IXL Learning reviews

3.4

59% would recommend to a friend

(447 total reviews)
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Paul Mishkin

53% approve of CEO

56% positive business outlook

IXL Learning has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 447 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The IXL Learning employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Education industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

447 reviews
2.0
May 24, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Strength of products -Many friendly people -Exciting industry

Cons

I have numerous gripes with IXL that resulted in me leaving, but before reading any further I want to preface that these are just my observations and hopefully the company can work to improve over time. The difficulty with a dysfunctional workplace is that folks like me end up "checking out" when things do not improve, and we end up becoming disgruntled ex-employees once we have alternatives or go full-on OfficeSpace and stop caring altogether. I would never tell anyone reading my review to reject a secure job that provides them enough income to support them and their family (unless they had alternatives). My advice is to take any review with a grain of salt and use your own judgements to see if the remarks align with observations made during interview(s). Additionally, there are a number of roles at IXL so my perspective may not apply. Who knows, maybe you are the person this company needs to reorient their direction? -Peter Principle: Much of the management is comprised of veteran employees who have shown lots of loyalty from when the company was very small, but aren't necessarily a good fit for roles where they are expected to mentor and oversee other workers. Days were almost always chaotic, which then led to stress and lots of "bad moods" on their faces. (Aside: much of management is strangely involved in some of the minutia of their previous roles, despite being overwhelmed) -Work/Life balance: I recall being quite excited about the "flexible hours" touted on IXL's hiring page. Turns out this was far from the truth: I was denied days off, was given no opportunities to work from home, was expected to travel and/or work on weekends, and had to work a rigid 9-6 schedule every single day. Management's idea of charity was to surprise workers before holiday weekends with a 1-hour early dismissal. -Odd workplace culture: While many individuals were incredibly friendly and great people, the overarching mood was extremely antiseptic. Social events consisted of generic once-a-month birthday celebrations and the occasional lunchtime sports game (But of course, who wants to play kickball at lunch when your day is miserably boring and you want some time to relax?). -Vertical paranoia: Extreme concern for keeping contact information under wraps, emails and other writing addressed to customers was very formulaic and revolved around a handful of talking points. Very little information about production schedules or even the company's history were shared with employees. Most decisions/projects relied on personal approval and involvement of senior management, causing things to move very slowly. Despite seemingly rolling in new revenue, unwillingness to spend money on office hardware and other expenses.

2.0
Jan 3, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

IXL makes an excellent product and there is ongoing attention to product improvement and detail. There is a lot of pride in product and creating something that is valuable and will impact teachers and students. The individual employees at IXL are positive, hard working and collaborative. They are intelligent people who are enthusiastic and excited about their jobs.

Cons

There is little regard for employees who don't work in engineering or product development. Professional development is non existent and not supported. Decisions are made by the COO with little to no input from others, seemingly at random, with little thought given to the process or the ultimate impact. Micromanagement is taken to an extreme level. Every purchase, hire and decision must be approved by the COO who clearly does not trust her employees to make smart decisions. Both the CEO and COO are completely out of touch with the world of education. They created an excellent product but they have no idea how it truly impacts students nor what it looks like in the classroom. The company has a wealth of employees who do know what happens in classrooms but this is not valued nor are those employees listened to. Hiring and layoff decisions are made arbitrarily and without clear reasoning. In sales meetings, impressive quarterly growth is frequently touted as a testament to the hard work of the sales and customer success teams and the next week, 4-5 salespeople are laid off, only to be quickly replaced by new hires who sometimes only stay 2 weeks.

1.0
Jun 11, 2023

Run, don’t walk - not worth your energy!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-A paycheck -company has been around long enough to be known/ recognized - core business is doing well

Cons

-top down, uber corporate environment -unnatural dysfunctional communications within and across functions (no responses to questions, messages, emails etc unless it’s from a special CEO/COO direct line of interest; engineering doesn’t talk to product or marketing etc) -NO real strategy (they’re just coasting off the core business) -zero faith that their current leadership team is actually good at leading teams, people, and managing for growth (to quote someone else: senior leaders at IXL would not be hired ANYWHERE else for their roles and are utterly incompetent at core parts of what their JDs are; that’s also likely why they’ve all been at IXL for so long, no one else would hire them…) -don’t value expertise (CEO/COO dictate all, handful of leaders have been there for a while being their minions, and almost ALL ICs are extremely junior and inexperienced, perfect cogs in a wheel) -don’t value diversity -toxic culture where any disagreement results in layoff (any employees who ask questions or point out possible concerns get fired and then scapegoated for all problems) -not innovative (tech and product looks like its leadership team: dinosaurs from the oracle era) -pay is under market (pretend there is no equity when really it’s that they want to continue to bamboozle employees into believing it’s common to NOT disclose full details about compensation packages)

Viewing 13 - 15 of 447 Reviews

Glassdoor has 482 IXL Learning reviews submitted anonymously by IXL Learning employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if IXL Learning is right for you.