What Parents Actually Want to Hear in That First January Email
Your first January email sets the tone for the whole year. Here’s what to actually say — and what to skip.
Your first January email sets the tone for the whole year. Here’s what to actually say — and what to skip.
Forget the giant January overhaul. The reset that actually works is small, specific, and finished before Friday.
Trust is not built in a meeting. It is built in thirty-second conversations, repeated daily, over months.
When nobody applies, the problem usually isn’t the job post. It’s that you’re competing with everyone else’s job post.
Tracking subsidy payments doesn’t need software. It needs one consistent place, one consistent time, and a refusal to do it in panic.
Infant-toddler classrooms are losing teachers faster than any other room. The reasons aren’t a mystery, and the fixes aren’t out of reach.
Small daycares quietly outperform big centers on parent loyalty. Here’s the structural reason, and how to lean into it.
TK is already pressing on private preschool enrollment in California — even before full expansion. Here’s the quiet read.
Mid-week holidays are the schedule nightmare nobody talks about. Here’s how to handle them without losing trust.
When a parent says they want to be ‘in the loop,’ they don’t usually want more updates. They want a different shape of one.
Back-to-school season hits even when your program never closed. Here’s how to mark it without disrupting the kids who never left.
Hot weather in California can derail a childcare day. A few small routine tweaks keep things running.
If you’re thinking about opening a family childcare home, or you already run one and want to check your numbers honestly, here’s the real math.
Hard parent conversations are part of the job. Done right, they make the relationship stronger, not weaker.
Quiet quitting in childcare doesn’t look like in other industries. Here’s how it actually shows up — and what to do.
Most licensing stress comes from doing the paperwork in panic. Pre-built systems take an afternoon and save you years.