By Luke Yates 2026.05.20
Every staffing agency knows who they are. The estate manager whose current employer guards jealously because three other families are waiting for the day she becomes available. The house manager who gets job offers at dinner parties he attends with his principals. The private chef families literally try to poach mid-event when they taste his food. These aren’t just competent staff, they’re the ones everyone wants, and understanding what makes them different tells you more about what excellent household employment actually looks like than any job description ever could. The thing that makes these staff valuable isn’t what you’d expect. It’s not that they went to the fanciest culinary school or have the most prestigious previous employers or speak five languages or have some specific certification. Those things might be on their resumes, but they’re not what makes other families try to steal them away. What makes them valuable is something harder to define and impossible to fake: they make households run smoother without making it obvious they’re doing anything at all. The family’s life just works better when this person is managing it, and principals often can’t even articulate exactly what the staff member is doing differently, they just know that when this person is on vacation everything feels harder and they can’t wait for them to get back. These staff members are three steps ahead of problems before they materialize. The estate manager who notices the roof needs attention before the leak starts, who schedules the HVAC maintenance before the system fails in the middle of summer, who flags the vendor whose quality is slipping before it becomes an obvious issue. The house manager who knows the principal is about to ask for something before the principal knows they want it, who’s already coordinated the solution before the need becomes urgent. The chef who sees the family’s schedule getting overwhelming and has already prepared meals that make the week easier without anyone asking. This anticipatory problem-solving is what separates good staff from the ones everyone wants to hire. They don’t just respond to needs, they prevent problems from becoming needs in the first place. They also have what you might call professional emotional intelligence that goes beyond standard people skills. They read the room accurately, they know when to be visible and when to disappear, they understand what the family actually wants versus what they’re saying they want, and they adjust their approach based on what’s happening in the household without needing explicit direction. The personal assistant who recognizes the principal is stressed and quietly reschedules the non-urgent appointments before being asked. The house manager who knows when the family needs the house to feel more relaxed versus when they’re preparing for something that requires everything perfect. The estate manager who understands that the principal’s questions about costs right now are really about something else entirely and responds to the actual underlying concern rather than just the surface question. This kind of reading and responding to context is almost impossible to teach, and staff who have it are worth their weight in gold. The staff everyone wants share another quality: they make the family feel taken care of without making them feel managed. This is a tricky balance that many household staff never figure out. Some staff are so competent they make principals feel unnecessary in their own homes, like everything would run better if the principals just stayed out of the way. Others are so deferential they make principals feel like they have to manage the person managing their household. The truly excellent staff make principals feel like partners in creating the life they want to live, where the staff member handles everything that should be handled but the principals never feel diminished or sidelined in their own home. This balance requires genuine respect going both directions and staff who are confident enough that they don’t need to prove their competence by making the principals feel incompetent. They’re also exceptionally reliable in ways that go beyond just showing up on time. When they commit to something, it happens. When they say they’ll handle something, the family never wonders if it actually got done. When they’re responsible for an outcome, the family can completely trust that outcome without checking up on it. This level of reliability means the family’s cognitive load decreases dramatically, because they’re not mentally tracking all the things household staff are supposed to be managing and wondering if those things are actually happening. The estate manager the family never worries about versus the estate manager the family has to follow up with regularly are doing similar tasks, but the mental relief the first one provides is worth substantially more than the resume bullet points suggest. What’s interesting is these staff members usually aren’t workaholics who never set boundaries or people-pleasers who say yes to everything. In fact, they’re often quite good at maintaining professional boundaries and saying no to things that don’t make sense. What makes this work is that families trust their judgment enough that when they say no, it doesn’t feel like refusal, it feels like expert guidance. The house manager who explains why a particular project isn’t a good idea right now and proposes a better alternative is more valuable than the one who agrees to everything and then delivers mediocre results because they’re overextended. Families who employ the truly excellent staff often say variations of “I trust their judgment more than my own about household operations” which is about the highest compliment you can give household staff. These staff also tend to have long tenures with families, not because they can’t get other jobs but because the working relationships are genuinely good. Families who employ exceptional staff usually treat them well, compensate appropriately, respect their professional expertise, and create working environments where the staff want to stay. The circular dynamic is real – excellent staff attract excellent employers, and excellent employers create conditions that excellent staff want to work in long-term. The families who can’t keep good staff are often the same families whose staff nobody wants to work for, and the pattern perpetuates itself. The staff everyone wants to poach also tend to be professional without being formal, friendly without being inappropriately familiar. They’ve found that sweet spot where the working relationship feels warm and human but boundaries are clear and maintained. Families enjoy working with them as people while never forgetting that they’re employees with professional roles to fulfill. This balance is harder than it sounds, and staff who achieve it create working relationships that last decades because both parties genuinely respect each other within appropriate professional frameworks. What families trying to poach these staff members discover is they can’t usually be bought with higher salaries alone. The staff everyone wants typically already has strong working relationships with their current families, professional satisfaction in positions that work well, and enough awareness of the market to know that more money at a dysfunctional household isn’t worth the trade-off. They’re usually open to new opportunities only when something significant has changed with their current family or when a new position offers genuine professional growth rather than just higher compensation. The families who successfully hire these staff members are offering better total packages that include appropriate compensation, good working relationships, reasonable expectations, and situations where the staff member can do their best work. At Seaside Staffing Company, we recognize these exceptional staff members immediately, and we work with them throughout their careers helping them find positions that deserve their talent. We also coach families about what it takes to attract and retain staff at this level, because the families who employ the best staff tend to be the best employers, and that’s not a coincidence. If you want the household staff everyone is trying to poach, you need to offer the working environment everyone wants to work in.Luke Yates brings both technical precision and creative problem-solving to his role as Integrations Engineer at Seaside Staffing Company. His fascination with how things work started in childhood—taking apart computer towers just to see their inner workings—and has since evolved into expertise spanning backend development, systems integration, and IT infrastructure. A year living in the Czech Republic deepened Luke’s appreciation for different perspectives and approaches to problem-solving. At Seaside, he’s the engineer who ensures our technology works seamlessly so our team can focus on making exceptional placements. From building custom integrations to managing our digital infrastructure, Luke’s work keeps our operations running smoothly and our team connected. When he’s not solving technical challenges, Luke is likely hiking through the wilderness or diving into his latest read.
