The phrase “on call 24/7” appears in private service position descriptions with enough regularity that it’s started to read like wallpaper – a standard condition of employment at a certain level of household staffing that candidates are expected to accept without much examination of what it actually means. Families who write it into job descriptions are usually not thinking carefully about what they’re asking for. They’re expressing a desire for a certain kind of availability – the reassurance that if something comes up, the person responsible for their household is reachable and responsive. That’s a reasonable thing to want.
What they’re less often thinking about is what it’s like to be the person on the other end of that expectation for weeks, months, and years at a stretch. What it costs in terms of personal life, sleep, the ability to be genuinely present in any context outside work, and the kind of low-level chronic vigilance that comes with knowing that your phone represents a professional obligation that doesn’t have predictable hours. These are questions that matter both because they affect the wellbeing of the people doing the work and because they directly affect the quality and longevity of the placement the family is investing in.
What On-Call Actually Looks Like in Practice
The way on-call availability plays out in practice varies enormously by household and principal. In some households, “always available” means the estate manager rarely gets a call outside normal hours – the principal respects the personal time of their staff, understands the difference between genuine emergencies and things that can wait until morning, and exercises discretion about when to reach out. Staff in these households describe on-call availability as a background condition that rarely activates, and they find it professionally manageable.
In other households, “always available” means exactly that. The principal texts at ten at night about a dinner party detail. The call comes at seven on Sunday because something needs to be coordinated before the week starts. The staff member’s personal vacation is interrupted because a household matter has come up that feels urgent to the principal regardless of whether it’s actually time-sensitive. The availability that was described as a baseline condition has become the dominant feature of the employment relationship.
Most households fall somewhere between these two extremes, and the specific culture around availability is one of the most important things a prospective household staff member can learn about a position before accepting it. Asking about it directly – how often does the principal typically contact staff outside normal hours, what kinds of situations generate those contacts, what the expectation is around response time – is legitimate due diligence that experienced candidates do as a matter of course.
The Sleep Problem
The dimension of constant availability that gets talked about least honestly is what it does to sleep. An estate manager or house manager who is genuinely reachable at any hour keeps her phone on at night. Keeping a phone on at night means any vibration, any sound, any notification carries the possibility of something requiring a response. Even when the phone doesn’t produce anything overnight, the knowledge that it could is enough to change the quality of sleep in ways that compound across months and years.
Sleep deprivation is not a minor professional hazard. It affects judgment, emotional regulation, the ability to manage complex situations calmly, the creativity that good problem-solving in household management requires. A household staff member who is chronically underslept because the availability expectation precludes genuine rest is not delivering the quality of work the family thinks they’re getting, even when the outputs look the same. And the long-term toll of that kind of sustained vigilance produces burnout in ways that are bad for the placement and worse for the person.
The best principals understand this and structure their availability expectations accordingly. They have clear protocols about what constitutes a genuine overnight emergency versus what can wait. They use defined channels for urgent versus non-urgent communication so that their staff know which notifications require immediate attention and which don’t. They respect the difference between being available and being continuously on duty, and they build that respect into how they actually behave rather than just expressing it as a stated policy.
What Compensation Should Reflect
Genuine around-the-clock availability is a premium professional condition, not a standard benefit of private service employment. Positions that actually require it – that involve principals with legitimate round-the-clock needs, complex multi-property operations where overnight issues genuinely arise regularly, or household situations where the staff member is the single point of contact for everything – should compensate for that demand explicitly.
What “compensate for it explicitly” means varies by role and scope, but the principle is consistent: if the job regularly intrudes on time outside agreed working hours in ways that affect the staff member’s ability to maintain a personal life, that intrusion has a value and it should be reflected in the compensation structure. On-call arrangements, overtime provisions, structured rest periods that are actually honored, relief coverage for extended absences – these are the mechanisms that professional households use to make genuine availability sustainable rather than extractive.
At Seaside Staffing Company, we discuss availability expectations specifically with every client before a search begins, because the difference between a position that’s described as on-call and one that’s genuinely demanding around-the-clock availability changes who the right candidate is, what the appropriate compensation looks like, and how realistic the long-term success of the placement will be. Positions that ask for constant availability without accounting for it tend to produce strong candidates who leave before the family has gotten the return on their investment. Getting this right at the start is significantly cheaper than learning it on the back end.