Comfortable but lacking - Software Engineer Luminate Employee Review

3.0
24 Jan 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

People here in general are pleasant to work with and reasonably friendly. Daily work life balance is decent.

Cons

Easy for your career to stagnate if you aren't actively seeking growth opportunities. Leadership pushed us back to 4-days in office, copying Amazon and the like without addressing employee feedback.

Explore other reviews about Luminate

5.0
16 Jan 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Part of Hollywood - data and services are integrated into the entertainment industry. Services and products are highly regarded.

Cons

Hard to imagine cons. This is a great place to work as a driven sales exec.

1
2.0
8 May 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The biggest positive about Luminate is the client exposure and industry relevance. Working with entertainment companies and enterprise accounts gave me incredible experience in strategic account management, analytics, customer success, and executive-level relationship building. Many employees are genuinely talented, hardworking, and trying their best despite the environment. If you want to learn quickly, you will. The pace forces you to become adaptable, resourceful, and client-focused very fast.

Cons

The internal experience unfortunately did not match the external image of the company. There was a severe lack of transparency between leadership, product, operations, and client-facing teams. Customer Success and other client-facing employees were often expected to manage escalations, defend product gaps, explain reporting inconsistencies, and maintain enterprise relationships while not even being fully informed internally themselves. It created constant stress and tension with clients. The expectations placed on teams were honestly unrealistic at times. Employees were expected to perform at extremely high levels while lacking the staffing, operational support, tools, and resources needed to actually succeed. Many people felt set up for failure, especially during major migrations, product transitions, and organizational changes. The company heavily prioritized the engineering and product side of the business while consistently underinvesting in client-facing teams. Leadership would push growth and expansion expectations without properly supporting the people responsible for maintaining those relationships day to day. There was often little understanding or appreciation for how difficult enterprise client management actually was, especially within certain sectors of the business. Favoritism also impacted morale. Some employees were protected or given more support and visibility while others were expected to absorb impossible workloads with little recognition. Career growth and leadership support often felt inconsistent depending on who you were aligned with internally. Operational leadership was another major issue. Certain operations leaders created an environment that felt combative instead of collaborative. Rather than partnering with client-facing teams to solve problems, there were times where accountability was avoided and blame was pushed onto others. This lack of teamwork made already difficult client situations even worse. At one point, some clients openly expressed frustration about having to work with certain operational leaders because of their communication style, attitude, and lack of partnership. The stress from this environment severely impacted my mental and physical health over time. Constant fire drills, lack of internal support, shifting priorities, and pressure from all sides created a culture that often felt unsustainable. Layoffs and leadership shifts only added to the instability, and communication during those periods lacked transparency and empathy.

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