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LanguageLine Solutions

Engaged Employer

LanguageLine Solutions reviews

2.9

39% would recommend to a friend

(252 total reviews)

Simon Yoxon-Grant

37% approve of CEO

33% positive business outlook

Reviews by job title

252 reviews

Reviews about "Culture"

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1.0
May 18, 2026

1/10 to be very honest with you

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

work from home with 401k

Cons

Based on my personal time with the company, I found this role to be quite challenging and it ultimately wasn't the right fit for me. During my employment, I experienced frequent schedule adjustments that resulted in periods of unpaid time off, even during shifts that felt busy with back-to-back calls. For me, this lack of consistent hours made it difficult to maintain the steady earnings I was anticipating. Because the role is fully remote, communication relies heavily on an internal chat platform. I personally found the communication style frustrating. Whenever serious topics or workplace concerns were raised, the feed often seemed to quickly fill with casual trivia and social posts, which made it feel difficult to have visible, constructive discussions about work conditions. I also found the scheduling policies to be less flexible than I had originally hoped. In my experience, getting time off approved required significant advance notice, and the adherence metrics felt exceptionally strict. Even when taking necessary sick time, the tracking system felt rigid and left me feeling unsupported. Regarding compensation, I did not see a clear pathway for merit-based raises. From my perspective, compensation seemed to remain stagnant regardless of an employee's tenure or additional training, with adjustments only appearing to occur during broad, company-wide rate changes. When navigating difficult client interactions, I felt that the internal conflict resolution process was lacking. In situations where client complaints were filed, I personally felt that my perspective wasn't fully weighed or supported before disciplinary steps were taken. Additionally, I found that the provided medical benefits package did not meet my personal healthcare needs. Overall, my experience left me feeling disconnected from the company culture. I ultimately decided to move on because I felt viewed more as a productivity metric than a supported member of the team.

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LanguageLine Solutions Response
2w
Thank you for sharing your experience and for the years you dedicated to LanguageLine as a Spanish Interpreter. We appreciate your feedback regarding scheduling, communication, support, benefits, and workplace culture, as these perspectives help us continue evaluating and improving the interpreter experience. Our interpreters play an important role in helping people communicate during critical moments, and we remain committed to reviewing our practices, resources, and systems to better support their success. We appreciate your contributions during your time with the company and wish you the very best in your future career endeavors.
4.0
May 5, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Remote job with flexibility to move anywhere in the US

Cons

Poor communication with the employees

avatar
LanguageLine Solutions Response
1mo
Thank you for sharing your experience and for your contributions over the past year as a French Interpreter. We’re glad to hear that the flexibility of remote work has been a positive aspect of your role. We also appreciate your feedback regarding communication, as this is an area we continuously review to better support our interpreters. Your perspective is valuable as we work to improve our processes and strengthen connections across teams. If you’d like to share more, we welcome you to reach out at interpretercommunications@languageline.com.
1.0
May 1, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Work from home and interpreting experience thats it

Cons

Money-driven, disorganized, and lacking accountability or integrity. Management communication is consistently condescending and often uses unnecessarily threatening language over routine issues. Interpreters are constantly talking about how burned out and overwhelmed they are, yet nothing meaningfully changes. The company cuts hours due to “business needs,” which just results in the remaining interpreters being flooded with nonstop, back-to-back calls—sometimes with as little as 13 seconds between calls. This is emotionally taxing work, often involving sensitive or traumatic situations, yet support is minimal. You’re limited to one extra 5-minute break outside of scheduled breaks—even after handling difficult calls. Everything affects your attendance, including earned sick time, which is counterintuitive and discouraging. “Business needs” dictate everything. Your hours can be cut at any time, and you can be switched from phone to video with no notice or input. If your PIN gets blocked because they claim you didn’t respond to an email, even when you provide proof that you did, there’s no accountability or acknowledgment just an expectation to comply and move on. Departments barely communicate with each other, leaving interpreters to constantly advocate for themselves due to system errors, incorrect coding, or internal miscommunication. The company has already faced lawsuits and clearly not enough because patterns continue. It’s honestly shocking to see management consistently communicate in such a condescending and threatening tone across the board. and based on how things continue to operate, it’s hard to believe enough has changed. The tone and approach from management remain consistent across the board. Once a year, there’s a strong push to complete the “Great Place to Work” survey, with results presented as overwhelmingly positive. That’s difficult to reconcile with the level of burnout and frustration openly expressed by interpreters. There seems to be a clear disconnect between reported outcomes and day-to-day experience. Despite all of this, interpreters develop strong, professional-level skills from handling a wide range of complex situations under pressure. With minimal time between calls, you become highly efficient and capable. However, there is little to no recognition. New interpreters quickly realize that even those who have been with the company for 10+ years report never receiving a raise, despite the company generating over $1 billion in annual revenue. The work itself facilitating communication, often in critical situations is meaningful. Unfortunately, the company makes it far more difficult than it needs to be. The only consistent benefit is that it’s work from home. Beyond that, there are significant systemic issues. Interpreters are pushed to their limits ,some even lose their voice by the end of the day.

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LanguageLine Solutions Response
1mo
Thank you for sharing your experience and for the time you spent with LanguageLine. We recognize the intensity and responsibility that come with interpretation work, especially in emotionally complex situations, and we value the professionalism and resilience interpreters bring every day. Your feedback regarding communication, workload, scheduling, and support is noted, and we continue to review our practices, resources, and systems to better support interpreters and improve overall experience. We also appreciate you highlighting the meaningful nature of the work and the strong skills developed along the way. We wish you continued success in your career and thank you again for your contributions.
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