By Luke Yates 2026.05.13
Housekeepers working in private homes sometimes describe being treated as if they’re invisible: families who walk past without acknowledgment, who discuss private matters as if the housekeeper isn’t present, who never make eye contact or engage in basic human courtesy, or who behave as if household staff are furniture rather than people doing professional work in their homes. This treatment affects housekeepers psychologically and professionally in ways families often don’t recognize, and it creates working conditions that even excellent compensation can’t fully offset. Being treated as invisible means families who never acknowledge the housekeeper’s presence with basic greetings, who discuss intimate personal or financial matters in front of the housekeeper as if she’s not there, who walk through spaces the housekeeper is cleaning without acknowledging they’re interrupting work, who never make eye contact or engage in any personal interaction however brief, or who treat the housekeeper as a service that happens rather than a person providing that service. Housekeepers are professional workers providing skilled service, and being treated as invisible rather than as professionals deserving basic respect undermines professional dignity in ways that affect job satisfaction regardless of other working conditions. The housekeeper who’s never acknowledged as a person experiences the work as dehumanizing even when the tasks themselves are fine and the compensation is adequate. Being consistently treated as invisible affects mental health and self-worth over time. Housekeepers describe feeling erased, unvalued as people despite being valued for their work output, isolated even while working in occupied spaces, and questioning their own worth when treated as if they don’t exist as humans. This psychological impact accumulates and creates damage that goes beyond typical work stress. Some families treat housekeepers as invisible without recognizing it as deliberate rudeness. They’ve absorbed cultural messages about household staff being background rather than human, they’re uncomfortable with the class dynamics of employing help, or they simply haven’t thought about how their behavior affects the people working in their homes. The impact is the same whether the invisibility is intentional or unconscious. Respectful treatment of housekeepers includes acknowledging their presence with basic greetings when encountering them, pausing intimate conversations when the housekeeper enters spaces, treating them as professionals doing valued work, engaging in brief appropriate interaction that recognizes them as people, thanking them for specific work when appropriate, and generally extending the same basic courtesy you’d extend to anyone working in your space. This isn’t about becoming friends or having lengthy conversations. It’s about basic human acknowledgment. The invisible housekeeper dynamic often reflects class discomfort or cultural patterns about how people with wealth should relate to household workers. Some families learned from their own upbringings that household staff should be ignored or that acknowledging them is inappropriate. These learned patterns create treatment that housekeepers experience as dehumanizing regardless of the family’s intentions. Even excellent housekeepers leave positions where they’re treated as invisible, because the psychological toll becomes unsustainable regardless of compensation. The housekeeper who’s technically well-compensated but emotionally exhausted from being treated as non-existent eventually finds work where she’s treated with basic human dignity even if it pays somewhat less. Professional housekeepers want families to understand that being acknowledged as people doing valued work matters profoundly to job satisfaction, that invisibility treatment is psychologically harmful over time, that basic courtesy doesn’t require friendship or extensive interaction, and that respectful treatment contributes as much to employee retention as good compensation does. Children in households watch how their parents treat household staff and learn from those patterns. Families who treat housekeepers as invisible teach their children that certain classes of people don’t deserve basic acknowledgment. Families who model respectful treatment teach children about human dignity and professional respect. Housekeepers experiencing invisible treatment should consider addressing it directly with families if the relationship otherwise works, explaining that basic acknowledgment matters to professional job satisfaction. Some families genuinely don’t realize their behavior is harmful and will adjust when told. Others won’t change, and that’s information the housekeeper needs to decide whether to stay. There’s a balance between families who treat housekeepers as invisible and families who overstep into inappropriate familiarity. Housekeepers want to be treated as professional workers deserving respect and acknowledgment, not as friends or family members, but also not as furniture. Finding that professional middle ground is what respectful household employment looks like. Most housekeepers describe being treated with basic human respect as a make-or-break factor in job satisfaction, and families who extend basic courtesy tend to keep excellent housekeepers long-term while families who treat staff as invisible experience high turnover.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.”