Anonymous wrote:nannies, stop giving your hours away. I am a mother with two children and I have a great nanny for almost 2 years now. She is like the second mother of my kids, and that's what nannies are supposed to be when their are in charge of our little ones. I appreciate her kindness, love and care and we all love her. I was going to paid her 25/hr, but then my husband and my mom told me that what she does for the family is priceless so we decide to pay her $30/hr with all federal holidays paid, etc....
I'm sorry but I don't believe you.
Yep, me either.
Me three. This post has nanny troll written all over it.
For a nanny to be worth more than $20/hr for two children, she would have to provide extra services. Cook, clean, bring something else to the table.
The fact is there are many wonderful nannies working for market rates and if you want to earn more, you need to bring more.
nannies, stop giving your hours away. I am a mother with two children and I have a great nanny for almost 2 years now. She is like the second mother of my kids, and that's what nannies are supposed to be when their are in charge of our little ones. I appreciate her kindness, love and care and we all love her. I was going to paid her 25/hr, but then my husband and my mom told me that what she does for the family is priceless so we decide to pay her $30/hr with all federal holidays paid, etc....
I'm sorry but I don't believe you.
Yep, me either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:nannies, stop giving your hours away. I am a mother with two children and I have a great nanny for almost 2 years now. She is like the second mother of my kids, and that's what nannies are supposed to be when their are in charge of our little ones. I appreciate her kindness, love and care and we all love her. I was going to paid her 25/hr, but then my husband and my mom told me that what she does for the family is priceless so we decide to pay her $30/hr with all federal holidays paid, etc....
I'm sorry but I don't believe you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:nannies, stop giving your hours away. I am a mother with two children and I have a great nanny for almost 2 years now. She is like the second mother of my kids, and that's what nannies are supposed to be when their are in charge of our little ones. I appreciate her kindness, love and care and we all love her. I was going to paid her 25/hr, but then my husband and my mom told me that what she does for the family is priceless so we decide to pay her $30/hr with all federal holidays paid, etc....
I'm sorry but I don't believe you.
Anonymous wrote:nannies, stop giving your hours away. I am a mother with two children and I have a great nanny for almost 2 years now. She is like the second mother of my kids, and that's what nannies are supposed to be when their are in charge of our little ones. I appreciate her kindness, love and care and we all love her. I was going to paid her 25/hr, but then my husband and my mom told me that what she does for the family is priceless so we decide to pay her $30/hr with all federal holidays paid, etc....
Anonymous wrote:You are not fooling anyone. I've never met a nanny making $30/hour. Nice try though!! Your lucky if you get $20/hour but even that's pushing it!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll bite: link to ONE example in the parents forum where a "MB" is claiming that's acceptable pay.
You searched already and found nothing?
You don't understand how this works. You make a claim, you back it up. You can't just run around saying whatever you feel like and its fact until someone proves you wrong. That's not how the world works. Another hint; nannies don't make $30/hour (unless they work very few hours, like 1 or 2). If you make that much, you're probably doing much more than nannying.
Which thread was it that had the FT nanny earning $52/hr? No one said, repeat: no one said that every nanny qualifies to be "high-earning". You have your average, you have your low-earning newbie nannies (or the warm-body type), and you have the relatively few (rightfully so) high-earning nannies. After all, if they "all" earned 25-30, they wouldn't be "high-earning", would now?
Some nannies DO earn 25-30/hr. Remember, at least one nanny earns $52/hr.? So please stop with your asinine stupidity that "nannies don't make 30/hr., unless they work 1 or 2 hours". The ONLY thing you DO know is what YOU may pay a nanny. And that may be HALF as much (or less) as what SOME other nannies are earning.
And yes, high-income earning nannies indeed do much more than what most of you commonly envision for a "nanny". It may even be that they don't actually "do" more, depending on your understanding "doing". For instance, the best nannies do NOT engage in "multitasking". Because these nannies are not expected to "keep busy", as you call it, they are well-informed AND understand the overwhelming research, that multitasking is definately not something to aspire to. (You may google the word.) So, in just that one example, the professional nanny may be "doing" less, in your eyes. However, if our most acclaimed researchers in this field, come to observe such a nanny, they would most certainly recognize her uncommon ability to teach her charges in a developmentally appropriate fashion. And no, she's not going to try to make a bright 2 or 3 year old child, read. She knows better.
Anonymous wrote:Unfortunately for nannies, there are few special skills parents want to pay extra for.
Anonymous wrote:Very few nannies make over $20/hr. They are not at all significant to area market rates. They only post here to brag or to lie to parents and make them think their rate is the average.
Ignore them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sure some do, but they are outliers. Full-time baby nurses are a province of truly wealthy people. They are a minority among nanny employers and it's a very small market. Among the middle-class nanny employers, baby nurses are brought in - if at all - for a few weeks very early on, and that's about it.
This kind of flexible schedule works wonders for some professional caregivers.
It is, but the thing is, baby nurses aren't really nannies. They are a kind of a quasi-medical group of people who help the mom get settled with the newborn baby and show her the basics of infant care. So sure, baby nurses are great for a few weeks. I just don't think of them as nannies. They are a different breed.
I know several baby nurses who also do nanny work, probably the same way you may know some "nannies" who will clean your house.
I'm sure they do, but I am also sure they don't do it at baby nurse rate.