Unnerving experience - generative AI specialist Innodata Employee Review

1.0
Jul 19, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I can't say there were any.

Cons

I sent my resume and got a response back an hour later saying I was shortlisted, and asking me to take a preliminary language test (just seeing that I was a native English speaker, I assume). Then, a few weeks later, I took a longer language test for both English and Dutch. I was offered the job by email without an interview. I met nobody all through preboarding and my first day, in which I was told the name of my manager but did not meet her either. They wanted me to send in an I-9 with my IDs and were pushing the deadline hours after sending it to me (when you have 3 days). I still had not met a single person, seen a face or heard a voice! I can't imagine it's a scam, but it sure felt like I was about to have someone ruin my credit. The other possibility, that they are a complete mess of a company, didn't make the job any more appealing. I quit the same day.

Explore other reviews about Innodata

5.0
Feb 2, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great place to work with consistent communication.

Cons

Days can get repetitive and dry

2.0
Apr 12, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Some flexibility Work from home

Cons

One thing I really didn’t enjoy about the guidance: our client sets a bench mark of having 85% “utilization”. Basically stating that of the 40 hours worked, 85% of that must be in “production code”, so about 35ish hours a week. The rest of the time can be spent reviewing emails, guidelines, etc. The project manager basically had management tell people that they could be 2.5 hours in other codes, and about 37.5 should be in production. If this is a decision from a client, then great, but it seemed to me the project manager was just trying to get every little bit of production possible out of people. I’m under the impression that if employees are treated like people and given proper breaks, the quality of work will be way better. If you force them to sit for 7.5 hours or a 8 hour day in front of a screen, the quality will be worse. The client says it’s 85% utilization, so why are we telling our employees they need to be in production for 37.5 hours out of the day? It just seems dishonest. Data annotation work can be tough and some of the tasks are repetitive and can take a lot of concentration. Half of the admin, forgets what it’s like to work in the queues, and drive these numbers blindly. Meanwhile, half of their job consists of chatting on teams all day.

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