Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like the other nannies who've posted I have more offers for babysitting jobs than I can take. I nanny 50 hours a week so I'm not interested in going out of my way in the evenings or during my weekends for an unpaid trial (and all of my jobs are from referral anyway). I would come a little early on the night of for a run through, though. I'm confident in my abilities to feed, bathe, read stories, and put to bed any children I care for so don't think it's a matter of their "welfare" at all.
That's great. I'm not confident in your reading abilities though. It has been stated many times that this is a paid trial.
How rude are you? Several people have posted saying they're willing to come by for unpaid time; I was merely indicating I am not. Like most, I have a 4-hour minimum so I guess if you want a paid, four hour trial then sure! Otherwise I'll work for the people who don't want me to jump through hoops.
You all like to talk about the market and demand and so on - they are tilted in our favor for evening babysitting jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like the other nannies who've posted I have more offers for babysitting jobs than I can take. I nanny 50 hours a week so I'm not interested in going out of my way in the evenings or during my weekends for an unpaid trial (and all of my jobs are from referral anyway). I would come a little early on the night of for a run through, though. I'm confident in my abilities to feed, bathe, read stories, and put to bed any children I care for so don't think it's a matter of their "welfare" at all.
That's great. I'm not confident in your reading abilities though. It has been stated many times that this is a paid trial.
Anonymous wrote:Basically this. I'm happy to have a lengthy phone conversation, provide a reference or two, and come over as early as you want. Maybe if I live nearby I'll stop by for a half hour meet-and-greet but that's it. Anything else is excessive for a job that consists of serving dinner and putting kids to bed.
Anonymous wrote:What I find interesting is that the nannies can not seem to give any helpful advice specifically related to what would be best for the kids. Immediately the responses go to "what are you paying?!" Or "that's hardly worth MY time!"
If you would choose not to take a job that requires spending some (paid) time with the kids and parents first, that is absolutely your right not to. But there are people who are happy to do it. The question was not would YOU be willing to do zyz, it was what is the best way of going about this? It's really disturbing how little regard some nannies here have for the children's welfare. This sort of attitude makes me even more weary of who I will trust with my kids
The nannies here don't care about anything other than the money. They also seem to think they can command whatever rate they want. Whatever. Everyone who lives in the real world knows better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a professional nanny who babysits during the evening several times per week. If a new client were to ask me to come over to play with the kids for 1-2 hours on a random night, I wouldn't babysit for her. I would absolutely view you as annoying and high-maintenance.
Good babysitters usually don't need new clients. I wouldn't be willing to jump through your hoops.
That's ridiculous. We're talking about a paid job. Are you intimidated by parents who care who they leave their children alone with? What are you trying to hide?
Anonymous wrote:Like the other nannies who've posted I have more offers for babysitting jobs than I can take. I nanny 50 hours a week so I'm not interested in going out of my way in the evenings or during my weekends for an unpaid trial (and all of my jobs are from referral anyway). I would come a little early on the night of for a run through, though. I'm confident in my abilities to feed, bathe, read stories, and put to bed any children I care for so don't think it's a matter of their "welfare" at all.
Anonymous wrote:What I find interesting is that the nannies can not seem to give any helpful advice specifically related to what would be best for the kids. Immediately the responses go to "what are you paying?!" Or "that's hardly worth MY time!"
If you would choose not to take a job that requires spending some (paid) time with the kids and parents first, that is absolutely your right not to. But there are people who are happy to do it. The question was not would YOU be willing to do zyz, it was what is the best way of going about this? It's really disturbing how little regard some nannies here have for the children's welfare. This sort of attitude makes me even more weary of who I will trust with my kids
The nannies here don't care about anything other than the money. They also seem to think they can command whatever rate they want. Whatever. Everyone who lives in the real world knows better.