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How to Interview a Nanny Kendal

You've decided that you want a nanny to look after your most treasured possession - your child. But how do you make sure you get the best person possible for the job? Supernanny expert Amanda Coxen, who has a wealth of experience in this area, offers her tips.

Busy Bees Day Nursery
01539 814617
Kendal College
Kendal
Daisies Day Nursery
01539 739183 / 736343
Rannoch House
Kendal
Sunnybrow Day Nursery
01539 729437
Bankfield
Kendal
Playbase Nursery
01539 737472/07733 332443
Playbase Ltd
Kendal
Blossom Trees Nursery Ltd
01539 822400
Back Lane
Kendal
Meadow View Day Nursery
01539 722888
Appleby Road
Kendal
Brantfield Quality Care
01539 773626
Brantfield
Kendal
Playmates Day Nursery
01539 723340
East View
Kendal
Stramongate Nursery
07847 479420
Stamongate School
Kendal
Elleray Prep School
01539 443308
Windermere
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How to Interview a Nanny

By  Amanda Coxen Amanda Coxen, Tinies Supernanny Expert 04/03/2008

It is highly pertinent that my first piece for Supernanny is about interviewing nannies as this week that is exactly what I am doing. I have been recruiting childcarers for over seven years as part of my role at Tinies, and so I thought that when I was looking to hire a nanny myself, it would be a breeze. How wrong I was!

The interview process is so important and should involve many different stages.

Stage One - Filtering Out:

I believe you only need to see an average of five nannies to find the right one (although a friend of mine interviewed 45 nannies before she thought she had found the perfect one – and that one left after a week!). To get to your short list, then you should spend time filtering out candidates on the telephone so you see only the strongest contenders.

Stage Two - Interviewing:

It is an interview between you (and your partner) and the candidate. Keep the children out of the room – you can see how the candidates interact with your children as a later date. Get the candidate to relax – nannies can be very shy and won’t show you their best side if they are too nervous. Some parents I know advocate offering a glass of wine to the candidate, but that puts nannies in a quandary: if they say yes, does that mean they are a drinker, and if they say no are they being rude? Offering them a glass of water, and asking general questions is the best way to get them to relax.

The interview should have a structure:

• Tell the nanny about the position and about your children. Discuss what the role entails (hours, salary, start date, duties, routines, holidays etc)

• Ask the nanny to tell you why she went into childcare and then go through her CV in detail, asking her to describe each childcare position and any qualifications that she has taken. Also ask her why she left each job

• Run through a list of questions relating to the nanny’s abilities as a childcarer (what activities she would plan for your children? what books does she feel are appropriate for their age?); her views on discipline (how does she deal with a tantrum? how does she introduce good manners?); her cooking skills (what meals would she prepare for the children?); first aid questions (what would she do if your child was choking?) and questions relating to her own background.

• Ask the nanny if she has any questions.

Here are some of my top tips on conducting a successful interview:

1. Only ask questions that start with What, When, Why, How, Where or Tell me about – this avoids Yes and No answers.

2. As my husband keeps telling me – stop talking! It is so easy to fill in any gaps in conversation yourself but it is really best to see how they open up and let them do the majority of the speaking. I once conducted an interview that when it finished the nanny knew everything there is to know about me, my family, my extended family, my sore knees and even on how to unclog a washing machin...

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