
The world of domestic childcare is undergoing a quiet revolution.
Not long ago, the qualities most sought after in a nanny were a background in education, fluency in foreign languages, kindness, and the ability to cook a lump-free bowl of porridge. Today, however, an unexpected new requirement has climbed to the top of the list: advanced proficiency in artificial intelligence.
It turns out that modern parents are increasingly looking for more than someone to simply watch their children. They want a technologically savvy assistant. Candidates are expected to converse with ChatGPT and similar AI systems as naturally as they do with a child, using them to resolve unexpected situations without constantly interrupting busy parents at work.
Why Would a Nanny Need AI?
The trend extends far beyond simply looking up information. Employers’ primary expectation is personalized child development. Nannies are now expected to work with data: by entering a child’s age, gender, interests, and activity level into an AI model, they should be able to generate a customized schedule of educational games and activities for the day within seconds.
The days of flipping through teaching manuals are fading; now, the algorithm designs the lesson plan.
What’s more, proficiency with AI-powered content creation platforms has become a major advantage during interviews. A nanny who can help a child generate a fairy tale featuring the child’s own photograph, compose music together, or create amusing videos is considered exceptionally valuable. Such skills transform routine childcare into an engaging and interactive experience.
From “Why Is the Sky Blue?” to Emergency Assistance
Parents are equally clear on another point: a nanny should never hesitate to consult AI. On the contrary, they increasingly expect AI to serve as the primary source of reliable answers to the endless stream of children’s questions. Where a nanny might once have improvised an explanation for why grass is green, she is now expected to provide responses that are both scientifically accurate and carefully adapted to a child’s level of understanding.
Perhaps the most significant shift, however, has taken place in the areas of health and safety. According to Dmitry Sorokolet, founder of a domestic staffing agency, parents’ confidence in AI-assisted medical guidance has risen dramatically.
“Parents instruct their nannies that if a child suddenly becomes ill after eating, they shouldn’t panic, immediately call the family, and simply wait,” Sorokolet explains. “Instead, the nanny should know how to write an effective prompt for an AI system, accurately describe the symptoms, request an emergency action plan, stabilize the child’s condition as much as possible, and call an ambulance while providing a precise description of the situation. For many parents, artificial intelligence has become a faster and more dependable advisor than a worried grandmother on the phone.”
This emerging trend paints a portrait of the ‘Nanny 2.0’: no longer simply a warm-hearted caregiver, but a technologically fluent professional for whom AI is as essential a working tool as a thermometer or a diaper bag.