After seven years as a professional nanny in high-net-worth and high-profile homes, Samantha authored a guide for both elite caregivers and athlete families to help bridge the gap between professional support and private household dynamics. Today, she brings that same heart and clarity to Seaside Staffing Company’s social presence by crafting content that helps others feel understood, seen, and connected. As a military child who’s lived across the country, Samantha naturally connects with people from all backgrounds and values the integrity, compassion, and authenticity that define the Seaside brand.
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As our social media manager, Jade Stevenson is one of the primary gatekeepers to our Seaside story.
With a Bachelor’s degree in English Literature and Psychology, Jade is a natural champion of authenticity, and she uses her whimsically pink hair to nudge all of us closer to her magical world of creative expression.
As a kid, Jade discovered she was allergic to more than 60 percent of the food pyramid, and it is in this journey where she began to learn just how important it is to show up as a force of kindness in the world. She holds an unwavering belief in the power of story, and she believes that small acts of compassion can truly spark a movement of positivity and change.
When she’s not showing up with her digital marketing genius at Seaside, Jade can be easily spotted (thanks to her pink hair) tutoring local teens and helping them write the types of college essays that earn acceptance letters from the schools of their dreams.
Equally at home whether she’s amplifying the voices of Black Femmes or losing herself in the quiet stillness of an ancient book of poetry, Jade is a living expression of what it means to fully embrace your truest self. When you meet her, you’ll immediately feel like you’re right at home, and she’ll always help you discover and celebrate the best parts of who you are.
Jessica He has spent her entire life stepping feet first into the big, wide world, making every corner of it feel like home – no matter where she’s at.
Earning two Bachelor’s degrees in Chinese language and East Asian Studies, she’s traveled the world to study in monasteries, climb Mount Fuji, and drink tea and coffee with otters. (Yes, that last one is real. Ask her about it.) She’s also served as an ESL teacher, a recruiter, a trainer, and a nanny – always finding ways to work alongside families and children. Today, she brings all her stories and all her experiences to Seaside Staffing Company where she makes the art of perfect matchmaking look flawlessly simple.
When Jessica isn’t in the Seaside office, she’s a busy momma who knows firsthand what it’s like to be in the trenches and need support. Unashamed to claim her sense of humor as one of her greatest talents, Jessica is perpetually positive, fiercely organized, and always seems to find a way to bring levity to the hardest-to-solve problems. Knowing Jessica means you’ll never forget how to laugh, and she’ll give you the courage to live your life to the fullest.
(Want to see her humor in action? Ask her about the time she lived in China and got her Oreos confiscated by a very disappointed nun.)
With an MBA in HR Management and Accounting, Kim might best be described as a people expert.
She spent six years teaching children online in China as an ESL instructor, and with a TESOL certification in her proverbial back pocket, it’s no wonder why she shows up at Seaside every single day with a big, bold view of the world.
Over the last decade, Kim has served as a recruiter and a placement coordinator in the household staffing industry, and she’s learned that while systems are incredibly important, relationships matter more. It’s not uncommon to hear Seaside clients talk to Kim like she’s their best friend. They know she’ll go to the ends of the earth for them (and we’ve seen her do it countless times).
When Kim isn’t at Seaside, she can most likely be found 4-wheeling through the dirt and taking long hikes with her dogs. She’s always up for a great adventure, and she says one of the craziest things she’s ever done is buying an Amish house with no electricity or hot water (besides that one time in high school when she thought it was a great idea to buy a car with a giant British flag painted on the hood).
“The basement of our house used to be a bakery,” she says. “When I’m dreaming about escaping to New Zealand or Scotland, I just head downstairs, take in a deep breath, and imagine myself eating a delicious cinnamon roll baked to sticky-finger perfection.”