Anonymous wrote:I’m in silver spring and pay $19 on the books and generous vacation and bonuses. Lovely nanny, not fluent English but fluent in my native language which was important to us (not Spanish).
I interviewed 8 nannies and would have hired 3 of them. 2 has the native langueage and 1 was fluent in English only. Most wanted between 18-22 an hour and no one would work for $15 an hour.
How do you interview these nannies? I did 2 shadow days (paid) as well.
Silver spring has very robust and active moms groups and people are always posting for their nannies for Tate next job when their kid goes to preschool. That was one of my candidates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. This feedback is useful. A couple of responses:
1) I don't care too much about market rate. This goes beyond trying to save a few bucks, I'm trying to find good sustainable childcare for my son and at this point that doesn't have a price. For those quoting DC living prices, this is not in DC, this is in silver spring, MD. So the wage is in fact fair. But again, that's not the point. I would be willing to pay for the right care.
2) of course I'm an overprotective mom. It's my first baby! I'm also generous, flexible, kind, and respectful of my nannies. And I'm a city girl so outings don't scare me and on the contrary I encourage them. So I don't think that's the issue.
3) the real question for me and motivation in posting in the first place is: even if you are willing to pay $$$ for the right fit, where do you look? Posting online leads mostly to randos which is why we have been through 6 nannies. One had a criminal background. One was moody (I posted about this on this forum a while back), one didn't want to be paid on the books, one went back to her country, and one was telling me that her dead mother was calling her on the phone. I figured that was grounds to say let's not see each other again.
Where are the good nannies at? The warm nurturing women who speak English fluently (whether native or not), take initiative, love your baby, and are just overall reliable, professional, and trustworthy?
They are earning *at least* $20/hour working for someone else.
No, they're not. I have done 10 different nanny reference calls and many were making below $20/hour, especially if in the 40-55 hours/week full-time zone.
Now parttime, 4-5 hours for $100 was common.
Anonymous wrote:You are paying too low to find a good nanny, OP.
Try daycare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. This feedback is useful. A couple of responses:
1) I don't care too much about market rate. This goes beyond trying to save a few bucks, I'm trying to find good sustainable childcare for my son and at this point that doesn't have a price. For those quoting DC living prices, this is not in DC, this is in silver spring, MD. So the wage is in fact fair. But again, that's not the point. I would be willing to pay for the right care.
2) of course I'm an overprotective mom. It's my first baby! I'm also generous, flexible, kind, and respectful of my nannies. And I'm a city girl so outings don't scare me and on the contrary I encourage them. So I don't think that's the issue.
3) the real question for me and motivation in posting in the first place is: even if you are willing to pay $$$ for the right fit, where do you look? Posting online leads mostly to randos which is why we have been through 6 nannies. One had a criminal background. One was moody (I posted about this on this forum a while back), one didn't want to be paid on the books, one went back to her country, and one was telling me that her dead mother was calling her on the phone. I figured that was grounds to say let's not see each other again.
Where are the good nannies at? The warm nurturing women who speak English fluently (whether native or not), take initiative, love your baby, and are just overall reliable, professional, and trustworthy?
They are earning *at least* $20/hour working for someone else.
Anonymous wrote:OP. This feedback is useful. A couple of responses:
1) I don't care too much about market rate. This goes beyond trying to save a few bucks, I'm trying to find good sustainable childcare for my son and at this point that doesn't have a price. For those quoting DC living prices, this is not in DC, this is in silver spring, MD. So the wage is in fact fair. But again, that's not the point. I would be willing to pay for the right care.
2) of course I'm an overprotective mom. It's my first baby! I'm also generous, flexible, kind, and respectful of my nannies. And I'm a city girl so outings don't scare me and on the contrary I encourage them. So I don't think that's the issue.
3) the real question for me and motivation in posting in the first place is: even if you are willing to pay $$$ for the right fit, where do you look? Posting online leads mostly to randos which is why we have been through 6 nannies. One had a criminal background. One was moody (I posted about this on this forum a while back), one didn't want to be paid on the books, one went back to her country, and one was telling me that her dead mother was calling her on the phone. I figured that was grounds to say let's not see each other again.
Where are the good nannies at? The warm nurturing women who speak English fluently (whether native or not), take initiative, love your baby, and are just overall reliable, professional, and trustworthy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. This feedback is useful. A couple of responses:
1) I don't care too much about market rate. This goes beyond trying to save a few bucks, I'm trying to find good sustainable childcare for my son and at this point that doesn't have a price. For those quoting DC living prices, this is not in DC, this is in silver spring, MD. So the wage is in fact fair. But again, that's not the point. I would be willing to pay for the right care.
2) of course I'm an overprotective mom. It's my first baby! I'm also generous, flexible, kind, and respectful of my nannies. And I'm a city girl so outings don't scare me and on the contrary I encourage them. So I don't think that's the issue.
