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LanguageLine Solutions

Engaged Employer

LanguageLine Solutions reviews

2.9

39% would recommend to a friend

(2,166 total reviews)

Simon Yoxon-Grant

38% approve of CEO

31% positive business outlook

LanguageLine Solutions has an employee rating of 2.9 out of 5 stars, based on 2,166 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The LanguageLine Solutions employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Telecomunicaciones industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
1.0
May 11, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Schedule Flexibility: There are many schedule options to choose from -two to five days a week, five to nine hours a day schedules- so it's hard for you not to find one that fits your needs. You can also swap your availability with someone else sometimes for special ocassions. Pay: This is both a good and a bad reason to work at LLS: even though the salary is not bad for costarrican standards, it is ludicrously low compared to the profit that LLS makes from its outsources interpreters. I conceed that the whole point of outsourcing is to lower the productions costs, but LLS charges it's customers, per minute, about a 60% of what it pays its outsourced interpreters per hour. It's staff in Costa Rica earn just about as much as a senior engineer with no english skills and the only qualifications required for the position are english and spanish proficiency, so it is good pay; but the chasm between what you earn and what you should be earning becomes discouraging quickly. Job Stability: There are many reasons why LLS won't sink any time soon. Just like with many other outsourced services, it does well with bountyful times but it thrives during crises: the more big economies are forced to reduce productions costs, the more they outsource everything they can. Also, its maket demand is gargantuan and it keeps swelling by the thousands every passing day; simply put: as long as there is non-english speaking people in the USA, there will be a job to do. Last but not least, LLS is the the lead company in over-the-phone interpretations services, holding 98% of the American market, as of last year.

Cons

The Pay: As I stated in the section above: it's good by the local standards, but in comparisson to interpreters worldwide and to the profit ratio, it's plain insulting. The Labor Itself: Consecutive interpretation is the most difficult type of interpretation and one of the most mentally wearing activities in general. It is no surprise that consecutive interpreters get cycled every twenty minutes or so beause mental exhaustion leads to unaccuracy. At LLS, an interpreter may not always be able to afford such leisure: given a high volume of calls -e.g. every monday morning- he may have to interpret even three hours in a row. And to finish the picture, he is required to interpret for courts, 911 dispatch, insurance companies, financial institutions, hospitals... every organization out there which you may think that will need to speak with an inmigrant; that means that he has to be familiar with a mind blogging wealth of industry information which he'll manage to juggle in his head along with the regionalisms, street-talk, thick accents or mental confusion of his interlocutors. In all honesty, these words don't really do justice to the malestrom of trying to get two completely alien people to converse wtih each other: it even seemed simple to me, years ago when I had never tried to do it. Now I understand, maybe far too well to my liking, that -perhaps like the US itself- you have to be there to understand what it's like. The Facilities: They are not, by any account, an office. They are a storage hangar with walls lifted inside it in order to home cubicles and a few personal offices. Consequently, there are no windows whatsoever and all walls are white. Boxing a few hundred very stressed people in an environment which is seemingly decorated to isolate the brain from stimulus is not the best idea. Remember Guantanamo.

2.0
Dec 28, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Tranining for entry level employee.

Cons

Too many. Besides low wage, high stress working enviroment. It has a very bad medical insurance plan that it covers almost nothing. Because of the high intensive interpretation and mental stress from clients(poor audio, vague voice, spoken too fast, nonsense, accent, wrong language...), I got TMJ and went to so many different doctors, they couldn't fix me. The pain comes from your head, your ear, your mouth. When you eat, when you talk, everything that you need to use the temporomandibular joint and the muscles connecting to it. The things that you do without thinking now becomes a problem. The wage paid was so minimum and the cost is your health. I had left the company for a while, but the chronic pain it left me still constantly bothers me. They even took me money without my permission after a year I left from my 401k plan, but yet to be able to explain the difference amount. And Lincoln Financial Group wouldn't do anything about it, because they only listen to LLS, their customer. Please run away from the company if you can before it destroys your health!

avatar
LanguageLine Solutions Response
1y
Thank you for sharing your experience. We acknowledge the demanding nature of interpretation work, and we offer various resources aimed at supporting interpreters' mental and physical health. While we understand that experiences may vary, we regret that our offerings did not meet your expectations. Regarding your concerns about your 401(k) plan, it is important to understand the plan guidelines. We wish you all the best in your future endeavors.
2.0
Sep 8, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Provided training, small support money for study. Co-workers. My coach is pretty nice(depending on the language). Wfh

Cons

The company is so cheap, being stuck at home. Low quality interpretation due to low pay. Low quality training, some rude clients think we are interpreting robots. Cheap labor> quality service. The benefits are ridiculous.

avatar
LanguageLine Solutions Response
2y
Though these words are difficult to read, we will reflect upon them and use them as an opportunity to improve. We are always striving to be better for the employees who are LanguageLine’s core. After doing an extensive evaluation of our pay and benefits in comparison to other employers in our business, we find that our compensation and benefits, while not above average, are consistent with the industry. Please note: we regularly review industry compensation. If you would like to discuss further, please email interpretercommunications@languageline.com.
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