The executive/personal assistant role is one of the more common crossover hires in private household staffing – candidates with strong corporate EA backgrounds who are drawn to the personal nature of household work, the variety of the role, the compensation that high-end private household positions can offer. On paper, the overlap looks significant: both roles require exceptional organizational skills, discretion, the ability to manage complex schedules, and comfort working in close proximity to demanding principals. The transition, many candidates assume, should be relatively smooth.
It usually isn’t, and the candidates who struggle most are often the ones who assumed it would be. The corporate EA competencies are real and they transfer – but they transfer into an environment that operates on different rules, different rhythms, and different relational dynamics than corporate life, and understanding those differences before making the transition is what separates candidates who adapt quickly from ones who spend the first year surprised by what they didn’t know to expect.
What the Scope Actually Covers
In corporate EA work, the role is defined by the organizational structure around it. There are other departments, other resources, other professionals handling the functions that aren’t the EA’s responsibility. The EA manages her principal’s time, communications, travel, and priorities, and when something falls outside that domain, legal, finance, facilities, HR, there’s someone else in the organization whose job it is.
Private household EA work has no such adjacent structure. The household EA supporting a high-net-worth principal at home is often the single point of operational contact for a range of functions that would be distributed across multiple departments in a corporate setting. She may be managing personal finances alongside the principal’s calendar. She may be coordinating directly with the estate manager, the private chef, the household vendors, and the principal’s professional contacts simultaneously. She may be handling the personal correspondence that reflects the principal’s relationships, values, and social obligations in ways that require genuine judgment rather than template execution.
The scope isn’t just broader – it’s structurally different. The corporate EA knows where the edges of her role are because the organization draws them. The household EA is often working in an environment where the edges aren’t drawn and where her value is partly defined by her judgment about where they should be.
The Relational Dimension
Corporate EA relationships are professional and often warm, but they operate within an organizational context that provides structure and distance. There are performance review processes, HR protocols, established norms about professional conduct that both parties implicitly understand and that provide a framework for the relationship even when it isn’t referenced directly.
Household EA relationships are more personal by nature, and more exposed. The EA who works in someone’s home sees the family in ways that corporate colleagues typically don’t – the morning before the principal is fully composed, the moments of domestic stress, the personal relationships and family dynamics that are invisible in a corporate context. Maintaining professional boundaries inside that kind of proximity requires a particular kind of emotional intelligence that isn’t a standard feature of corporate EA training.
The expectations around availability and personal investment also tend to be higher in household roles. The principal who employs a household EA has made that person part of the operational fabric of her life in a way that differs from an employment relationship with organizational structure around it. What that means practically – in terms of hours, availability expectations, and the degree of personal investment the role implicitly asks for – is something candidates coming from corporate contexts are often not fully prepared for.
The Discretion Standard
Discretion is a requirement in corporate EA work, and excellent corporate EAs are genuinely discreet. But the discretion required in private household EA work is a different order of requirement. The EA who supports a high-net-worth principal in their personal life has access to information, financial, personal, relational, medical, that is sensitive in ways that corporate information typically isn’t. The NDAs are more comprehensive, the personal stakes of any breach are higher, and the professional culture around discretion in private service is more absolute than even the most demanding corporate environments.
Candidates who treat their corporate experience with confidentiality as preparation for household discretion requirements are usually right about the skills but underestimate the scope. At Seaside Staffing Company, when we’re placing household EAs, we’re looking for candidates who understand this distinction and who have internalized discretion as a professional identity rather than a rule they follow. The difference shows up clearly when something difficult arises, and it matters enormously to the principals these candidates work for.