3) the real question for me and motivation in posting in the first place is: even if you are willing to pay $$$ for the right fit, where do you look? Posting online leads mostly to randos which is why we have been through 6 nannies. One had a criminal background. One was moody (I posted about this on this forum a while back), one didn't want to be paid on the books, one went back to her country, and one was telling me that her dead mother was calling her on the phone. I figured that was grounds to say let's not see each other again.
Where are the good nannies at? The warm nurturing women who speak English fluently (whether native or not), take initiative, love your baby, and are just overall reliable, professional, and trustworthy?
They are earning *at least* $20/hour working for someone else.
Yes sorry OP but this is part of the problem. Raise your rate and then look for nannies who have glowing recommendations, written as well as over the phone references, word of mouth from other nanny employers etc. Websites like Care.com, Urbansitter are more of a base to start with. It's a major PIA but you're going to have to do your due diligence. Once you hire someone spend a day or two with them and see how they drive, interact with your children, discuss childcare philosophies. Trust your gut there's a reason you have one.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. This feedback is useful. A couple of responses:
1) I don't care too much about market rate. This goes beyond trying to save a few bucks, I'm trying to find good sustainable childcare for my son and at this point that doesn't have a price. For those quoting DC living prices, this is not in DC, this is in silver spring, MD. So the wage is in fact fair. But again, that's not the point. I would be willing to pay for the right care.
2) of course I'm an overprotective mom. It's my first baby! I'm also generous, flexible, kind, and respectful of my nannies. And I'm a city girl so outings don't scare me and on the contrary I encourage them. So I don't think that's the issue.
3) the real question for me and motivation in posting in the first place is: even if you are willing to pay $$$ for the right fit, where do you look? Posting online leads mostly to randos which is why we have been through 6 nannies. One had a criminal background. One was moody (I posted about this on this forum a while back), one didn't want to be paid on the books, one went back to her country, and one was telling me that her dead mother was calling her on the phone. I figured that was grounds to say let's not see each other again.
Where are the good nannies at? The warm nurturing women who speak English fluently (whether native or not), take initiative, love your baby, and are just overall reliable, professional, and trustworthy?
A good, reliable, experienced nanny here with glowing references and based on your first bullet I wouldn’t work for you. You dismiss what every poster here is saying and claim money isn’t an issue but also claim $15 is fair. Sorry but it’s not a fair wage anywhere in Montgomery County or DC. You get what you pay for and you see what $15 is giving you. If you want someone “good” for $15 then you will probably have to look at paying under the table and someone who’s English might not be the best. Any truly good nanny isn’t going to settle for $15hr or for a mom who thinks they know it all.
I’ve found my positions on this site and care.com (where I have 5 star reviews).
Anonymous wrote:OP. This feedback is useful. A couple of responses:
1) I don't care too much about market rate. This goes beyond trying to save a few bucks, I'm trying to find good sustainable childcare for my son and at this point that doesn't have a price. For those quoting DC living prices, this is not in DC, this is in silver spring, MD. So the wage is in fact fair. But again, that's not the point. I would be willing to pay for the right care.
2) of course I'm an overprotective mom. It's my first baby! I'm also generous, flexible, kind, and respectful of my nannies. And I'm a city girl so outings don't scare me and on the contrary I encourage them. So I don't think that's the issue.
3) the real question for me and motivation in posting in the first place is: even if you are willing to pay $$$ for the right fit, where do you look? Posting online leads mostly to randos which is why we have been through 6 nannies. One had a criminal background. One was moody (I posted about this on this forum a while back), one didn't want to be paid on the books, one went back to her country, and one was telling me that her dead mother was calling her on the phone. I figured that was grounds to say let's not see each other again.
Where are the good nannies at? The warm nurturing women who speak English fluently (whether native or not), take initiative, love your baby, and are just overall reliable, professional, and trustworthy?
Anonymous wrote:OP. This feedback is useful. A couple of responses:
1) I don't care too much about market rate. This goes beyond trying to save a few bucks, I'm trying to find good sustainable childcare for my son and at this point that doesn't have a price. For those quoting DC living prices, this is not in DC, this is in silver spring, MD. So the wage is in fact fair. But again, that's not the point. I would be willing to pay for the right care.
2) of course I'm an overprotective mom. It's my first baby! I'm also generous, flexible, kind, and respectful of my nannies. And I'm a city girl so outings don't scare me and on the contrary I encourage them. So I don't think that's the issue.
3) the real question for me and motivation in posting in the first place is: even if you are willing to pay $$$ for the right fit, where do you look? Posting online leads mostly to randos which is why we have been through 6 nannies. One had a criminal background. One was moody (I posted about this on this forum a while back), one didn't want to be paid on the books, one went back to her country, and one was telling me that her dead mother was calling her on the phone. I figured that was grounds to say let's not see each other again.
Where are the good nannies at? The warm nurturing women who speak English fluently (whether native or not), take initiative, love your baby, and are just overall reliable, professional, and trustworthy?