By Luke Yates 2026.05.05
Newborn care specialists typically work with families for anywhere from two weeks to twelve weeks, with contracts clearly defined from the start about duration and scope. This temporary structure is by professional design, reflecting both the nature of newborn care work and the sustainability limits of the intense schedule NCS work requires. Families who hire an NCS sometimes want to extend the contract past the original end date, and whether that extension makes sense depends on why the family is asking and whether the NCS wants to continue past the planned endpoint. Why NCS Work Is Structured as Temporary The overnight schedule that most NCS work involves, working ten to twelve hours through the night with minimal sleep, isn’t sustainable long-term for most professionals. The work is physically demanding in ways that accumulate over weeks. An NCS might work three or four nights per week, but even with recovery days between shifts, the pattern wears on the body over time. The temporary contract structure acknowledges this reality. The work is designed to help families through the acute newborn period when overnight support and expert guidance matter most, not to provide permanent overnight childcare indefinitely. The NCS who takes temporary contracts with different families can manage the physical demands better than one who tries to maintain the schedule for many months straight. What the Teaching Goal Supports The educational component of NCS work is built on the assumption that the parents will take over increasingly as the contract progresses. The NCS is teaching the parents to care for their newborn confidently, establishing routines and sleep foundations, and preparing the family to manage independently once the contract ends. This teaching goal makes sense within a defined timeframe but creates different dynamics if the NCS stays indefinitely. A family that wants to extend the NCS contract repeatedly may be signaling that they’re not actually ready to take over the care, which means the teaching component isn’t working or the family isn’t engaging with it. That’s information both the family and the NCS need to address rather than just extending the contract again. The Professional Career Structure Many NCS professionals prefer the variety and flexibility that temporary contracts provide. They work with one family for a defined period, have time off between contracts, then start with a new family. This pattern lets them help multiple families per year, prevents burnout from any single placement, and maintains the professional interest that comes from new situations rather than extended time in one household. The NCS who’s asked to extend past the original contract might not want to, even if the family is wonderful and the work is going well, because they’ve planned their professional calendar around the contract ending and starting something new. The family who assumes their NCS will extend indefinitely is assuming a career preference that many NCS professionals don’t share. When Extensions Make Sense Extensions of NCS contracts make sense in specific situations: the family genuinely needs more time to develop confidence and skills, the newborn has had medical issues or complications that delayed progress on routines and sleep, the family circumstances changed in ways that justify additional support, or the NCS is willing and available to extend. What makes these extensions work is that both parties are choosing them deliberately. The family isn’t just extending because they don’t want to stop having overnight help. The NCS isn’t just agreeing because she feels pressured. The extension serves the original purpose of the contract, which is helping the family become competent and confident in newborn care. When Extensions Signal Problems Extensions that happen because the family doesn’t want to do the night care themselves, because the parents haven’t engaged with the teaching component and don’t feel prepared, or because the family is using the NCS as permanent night coverage rather than temporary support signal that something isn’t working as intended. The NCS who recognizes these patterns has a choice about whether to extend. Some do, understanding that families have different timelines for building confidence. Others decline, knowing that continuing past the point where the family should be ready to take over isn’t serving the educational purpose of the work. The Compensation Question on Extensions When NCS contracts extend, the compensation should remain at NCS rates, not transition to lower nanny rates just because the newborn period is technically past. The work is still demanding, still overnight, and still provided by a specialist. The family who wants to keep their NCS but at reduced compensation because “the baby’s older now” is asking for specialized work at non-specialized rates. If the family wants to transition from NCS to a nanny or other childcare, that’s a different hire with different compensation. If they want the NCS to stay, the NCS rates continue. What Happens at Natural Endpoints Most NCS contracts end naturally around the time the baby is sleeping longer stretches, the parents feel confident in their care routines, and the acute newborn period has passed. The ending happens as planned, the family thanks the NCS for the support, and everyone moves forward. The NCS starts with a new family. The parents manage their baby’s care themselves. These natural endings feel right to everyone because the contract served its purpose. The family got the support and teaching they needed. The NCS did her job successfully. And the temporary structure worked the way it was designed to. When NCS Professionals Transition to Other Roles Some NCS professionals do occasionally transition from temporary NCS work to permanent nanny positions with families they’ve worked for, but it’s not the norm. The skillset, the work structure, and the professional identity of being an NCS is different from being a nanny, and not every NCS wants that transition. The family who assumes their NCS will naturally become their nanny is making an assumption they should check rather than just expect. The NCS might be interested. She might not. And pushing for a role transition that the NCS doesn’t want creates an awkward situation where the NCS feels pressured to agree or to disappoint a family she’s worked closely with. What Families Can Do to Prepare for the End Families who want the transition from NCS support to independent care to go smoothly should engage actively with the teaching component throughout the contract, practice the techniques the NCS demonstrates, and build their own confidence progressively rather than deferring everything to the NCS and hoping they’ll feel ready at the end. The family that treats the NCS as someone who does the work while they sleep is less prepared when the contract ends than the family that treats the NCS as a teacher who’s helping them develop their own skills. At Seaside Nannies, families hiring newborn care specialists should understand from the start that the work is temporary by design, and planning for what happens after the contract ends should begin when the contract starts, not when it’s about to end.Lorem ipsum color sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Corbi ut ligula at pus faceless sollicitudin quis vitae anteur. Vivamus consequat tempus molestie. In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Nullam a tortor odio. Ut eleifend nibh urna, non maximus eros pulvinar a. Quisque et faucibus quam. Phasellus ultricies et nisi et consequat. Lorem ipsum color sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Corbi ut ligula at pus faceless sollicitudin quis vitae anteur. Vivamus consequat tempus molestie. In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Nullam a tortor odio. Ut eleifend nibh urna, non maximus eros pulvinar a. Quisque et faucibus quam. Phasellus ultricies et nisi et consequat. Lorem ipsum color sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. 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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.”