why nannies as a group are so underpaid. Who cares if your employer doesn't gosh about you being the most incredible thing that ever happened to their family? Do they pay you well? Do they treat you with respect? Do they provide good working conditions? They support you and give you the things that you need to do your job well? Do they provide benefits you need to live your life well outside of work?
If they are doing all of that, and they are doing their job as employers and you can decide to quit because you got a better offer or you can decide to stay because this is the best job you can get in terms of benefits pay and working conditions. But quitting a job that you claim to have loved until yesterday because your boss hurt your feelings is a flat out stupid decision. Either you already didn't like this job and we're staying for emotional reasons, which is a bad business decision, or this is a great job and you are quitting for emotional reasons, which is a bad business decision. Quit because you got a better offer, not because somebody made you sad.
Jesus. Thank you! Former nanny here...again we see the paradoxical DCUM Nanny argument that one wants to be treated like a professional but they get butt hurt and quit the second they are not the most cherished person in their employer's life. Guess what, you do a JOB, regardless of what it is. There are plenty of occupations that are just as meaningful, intimate, and (frankly more) important than nannying. You aren't a special group deserving of a place in the family photo album AND bonuss marking every birthday, holiday, and "nannyversary". If you want to be treated as professionals, as a group, grow the F up and act like one. Until that happens, it will continue to be a profession that is looked down upon as a whole and you will continue to be under-appreciated and under-compensated.